Wednesday, January 25, 2012





Remembering Etta James 


Etta
              James 


Etta James has died at age 73 in Southern California where she was born.

The California blues superstar has lost her battle with leukemia, Alzheimer's, kidney disease and Hepatitis-C, and the family of Etta James was by her side until the very end.

Etta James' manager, Lupe De Leon, had previously announced that the music legend was terminally ill, under 24-hour care and on oxygen. "We're all very sad. We're just waiting," said De Leon in December.

The great Etta James did not make it to her 74th birthday on January 25th, though many prayed for a healing miracle.

Millions of fans around the world are saddened by the news of Etta James' death after the Rock & Roll, Blues, Soul, R&B, Pop, Gospel and Jazz superstar had survived just about everything life could dish out --- and lived to sing about it all for decades.

Now the end has finally come and the great voice has been silenced on earth.
The sassy, sultry diva behind "At Last" and "Tell Mama" finally achieved the recognition due her over the past few years, with Beyonce starring as the troubled icon in the film Cadillac Records. But long before she had her signature hit, this gospel prodigy was already helping pave the way for rock, soul, and modern blues.



Born:


Jamesetta Hawkins on January 25, 1938, in Los Angeles, CA; died January 20, 2012, Riverside, CA

Genres:


R&B, Blues, Gospel, Soul, Jazz

Instruments:


Vocals

Contributions to music:


  • One of the R&B and blues world's greatest divas
  • Gave R&B a big boost into the mainstream and helped develop the rock craze in the process with her 1955 hit "The Wallflower" (a/k/a "Roll With Me, Henry")
  • Her signature song, 1961's "At Last," is one of the most popular wedding soundtracks of all time
  • A major influence on rough blues-rock singers such as Janis Joplin, Bonnie Raitt, and Rod Stewart
  • Well-known for her saucy and sometimes scandalous stage demeanor

Early years:


Etta James' wild life began early on -- she grew up in a single-mother household and was eventually expelled from her high school, by which time she'd already formed more than one doo-wop group with her schoolmates. Bandleader Johnny Otis, later famous for "Willie and the Hand Jive," had the group record a novelty song of sorts, an answer to Hank Ballard and the Midnighters' huge smash "Work With Me Annie." The female response record, dubbed "Roll With Me, Henry," was another smash, though it was changed to "Dance With Me, Henry," and, later, "The Wallflower," to disguise the frank sexual nature of the song.

Success:


The hits dried up after that, however, and Etta's solo career was slowing until she signed with Chess Records in 1960. It was there that the Chess brothers redesigned Etta as a torchy jazz-pop singer, leading to hits like "At Last" and "All I Could Do Was Cry." 1967's "Tell Mama" was another hit that marked a fork in her career, steering her more towards gutbucket soul. Etta stayed with the Chess label until it folded in 1975, long after most artists had left, and moved with the times to a more rock-based approach like Tina Turner's, becoming noted for covers of offbeat artists like Randy Newman and Prince.

Later years:


Eventually she turned to a straight blues approach, and since 1989 has reigned as one of the singular stars on that scene, loaded with Grammy and Blues Foundation awards. Etta's health had begun failing in the Nineties, however, as her weight ballooned to over 400 pounds and doctors were forced to deny her the knee-replacement surgery she desperately needed. However, in 2003 she became one of the first celebrities to undergo gastric bypass surgery, and she subsequently dropped almost half her body weight. She toured and recorded regularly, and remained one of the premiere draws on the jazz and blues circuit. In January 2011 she was diagnosed with leukemia, and recorded her final album, the acclaimed "The Dreamer." Etta James passed away on January 20, 2012.

Other facts:


  • Has had a history of substance abuse and legal trouble, including addictions to heroin, cocaine, and alcohol, as well as arrests for forgery and bad checks
  • Claims her father is the legendary pool player Rudolf Wanderone, a/k/a "Minnesota Fats"
  • Sang on local gospel radio as a soloist at the age of five
  • Recorded in Cosimo Matassa's legendary New Orleans studio in the late Fifties
  • Had an affair with the married Harvey Fuqua of the Moonglows, with whom she cut two hit duets
  • Sang on "Henry" with Richard Berry, original creator of the R&B hit "Louie, Louie," and was later related to him by her daughter's marriage

Awards/Honors:


  • Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1993)
  • GRAMMY Awards (1994, 1999, 2002. 2003, 2004)
  • GRAMMY Hall of Fame (2008)
  • Rhythm and Blues Foundation Pioneer Award (1989)
  • BMI Lifetime Achievement Award (2003)
  • Hollywood Walk of Fame (7080 Hollywood Blvd.)

Recorded work:

#1 hits:
R&B:
"The Wallflower" (a/k/a "Roll With Me, Henry") (1955)
 
Top 10 hits:
 

R&B:
"Good Rockin' Daddy" (1955)
"All I Could Do Was Cry" (1960)
"If I Can't Have You" with Harvey Fuqua of the Moonglows(1960)
"My Dearest Darling" (1960}
"At Last" (1961)
"Trust In Me" (1961)
"Don't Cry Baby" (1961)
"Something's Got A Hold On Me" (1962)
"Stop The Wedding" (1962)
"Pushover" (1963}
"Loving You More Every Day" (1964)
"Tell Mama" (1967)

 
#1 albums:
 

Blues:
Mystery Lady: Songs of Billie Holiday (1994)
Burnin' Down The House
(2002)
Let's Roll
(2003)
The Definitive Collection
(2006)
 
Jazz:
Blue Gardenia (2001)
 
Top 10 albums:
 

R&B:
All The Way (2006)
 
Blues:
Love's Been Rough On Me (1997)
12 Songs Of Christmas
(1998)
Life, Love And The Blues
(1998)
The Best Of Etta James: 20th Century Masters
(1999)
The Heart Of A Woman
(1999)
Matriarch of the Blues
(2002)
Love Songs
(2001)
Blues To The Bone
(2004)
All The Way
(2006)
 
Jazz:
Mystery Lady: Songs of Billie Holiday (1994)Time After Time (1995)
 
Other important recordings: "Spoonful" with Harvey Fuqua of the Moonglows, "A Sunday Kind Of Love," "Fool That I Am," "Dream," "It's Too Soon To Know," "Seven Day Fool," "Next Door To The Blues," "Would It Make Any Difference To You," "Payback," "Two Sides (To Every Story)," "Baby What You Want Me To Do," "In The Basement - Part 1" with Sugar Pie DeSanto, "I Prefer You," "Security," "Almost Persuaded," "Losers Weepers - Part 1," "I Found A Love," "All The Way Down," "Leave Your Hat On," "Out on the Street, Again," "Tough Lover," "Waiting For Charlie (To Come Home)," "These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)," "I'd Rather Go Blind," "God's Song (That's Why I Love Mankind)," "Feeling Uneasy," "Let's Burn Down The Cornfield," "Loving Arms," "Take It To The Limit," "Damn Your Eyes," "Whatever Gets You Through The Night," "The Man I Love," "The Blues Is My Business," "The Sky Is Crying"
 

Covered by: Christina Aguilera, Rod Stewart, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Cyndi Lauper, Joan Osborne, Joni Mitchell, Chicken Shack, Paul Weller, The Temprees, Warren Hill, Sydney Youngblood, Mary Coughlan, Renee Olstead
 

Appears in the movies: "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (1978), "Chuck Berry Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll" (1987), "Tap" (1989), "Record Row: Cradle of Rhythm and Blues" (1998)

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