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Gwen Guthrie

 

Singer, songwriter

During her nearly quarter-century career in music, Gwen Guthrie scored a series of R&B and dance-chart singles distinguished by their potent grooves and well-crafted lyrics. Her best-known song, "Ain’t Nothing Goin’ On But The Rent," brought her to a large pop audience in the United States for the first time. Known for her songwriting flair and independent spirit, she co-wrote most of her hits and managed to combine both American and Jamaican elements in her music. At the time of her passing at age 48 in February of 1999, she was remembered by her peers as a strong-willed artist who contributed much to the contemporary R&B scene.

Born in Newark, New Jersey, Guthrie began piano lessons at age eight and sang in the choir of the Mount Zion Baptist Church. In high school, she was a member of the Ebonettes, an all-girl vocal quartet that sported matching gowns and elbow-length gloves. She also performed with the Matchmakers alongside future Cameo lead singer Larry Blackmon. She went on to graduate from Newark State College and took a position teaching first grade in the New York City school system. During this time, she helped to establish herself in the music business by writing and singing commercial jingles. "Doing commercials is good and bad," she told writer Brian Chin in an interview for Billboard years later. "Financially, it’s good. But you lose your imagination…. Later, you find it’s all you can do. Now, I have my imagination back, and I don’t want to lose it again."

Guthrie’s career took a major leap forward when she sang background vocals on Aretha Franklin’s 1974 hit "I’m In Love." Further singing assignments with Roberta Flack, Isaac Hayes and other artists followed. The mid-1970s also saw her active as a songwriter, composing Ben E. King’s 1975 number one R&B single "Supernatural Thing." Around this time, CBS Records signed her as an artist, but disagreements between Guthrie and the label led to the cancellation of her album’s release.

In 1978, she relocated to Jamaica and became involved with some of the island’s top reggae musicians. She enjoyed a long working relationship with Jamaican singer/songwriter Peter Tosh, contributing vocals to his Bush Doctor, Mystic Man and Wanted Dread And Alive albums. The last-named album included a Tosh/Guthrie duet, "Nothing But Love." It was through Tosh that Guthrie met the famous reggae session duo of drummer Sly Dunbar and bassist Robbie Shakespeare, who asked her to sing lead vocals on an album they were recording for Island Records. The album was eventually released by Island in 1982 as Guthrie’s self-titled solo debut. Combining American R&B with Jamaican production touches, Gwen Guthrie earned both pop and R&B airplay

with the songs "It Should Have Been You" and "For You (With A Melody Too)."

Portrait, a second album recorded with Dunbar and Shakespeare, followed in 1983, yielding the singles "Hopscotch" and "You’re The One." A number of Guthrie’s most dance-oriented tracks were gathered together on the 1983 EP Padlock, which included such danceclub hits as "Seventh Heaven," "Peanut Butter" and the title number. The recordings found on Padloc were remixed by Larry Levan, a DJ at the popular Paradise Garage club in New York. Guthrie’s music was such a favorite at that venue that she became known as the "First Lady of Paradise Garage."

During the recording of her 1985 album Just For You, Guthrie had a falling out with Island president Chris Blackwell over creative control. The album failed to do as well as her two previous ones, and she left the label after its release. Looking back a year later in a Musician interview with Havelock Nelson, she claimed that Black-well "tried to hold me back, not letting me realize my full potential. I don’t believe in that. That’s why I left. Slavery is over, honey."

Guthrie took a break from recording after the birth of her second child, Iyana. Signing with Polydor Records, she returned to record-making in 1986 with Good To Go Lover. Co-producing the album with David "Pic" Conley of the R&B group Surface, she was able to build upon her reggae and dance music base to reach a broader pop audience. The breakthrough track from Good To Go Lover was "Ain’t Nothin’ Goin’ On But The Rent," a sarcastic look at the financial aspects of male/female relations. Released as the album’s first single, it became a number one R&B. It also reached number 46 on the pop charts as well. The song was inspired by a phrase her grandfather used to say, Guthrie told authors Adam White and Fred Bronson in an interview for The Billboard Book of Number One Rhythm & Blues Hits. She added that "the two biggest arguments in relationships are usually money and children. So I think people just related to it. And it had a good beat…. I was just saying it takes two. That both parties should be productive."

Though "Ain’t Nothin’ Goin’ On But The Rent" became her only major pop hit, Guthrie enjoyed further dance club success with her remake of the Beatles’ "Ticket To Ride" in 1988, and ventured back into reggae with "Friends And Lovers," a duet with singer Boris Gardner. Her work also appeared on soundtracks for such 1980s films Jumpin’ Jack Flash and Disorderlies. In 1990, she moved in a more mainstream R&B direction with her debut album for Reprise, Hot Times. Though "Miss My Love" and the album’s title track failed to do well as singles, she bounced back with the hit "Sweet Bitter Love." In 1993, she topped many of the international reggae charts with a Jamaican-produced single, "Girlfriend’s Boyfriend."

Guthrie’s career was sadly cut short when she was diagnosed with cancer in 1998. She passed away on Feburary 4, 1999 in Orange, New Jersey. Among those who recalled her with affection and respect was singer/producer Isaac Hayes, who told Billboards Aliya S. King that "with her passing, a definite void has been placed in many of our lives. She loved this business, and she loved performing. When R&B music became mostly crossovers, Gwen remained a true R&B artist."

Selected discography
Gwen Guthrie, Island, 1982.
Portrait, Island, 1983.
Just For You, Island, 1985.
Good To Go Lover, Polygram, 1986.
Hot Times, Reprise, 1990.

Sources
Books
Larkin, Colin, editor, The Encyclopedia Of Popular Music, Muze, 1998.
White, Adam and Bronson, Fred, The Billboard Book Of Number One Rhythm & Blues Hits, Billboard Books, 1993.


Periodicals
Billboard, August 23, 1986; January 5, 1991; February 20, 1999.
Musician, October 1986.

Online
Garage Net Spotlight, http://www.garagenet.ndirect.co.uk/spotfebmar99 (June 9, 1999).
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  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues

Biography

Gwen Guthrie is best known for her number one R&B single "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent," a popular self-written bouncer. A prolific songwriter and a good pianist, she also penned "Supernatural Thing" for Ben E. King and "This Time I'll Be Sweeter" for Martha Reeves, which was later popularized by Angela Bofil and Issac Hayes. In all, Guthrie logged approximately 50 compositions, and many thought Guthrie and songwriting partner Patrick Grant had the potential to become another Ashford & Simpson.

Born in Newark, NJ, in 1950, Guthrie started singing in high school with a female quartet called the Ebonettes. (Another of its members, Brenda White King, pursued music like Guthrie and became an in-demand session singer.) Guthrie sang lead for a group (East Coast Band) formed by Larry Blackmon (later of Cameo) in New York, but got her big break when she was asked to do a background session for Aretha Franklin, the number one R&B hit "I'm in Love," from 1974. Six months later, Guthrie signed as a staff writer with Bert Coteaux Productions and co-wrote "Love Don't Go Through No Changes," the first hit for Sister Sledge, and many others with Grant. The collaboration didn't last long, however.

Guthrie continued to write with a variety of partners, and supplied backing vocals to many recording sessions. Working with Peter Tosh in the late '70s, Guthrie befriended reggae stars Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, who invited her to Nassau to record vocals for an album they were producing. Hearing her unique voice in the studio, Island Records founder Chris Blackwell inked her to a contract, and the Dunbar/Shakespeare project, assisted by David Conley of Surface, became her first solo release, a self-titled LP. She did score a dancefloor hit in the '80s in the UK with "It Should Have Been You," a ballad from the first album. Her second LP, Portrait, released in 1983, followed the same formula: simplistic dance tracks and trite grooves. Album number three, Good to Go Lover, dropped in 1986, and spawned her chart-topper "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on but the Rent," plus the torching ballad "You Touched My Life." On Lifeline (1988), Guthrie was more involved in the writing and production. Hot Times was Guthrie's final LP release, hitting the streets in 1990. Like the previous LP, she wrote nearly everything, except for a moving remake of Stephanie Mills' "Never Knew Love Like This Before." Guthrie also had two LP releases: Just for You (1985) and Ticket to Ride (1988) on Fourth & Broadway Records. Guthrie died on February 4, 1999, of uterine cancer in Orange, NJ. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi
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Gwen Guthrie

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Gwen Guthrie

Gwen Guthrie
Background information
Born July 9, 1950(1950-07-09)
Okemah, Oklahoma, United States
Died February 3, 1999(1999-02-03) (aged 48)
Orange, New Jersey, United States
Genres Contemporary R&B[1]
Soul[1]
Post-disco[1]
Dance-pop
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Years active 1974–1999

Gwen Guthrie (July 9, 1950 – February 3, 1999) was an American singer-songwriter, who also sang backing vocals for Aretha Franklin, Billy Joel, Stevie Wonder, and Madonna, among others, and who wrote songs made famous by Ben E. King, and Roberta Flack.

Contents

Life and career

Guthrie was born in Okemah, Oklahoma and raised in Newark, New Jersey.[2] In school, she studied classical music, and her father began teaching her piano when she was eight years old. By the early 1970s, she had joined vocal groups such as the Ebonettes and the Matchmakers, meanwhile working as an elementary school teacher. When a backup singer scheduled to sing on Aretha Franklin's 1974 single "I'm in Love" fell ill, Guthrie took the vocalist's place beside Cissy Houston; thus Guthrie would happily state that her career on record began "at the top".

Guthrie soon began moonlighting as a singer of commercial jingles, sometimes with her friend Valerie Simpson (of the Ashford & Simpson fame). A songwriting partnership with her then boyfriend, trombonist/bassist Haras Fyre (professionally known as "Patrick Grant") resulted in Ben E. King's comeback single, "Supernatural Thing", and "This Time I'll Be Sweeter", covered by numerous artists. Together they wrote seven tracks on the Sister Sledge's 1975 album Circle of Love: "Cross My Heart", "Protect Our Love", "Love Don't You Go Through No Changes on Me", "Don't You Miss Him Now", "Pain Reliever", "You're Much Better Off Loving Me", and "Fireman". She was also the writer of Roberta Flack's "God Don't Like Ugly".

As Guthrie's solo career developed, she worked extensively with Sly and Robbie on dub-influenced club cuts, and began racking up dance hits. She was dubbed "The First Lady of the Paradise Garage" as several of her songs became anthems at the venue, helped by the frequent and dynamic performances she gave there. She soon teamed musically with famed Paradise Garage DJ Larry Levan, and recorded her first major landmark hit, "Padlock" in 1983 with the Compass Point All Stars in Nassau, Bahamas which became a club and radio hit two years later.

Guthrie is probably best known for her 1986 dance anthem "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent", a self-written and -produced track which garnered some controversy for its misandric and materialistic lyrics such as: "You've got to have a j-o-b if you want to be with me/No romance without finance". A literal reading suggests a man only require the finances to make a relationship work. However, Guthrie's lyrics intend to motivate her partner into being responsible for maintaining equality and financial stability.

"Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent" was later sampled by numerous dance and hip hop artists, notably by Foxy Brown in her 1998 song "JOB" featuring Mýa and by Utah Saints for the original version of their hit "What Can You Do for Me". The song is referenced in the Eddie Murphy monologue "No Romance Without Finance", in his Eddie Murphy Raw concert and film (also available on DVD). Guthrie also had a hit in 1986 with a cover of "(They Long to Be) Close to You", which reached number twenty-five on the UK Singles Chart the same year.[3]

Her single "Can't Love You Tonight" boldly addressed AIDS at a time when the disease was a taboo subject. Guthrie was an ally to the gay community, and to people with AIDS long before the masses caught up. Proceeds from the single went to the AIDS Coalition.

Other club hits of hers include the Compass Point All Stars-produced "Seventh Heaven", "Peanut Butter", and "Peek-a-Boo". "Padlock" was later covered by M People, who included it on their 1995 album Bizarre Fruit, featuring vocalist Heather Small.

Death

Guthrie died of uterine cancer on February 3, 1999, at the age of 48, and was interred in Fairmount Cemetery in Newark, New Jersey.[4]

Discography

Albums

  • 1973: East Coast (Encounter)
  • 1982: Gwen Guthrie (Island) - R&B #28
  • 1983: Portrait (Island)
  • 1983: Padlock (Garage Records/Island) - R&B #47
  • 1985: Just for You (4th & Broadway/Island) - R&B #55
  • 1986: Good to Go Lover (Polydor) - US #89, R&B #20, UK #42[3]
  • 1987: Ticket to Ride (4th & Broadway/Island)
  • 1988: Lifeline (Warner Brothers)
  • 1990: Hot Times (Reprise/Warner Brothers)
  • 1999: Ultimate Collection (Hip-O)

Singles

  • 1979: "Never (Gonna Let You Go)" (Charme featuring Gwen Guthrie)
  • 1981: "Nothing But Love" (with Peter Tosh) - R&B #43
  • 1982: "It Should Have Been You" - R&B #27
  • 1982: "Peek-a-Boo"
  • 1982: "For You (With a Melody Too)"
  • 1983: "Peanut Butter" - R&B #83
  • 1983: "Hopscotch"
  • 1984: "Love in Moderation" - US #110, R&B #17
  • 1985: "Say Yeah" (with The Limit)
  • 1985: "Just for You" - R&B #53
  • 1985: "Padlock" (Larry Levan Remix) - US #102, R&B #25
  • 1985: "Peanut Butter" (Larry Levan Remix) - R&B #75
  • 1986: "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent" - US #42, R&B #1, UK #5
  • 1986: "Seventh Heaven" - UK #85
  • 1986: "Outside in the Rain" - R&B #51
  • 1986: "(They Long to Be) Close to You" - R&B #69, UK #25
  • 1986: "You Touched My Life" - BR #10
  • 1987: "Good to Go Lover" / "Outside in the Rain" - UK #37
  • 1987: "Family Affair" (Larry Levan Remix)
  • 1987: "Ticket to Ride"
  • 1987: "Friends and Lovers" (with Boris Gardiner) - UK #97
  • 1988: "Can't Love You Tonight" - UK #79, R&B #83
  • 1988: "Rockin' Chair"
  • 1990: "Miss My Love"
  • 1990: "Say It Isn't So"
  • 1991: "Sweet Bitter Love" - R&B #74
  • 1992: "Eyes (You Never Really Cared)" - UK #95
  • 1993: "Ain't Nothin' Goin' on But the Rent" (Remix) - UK #42
  • 1993: "This Christmas Eve"
  • 1994: "What a Life" (Joey Negro featuring Gwen Guthrie)

[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Gwen Guthrie on AMG". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/gwen-guthrie-p4417. Retrieved 2011-08-09. 
  2. ^ Gwen Guthrie Page in Fuller Up The Dead Musician Directory
  3. ^ a b c Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 238. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  4. ^ Gwen Guthrie, Find a Grave. Accessed August 23, 2007.

External links


 
 
Related topics:
Search for the Hero [US Single] (1995 Album by M People)
Free to Be, Vol. 2 (1996 Album by Various Artists)
Brian Jackson (Rhythm & Blues Artist, '70s)

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