{{short description|American jazz musician}} {{multiple issues| {{cleanup rewrite|date=June 2011}} {{more citations needed|date=April 2014}} {{Lead too short|date=July 2022}} }}
'''John Norman Mapp''' (1928–1988) was a jazz vocalist, lyricist and composer.
==Biography== Mapp was born to John Offir Mapp and Frances Edwina Carter Mapp; and raised in Queens, New York. He was married to Marilyn Patricia Folk Lewis Mapp, and was the father of four sons, one daughter and one stepson, David (aka David P Newman), John, Brian, Eric, Robin and Norman A. Lewis, respectively. He started his music career as a singer with the U.S. Army band during World War II while stationed in Europe. He returned home a disabled veteran, after his honorable discharge.
Dinah Washington, after an evening of performing, went into a Harlem night club to hear Mapp sing at his debut, and she adopted him as her protégé, encouraged him to continue singing and writing songs, and helped him start his career as a soloist and big-band musician.
In February 1988 upon Mapp's death at age 59, Anthony Scaduto wrote Mapp's obituary for ''New York Newsday 1988'' and quoted Mapp's friend, trumpeter Clark Terry, who said, "He was the warmest human being who ever lived. Very beautiful, very talented.".<ref>{{cite news|work=New York Newsday|year=1988}}</ref> In the same obituary, Norman Mapp was quoted from a previous ''Newsday'' interview in 1986 as saying he "never regretted making music his career...because it brought him a wealth of experience, plus the opportunity to know and work with people such as Count Basie, Dinah Washington, Sy Oliver." On learning of his passing, Arthur Prysock said, "I thought he was a great fellow. He's going to be missed.<ref>{{cite news|work=New York Newsday|year=1988}}</ref>
Mapp's songs include "Jazz Ain't Nothin' but Soul", "I Worry 'Bout You", "Mr. Ugly", "In the Night", "Free Spirits", and "Foul Play". His songs were performed by Count Basie, Betty Carter, Marvin Gaye, Gigi Gryce, Peggy Lee, and Arthur Prysock.
== Discography == * ''Jazz Aint Nothin but Soul''
==References== {{Reflist}}
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David P. Mapp, aka: Newman, son
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mapp, Norman}} Category:1928 births Category:1988 deaths Category:American jazz singers Category:American male jazz composers Category:Musicians from Queens, New York Category:Jazz musicians from New York City Category:Singers from New York City Category:United States Army personnel of World War II Category:United States Army soldiers Category:20th-century American singers Category:20th-century American jazz composers Category:20th-century American male composers