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Esther Phillips

 
Artist: Esther Phillips
See Esther Phillips Lyrics
  • Born: December 23, 1935, Galveston, TX
  • Died: August 07, 1984, Carson, CA
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Esther Phillips (1962-1970)," "Complete Savoy Recordings with Johnny Otis," "Burnin'"
  • Representative Songs: "Release Me," "And I Love Him," "Home Is Where the Hatred Is"

Biography

Esther Phillips was perhaps too versatile for her own good, at least commercially speaking; while she was adept at singing blues, early R&B, gritty soul, jazz, straight-up pop, disco, and even country, her record companies often lacked a clear idea of how to market her, which prevented her from reaching as wide an audience as she otherwise might have. An acquired taste for some, Phillips' voice had an idiosyncratic, nasal quality that often earned comparisons to Nina Simone, although she herself counted Dinah Washington as a chief inspiration. Phillips' career began when she was very young and by some accounts, she was already battling drug addiction during her teenage years; whenever her problems took root, the lasting impact on her health claimed her life before the age of 50.

Esther Phillips was born Esther Mae Jones in Galveston, TX, on December 23, 1935, and began singing in church as a young child. When her parents divorced, she split time between her father in Houston and her mother in the Watts area of Los Angeles. It was while she was living in Los Angeles in 1949 that her sister entered her in a talent show at a nightclub belonging to bluesman Johnny Otis. So impressed was Otis with the 13-year-old that he brought her into the studio for a recording session with Modern Records and added her to his live revue. Billed as Little Esther, she scored her first success when she was teamed with the vocal quartet the Robins (who later evolved into the Coasters) on the Savoy single "Double Crossin' Blues." It was a massive hit, topping the R&B charts in early 1950 and paving the way for a series of successful singles bearing Little Esther's name: "Mistrustin' Blues," "Misery," "Cupid Boogie," and "Deceivin' Blues." In 1951, Little Esther moved from Savoy to Federal after a dispute over royalties, but despite being the brightest female star in Otis' revue, she was unable to duplicate her impressive string of hits. Furthermore, she and Otis had a falling out, reportedly over money, which led to her departure from his show; she remained with Federal for a time, then moved to Decca in 1953, again with little success.

In 1954, she returned to Houston to live with her father, having already developed a fondness for the temptations of life on the road; by the late '50s, her experiments with hard drugs had developed into a definite addiction to heroin. She re-signed with Savoy in 1956, to little avail, and went on to cut sides for Federal and (in 1960) Warwick, which went largely ignored. Short on money, Little Esther worked in small nightclubs around the South, punctuated by periodic hospital stays in Lexington, KY, stemming from her addiction. In 1962, she was rediscovered while singing at a Houston club by future country star Kenny Rogers, who got her signed to his brother's Lenox label. Too old to be called Little Esther, she re-christened herself Esther Phillips, choosing her last name from a nearby Phillips gas station. Phillips recorded a country-soul reading of the soon-to-be standard "Release Me," which was released as a single late in the year. In the wake of Ray Charles' groundbreaking country-soul hit "I Can't Stop Loving You," "Release Me" was a smash, topping the R&B charts and hitting the Top Ten on both the pop and country charts. Back in the public eye, Phillips recorded a country-soul album of the same name, but Lenox went bankrupt in 1963.

Thanks to her recent success, Phillips was able to catch on with R&B giant Atlantic, which initially recorded her in a variety of musical settings to see what niche she might fill best. It was eventually decided to play up her more sophisticated side and accordingly, Phillips cut a blues-tinged album of jazz and pop standards; her string-laden remake of the Beatles song "And I Love Him" (naturally, with the gender changed) nearly made the R&B Top Ten in 1965 and the Beatles flew her to the U.K. for her first overseas performances. Encouraged, Atlantic pushed her into even jazzier territory for her next album, Esther Phillips Sings; however, it didn't generate much response and was somewhat eclipsed by her soul reading of Percy Sledge's "When a Woman Loves a Man" (again, with the gender changed), which made the R&B charts. Nonplussed, Atlantic returned to their former tactic of recording Phillips in as many different styles as possible, but none of the resulting singles really caught on and the label dropped her in late 1967.

With her addiction worsening, Phillips checked into a rehab facility; while undergoing treatment, she cut some sides for Roulette in 1969 and upon her release, she moved to Los Angeles and re-signed with Atlantic. A late-1969 live gig at Freddie Jett's Pied Piper club produced the album Burnin', which was acclaimed as one of the best, most cohesive works of Phillips' career. Despite that success, Atlantic still wanted her to record pop tunes with less grit and when their next attempts failed to catch on, Phillips was let go a second time. In 1971, she signed with producer Creed Taylor's Kudu label, a subsidiary of his hugely successful jazz fusion imprint CTI. Her label debut, From a Whisper to a Scream, was released in 1972 to strong sales and highly positive reviews, particularly for her performance of Gil Scott-Heron's wrenching heroin-addiction tale "Home Is Where the Hatred Is." Phillips recorded several more albums for Kudu over the next few years and enjoyed some of the most prolonged popularity of her career, performing in high-profile venues and numerous international jazz festivals. In 1975, she scored her biggest hit single since "Release Me" with a disco-fied update of Dinah Washington's "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes" (Top Ten R&B, Top 20 pop), and the accompanying album of the same name became her biggest seller yet.

In 1977, Phillips left Kudu for Mercury, landing a deal that promised her the greatest creative control of her career. She recorded four albums for the label, but none matched the commercial success of her Kudu output and after 1981's A Good Black Is Hard to Crack, she found herself without a record deal. Her last R&B chart single was 1983's "Turn Me Out," a one-off for the small Winning label; unfortunately, her health soon began to fail, the culmination of her previous years of addiction combined with a more recent flirtation with the bottle. Phillips died in Los Angeles on August 7, 1984, of liver and kidney failure. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Esther Phillips
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Esther Phillips
Birth name Esther Mae Jones
Also known as Little Esther Phillips
Born December 23, 1935(1935-12-23)
Origin Galveston, Texas, USA
Died August 7, 1984 (aged 48)
Carson, California, U.S.
Genres Pop
Country
Jazz
R&B
Soul
Occupations Vocalist
Years active 1950s – 1984
Labels Atlantic
Kudu
Mercury
Lenox

Esther Phillips (Born Esther Mae Jones, December 23, 1935 in Galveston, Texas; died August 7, 1984 in Carson, California) was an American singer. Phillips was one of the great female R&B vocalists [1], but she was also a versatile singer, performing pop, country, jazz, blues and soul music in her distinctive style.

Contents

Biography

Big Break

When Phillips was an adolescent, her parents divorced, and she was forced to divide her time between her father in Houston and her mother in the Watts area of Los Angeles. Because she was brought up singing in church, she was hesitant to enter a talent contest at a local blues club, but her sister insisted and Esther complied. A remarkably mature singer at age fourteen, she won the amateur talent contest in 1949 at the Barrelhouse Club owned by Johnny Otis. Otis was so impressed that he recorded her for Modern Records and added her to his traveling revue, the California Rhythm and Blues Caravan, billed as "Little Esther Phillips" (she reportedly took the surname from a gas station sign).[2]

Early career

Her first hit record was "Double Crossing Blues", recorded in 1950 for Savoy Records. After several hit records with Savoy, including her duet with Mel Walker on "Mistrusting Blues", which went to number one that year, as did "Cupid Boogie". Other Phillips records that made it onto the R&B charts in 1950 include "Misery" (number 9), "Deceivin' Blues" (number 4), "Wedding Boogie" (number 6), and "Faraway Blues" (number 6). Few female artists, R&B or otherwise, had ever enjoyed such incredible success in their debut year.[3] Phillips left Otis and the Savoy label at the end of 1950 and signed with Federal Records.

But just as quickly as the hits had started, the hits stopped. Although she cut more than thirty sides for Federal, only one, "Ring-a-Ding-Doo", charted; the song made it to number 8 in 1952. Not working with Otis was part of her problem; the other part was drugs. By the middle of the decade Phillips was chronically addicted to drugs.[4]

In 1954, she returned to Houston to live with her father to recuperate. Short on money, Little Esther worked in small nightclubs around the South, punctuated by periodic hospital stays in Lexington, Kentucky, stemming from her addiction. In 1962, Kenny Rogers re-discovered her while singing at a Houston club and got her signed to his brother Lelan’s Lenox label.

Comeback

Phillips ultimately got well enough to launch a comeback in 1962. Now called Esther Phillips instead of Little Esther, she recorded a country tune, "Release Me," with producer Bob Gans. This went to number 1 R&B and number 8 on the pop listings. After several other minor R&B hits on Lenox, she was signed by the fast-growing Atlantic Records. Her cover of the Beatles' song "And I Love Him" nearly made the R&B Top Ten in 1965 and the Beatles flew her to the U.K. for her first overseas performances.[5]

She had other hits in the 1960s on the label, but no more chart toppers, and she also waged another battle with heroin. With her addiction worsening, Phillips checked into a rehab facility. While undergoing treatment, she cut some sides for Roulette in 1969, mostly produced by Lelan Rogers. On her release, she moved back to Los Angeles and re-signed with the Atlantic label. A late-1969 live gig at Freddie Jett's Pied Piper club produced the album Burnin', which was acclaimed as one of the best, most cohesive works of Phillips' career, produced by King Curtis. She performed with the Johnny Otis Show at the legendary Monterey Jazz Festival in 1970.

The 1970s

One of her greatest post-1950s vocal triumphs was in 1972 with her first album for Kudu, a subsidiary of CTI Records run by established jazz producer Creed Taylor. The song penned by Gil Scott-Heron, "Home Is Where the Hatred Is" -- a haunting account of drug use — was lead track on "From a Whisper to a Scream" which went on to garner a Grammy nomination that year. When Phillips lost to the "Queen of Soul" Aretha Franklin, the soul diva presented the trophy to Phillips, saying she should have won it instead.[6]

Taylor continued to cut albums with her until in 1975, she scored her biggest hit single since "Release Me" with a disco-style update of Dinah Washington's "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes". It reached a high of a Top Twenty chart appearance in the U.S., and Top Ten in the UK Singles Chart.[7] On November 8, 1975 she performed the song on an episode of "NBC's Saturday Night" hosted by Candice Bergen. The accompanying album of the same name became her biggest seller yet, with arranger Joe Beck on guitar, Michael Brecker on tenor sax, David Sanborn on alto sax, and Randy Brecker on trumpet to Steve Khan on guitar and Don Grolnick on keyboards.

She continued to record and perform throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, completing a total of seven albums on Kudu and four with Mercury Records, for whom she signed in 1977. In 1983, she charted for the final time on a tiny independent label, Winning with "Turn Me Out," which reached #83 R&B.

Death

Ill health undermined this artist's undoubted potential. Phillips' long-term heroin dependency, combined with heavy drinking, led to her death from liver and kidney failure in Carson, California in 1984, at the age of 48. Her funeral services were conducted by the bandleader who had started her out back in 1949, the Rev. Johnny Otis.[8]

Awards and recognitions

Grammy history

  • Career Wins: 0
  • Career Nominations: 4[9]
Esther Phillips Grammy Award History
Year Category Title Genre Label Result
1970 Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance - Female "Set Me Free" R&B Atlantic Nominee
1972 Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance - Female "From a Whisper to a Scream" R&B Kudu/CTI Nominee
1973 Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance - Female "Alone Again (Naturally)" R&B Kudu/CTI Nominee
1975 Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance - Female "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes" R&B Kudu/CTI Nominee

Discography

Albums

Year Title Label Billboard Chart[10]
1951 Hollerin' and Screaming Yorkshire
1963 Release Me Lenox 46
1965 And I Love Him! Atlantic
1966 Esther Phillips Sings
The Country Side of Esther
1970 Live at Freddie Jett's Pied Piper
Burnin' (Live) 7
1972 From a Whisper to a Scream Kudu/CTI 16
Alone Again (Naturally) Kudu/CTI 15
1974 Black-Eyed Blues 15
1975 Performance 27
Esther Phillips and Joe Beck 3
What a Diff'rence a Day Makes Kudu/CTI 13
1976 Capricorn Princess Kudu/CTI 23
Confessin' the Blues Atlantic 26
For All We Know Kudu/CTI 32
1977 You've Come a Long Way, Baby Mercury
1978 All About Esther
1979 Here's Esther, Are You Ready 47
1981 Good Black Is Hard to Crack
1992 A Way to Say Goodbye Muse

Singles

Year Title Billboard Pop Chart[11]
1962 "Release Me" 8
1963 "I Really Don't Want To Know" 61
1965 "And I Love Him" 54
1966 "When a Woman Loves a Man" 73
1972 "Home Is Where the Hatred Is"
1975 "One Night Afair"
"Too Late to Worry, Too Blue to Cry"
"What a Diff'rence a Day Makes" 20

Filmography

Television

References

  1. ^ Santelli, Robert The Big Book of Blues: A Biographical Encyclopedia, Penguin Books, page 376, (2001) - ISBN 0140159398
  2. ^ Freeland, David. Ladies of Soul, University Press of Mississippi, page xxiii, (2001) - ISBN 1578063310
  3. ^ Santelli, Robert. The Big Book of Blues: A Biographical Encyclopedia, page 376
  4. ^ Larkin, Colin. The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Guinness, page 3246, (1995) - ISBN 1561591769
  5. ^ Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, Ringo Starr. The Beatles Anthology By Beatles, Chronicle Books, page 196, (2000) - ISBN 0811826848
  6. ^ O'Neal, Jim. The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine, Routledge, page 376, (2002) - ISBN 0415936535
  7. ^ Larkin, Colin. The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Guinness, page 3247
  8. ^ O'Neal, Jim. The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine, page 376
  9. ^ Grammy Award History for Esther Phillips
  10. ^ Billboard Albums
  11. ^ Billboard Chart Singles
  12. ^ The Music of Lennon & McCartney (1965)
  13. ^ Television Appearances

External links


 
 
Learn More
Candice Bergen: Saturday Night Live (TV Episode) (1975 Comedy TV Episode)
And I Love Him!/Esther Phillips Sings (1999 Album by Esther Phillips)
It's a Blues Thing (1995 Album by Ray Charles)

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