To the diffident singer, the sessions in October 1948 – at Tanza’s new studio on Wakefield Street, Wellington – seemed to take a month of Sundays. One morning Williams didn’t turn up, and Tanza employee John Shears was sent to find her: She had gone to play hockey. Shears recalled, “I can still see Pixie in her hockey gear, with striped socks, singing away. And Ruru looking very serious. He always looked serious.”
After ‘Blue Smoke’, Williams followed up with another song by Karaitiana, ‘Let’s Talk It Over’ – another sad, slow waltz, but a sophisticated song with more adventurous melody, which she handles confidently. Over the next few months Williams would record nearly a dozen sides for Tanza, but late in 1949 she followed her heart to the South Island, and rarely performed in public.
“When you’ve got music in your life – you’ll be okay.”
– Pixie Williams
In 1951 Williams and the Karaitiana family were both living in Dunedin, so for the first time the pair performed in concert together (the songwriter did not participate in the recording of ‘Blue Smoke’). They gave a series of concerts at His Majesty’s Theatre, in a bill that also featured a roller-skating act and an exhibition of kapa haka. Williams sang many of Karaitiana’s songs, including the debut of his tribute to Dunedin, ‘Saddle Hill’, and ‘It’s Just Because’, written in honour of the troops of K-Force departing for the Korean War.
In 2002 she told Radio New Zealand’s Warwick Burke, “You wouldn’t believe it but I wasn’t interested in a career. I just wasn’t.” All of Pixie Williams’ recordings were re-released on a CD, For the Record: the Pixie Williams Collection, in 2011 on Blue Smoke Records. She now lives in retirement in the Wellington region and is said to “still love to sing, whistle and hum her way through each day”. Looking back on her life at the time of the compilation’s release, she said, “Music – it’s what keeps you going through good times and bad. It kept me sane in the hard times. Forget the pills. When you’ve got music in your life – you’ll be okay.”
Pixie Williams passed away on August 2, 2013. Her legacy lives on, however. On Anzac Day 2020, Māori TV broadcast a documentary about Williams’s life, Pixie: the Voice of Blue Smoke. (Available on demand at Māori TV; sign-in required.)
In April 2021 Blue Smoke Records released The New Blue: Pixie Williams Reimagined, which featured new version of songs first recorded by Williams. Produced by Mike Gibson, Lisa Tomlins and Riki Gooch, the artists included Anna Coddington, the Victory Dolls, and George Rutherford. With Kirsten Te Rito, Tomlins accompanied Williams posthumously on a new recording of ‘Blue Smoke’. In his RNZ review programme New Horizons, William Dart said, “This is a very respectful reimagining and the mood is one of evocation and honouring rather than any sort of deconstruction.”