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Loleatta Holloway

 
Artist: Loleatta Holloway
  • Born: 1946, Chicago, IL
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Runaway: The Best of Loleatta Holloway," "Greatest Hits," "Loleatta"
  • Representative Songs: "Love Sensation," "Hit and Run," "Runaway"

Biography

It may surprise some that perennial dance diva Loleatta Holloway's highest charting solo record was a soulful ballad, "Cry to Me." Still, Holloway is best known for dancefloor workouts like "Love Sensation," "Hit and Run," and "Run Away." Born in Chicago in 1946, Holloway developed her throaty, full-bodied vocal style and dramatic presentation while singing with her mother in the gospel group, the Holloway Community Singers. She later began taking acting classes. As a teenager, she joined classic gospel group the Caravans led by Albertina Walker who recorded for Savoy Records. In the early '70s, she joined the Chicago cast of the musical Don't Bother Me I Can't Cope. Around this time, she met her future producer, manager, and husband Floyd Smith. Smith produced a cover of Gene Chandler's 1963/1965 hit "Rainbow '71" for his Apache label. Atlanta businessman Michael Thevis, who had just started GRC (General Recording Corporation), signed Holloway to his Aware label. The small double-sided hit "Our Love" (number 43 R&B)/"Mother of Shame" (number 63 R&B) charted during the summer of 1973. The tunes were included on her debut album, Loleatta (1973). "Cry to Me," the title track of her second album, gave Holloway her highest charting solo single on the R&B and pop charts; written by master songwriter Sam Dees, it hit number ten R&B in early 1975.

While with GRC, Holloway met promotion director Gus Redmond whom she would later work with at Salsoul Records. In 1976, GRC went out of business and Holloway signed with Norman Harris' Salsoul-distributed label, Gold Mind Records. Guitarist/arranger/songwriter/producer Harris was a veteran of the Philly soul scene, having been a member of MFSB, the studio band for Gamble & Huff's Philadelphia International Records. He'd joined with fellow MFSB vets bassist Ron Baker and drummer Earl Young to form Baker-Harris-Young Productions (the Trammps, First Choice, Double Exposure, Love Committee, Eddie Holman). Oddly enough (possibly the label was hedging their bets), dance-oriented Gold Mind's first release on Holloway was the Dees ballad "Worn Out Broken Heart." The catchy Harris-produced up-tempo flip side "Dreamin'" reached number 72 pop and was popular in discos. Her first Gold Mind LP Loleatta (released March 1977) was both produced in Chicago by Floyd Smith and in Philadelphia by Baker-Harris-Young. In addition to "Worn Out Broken Heart," the album included "Hit and Run," which peaked at number 56 R&B. The two elongated alternate jam session takes of "Hit and Run" are disco classics. "Run Away," co-written by Vincent Montana, Jr., was released as the Salsoul Orchestra featuring Loleatta Holloway and was Holloway's next chart single (number 89 R&B in late 1977). After Gold Mind folded, all of their acts were transferred to Salsoul. Her first Salsoul LP, Queen of the Night (September 1978), yielded the disco hits "Catch Me on the Rebound," "Mama Don't, Papa Won't," and "I May Not Be There When You Want Me." The LP also spawned her second highest charting single on the R&B charts, the duet ballad "Only You" by Loleatta Holloway and Bunny Sigler, which hit number 11 R&B in late summer 1978. Her next album, Loleatta Holloway (September 1979), included the disco hits "All About the Papers," "That's What You Said" (another Holloway/Sigler duet), "The Greatest Performance of My Life," and the deep-soul ballad "There Must Be a Reason." Around 1979, Holloway contributed vocals to "Relight My Fire," a massive disco hit for Dan Hartman ("Instant Replay," "I Can Dream About You"). Hartman produced what became the singer's signature tune, "Love Sensation," which caused quite a sensation on the disco charts. The song was also the title of Holloway's 1980 LP that spawned the disco hits "Dance What Cha Wanna" and "Short End of the Stick." Holloway was reunited with the Salsoul Orchestra on a track written and produced by Patrick Adams (Inner Life, Phreek), "Seconds." Though she never had a pop hit in the U.S., Holloway had a huge following in Europe and Japan. In the mid-'80s, Salsoul ceased operations and Holloway was without a recording contract. Shortly after producing a cover of Rufus & Chaka Khan's "Sweet Thing" for Holloway, Floyd Smith died in 1984. That same year, the singer signed with Streetwise Records, a label owned by producer Arthur Baker (Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force). The single "Crash Goes Love" b/w "Sweet Thing" peaked at number 86 R&B in late summer 1984. Throughout the '80s and '90s, Holloway recorded for a succession of labels: DJ International, Saturday, Warlock, and Select, among others. During the '90s, audio sampling became in vogue and snippets of Holloway's vocals can been heard on numerous dance records from around the world. This practice has led to some litigation (Blackbox's "Ride on Time"). Holloway's fortunes took a turn for the better when Mark Wahlberg, younger brother of New Kids on the Block's Donnie Wahlberg, sampled "Love Sensation" for his million-selling 1991 hit. "Good Vibrations" by Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch featuring Loleatta Holloway hit number one pop during the fall of that year. The disco diva was in more demand than ever, riding the momentum of a number one pop hit. Holloway occasionally tours and resides in Chicago. ~ Ed Hogan, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Loleatta Holloway
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Loleatta Holloway
Birth name Loleatta Holloway
Born November 5, 1946 (1946-11-05) (age 62)
Origin Chicago, Illinois United States
Genres Soul, Disco, Dance
Occupations Singer
Years active 1971-present
Labels Gold Mind, Salsoul Records
Associated acts Albertina Walker,
The Caravans
Inner Life
Salsoul Orchestra
Joe Bataan
Black Box
Dorothy Norwood
Website Official Myspace Site

Loleatta Holloway (born November 5, 1946, Chicago, Illinois) is an American singer, mainly known for disco songs such as "Hit and Run" and "Love Sensation" (both of which have been greatly sampled).

Contents

Career

Early career

She began gospel singing with her mother in the Holloway Community Singers and has recorded with the Queen of Gospel Albertina Walker in The Caravans gospel group. Holloway was also a cast member of the Chicago troupe of Don't Bother Me; I Can't Cope. Around this time, she met her future producer, manager, and husband Floyd Smith and recorded "Rainbow '71" in 1971, a Curtis Mayfield song Gene Chandler had recorded in 1963. It was initially released on the tiny Apache label, but shortly thereafter got picked up for national distribution by Galaxy Records[1].

1970s

In 1971, Holloway signed a recording contract with the Atlanta-based soul music label Aware, owned by Michael Thevis. Loleatta recorded two albums for this Hotlanta Sound label, both produced by Floyd Smith: Loleatta (1973) and Cry to me (1975). Holloway later married Smith.

In 1976, Aware went out of business and Norman Harris signed Loleatta for his Gold Mind label, a subsidiary label of the famous New York-based SalSoul Records. She began singing on disco productions, and was contributed vocals to some classics like Love Sensation and Dan Hartman's Relight My Fire. She placed eighteen songs on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, including four Number ones.

1980s to the present

In the early 1980s, she had another dance hit with "Crash Goes Love" (#5 on the U.S. Dance chart, #86 on the US R&B Chart) before her vocals from "Love Sensation" were used in the UK number one hit, "Ride On Time" by Black Box.[2] Holloway, however, was uncredited for her powerful vocals, and both Holloway and her attorneys successfully launched a press-attack, and, subsequently, sued Black Box, leading to an undisclosed court settlement in Holloway's favor. In 1992 she also had a hit with dance band Cappella. There she appeared as Cappella featuring Lolleatta Holloway, of which the single called "Take Me Away" (UK #25). Holloway's fortunes dramatically improved, however, when she had her first US number-one hit when Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch featured her vocals in the chart topping song Good Vibrations (1991). Holloway also performed with Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch to promote the single, and she received full vocal credit and a share of the royalties. Despite the Black Box copyright infringements, both "Ride On Time" and "Good Vibrations" helped elevate Holloway to legendary status in the dance music community.

More recent dance chart entries include "What Goes Around Comes Around" (GTS featuring Loleatta Holloway) in 2000 and "Relight My Fire" (credited to Martin featuring Loleatta Holloway), which hit #5 in 2003. While not a single, "Like a Prayer", a Madonna cover, was a standout track on a Madonna tribute album, Virgin Voices.

Her latest hit "Love Sensation '06" peaked at #22 in the Dutch Top 40[3] and reached #37 on the UK Singles Chart as well as #49 in Australia.

Today, Holloway resides in Chicago, and occasionally tours, most recently Loleatta performed with Take That singing "Relight My Fire" for the bands 2009 "Take That Present: The Circus Live" tour.

Whitney Houston sampled Holloway's 1976 track, "We're Getting Stronger", for her hit single, "Million Dollar Bill", in 2009.

Albums

  • Loleatta (Aware 1973)
  • Cry To Me (Aware 1975)
  • Loleatta (Gold Mind 1976)
  • Queen Of The Night (Gold Mind 1978)
  • Loleatta Holloway (Gold Mind 1979)
  • Love Sensation (Gold Mind 1980)
  • Greatest Hits (Sony, 1996)
  • Loleatta Holloway: The Anthology (SalSoul, 2005)

Songs

  • "Cry To Me" (#10 R&B, #68, US Billboard Hot 100)
  • "Worn Out Broken Heart" (#25 R&B)
  • "Only You" with Bunny Sigler (#87 US, Billboard Hot 100, #11 US R&B)
  • "Love Sensation" (#1 US Dance, #5 UK) (A Tom Moulton mix)
  • "Vertigo / Relight My Fire" (with Dan Hartman)
  • "Dreamin'" (US #72), (US Dance #3)
  • "Hit and Run" (#3 US Dance), (#56 US R&B)
  • "Catch Me on the Rebound" (#16 US Dance)
  • "Crash Goes Love" (#5 US Dance), (#86 US R&B) (Latin freestyle music classic)
  • Black Box - "Ride On Time" (#1 UK; contains vocal samples from "Love Sensation" - Holloway's vocals are also the only vocals on the track; also Britain's best selling single of 1989)
  • Gotta Be #1 (#2, US Dance)
  • Marky Mark (aka Mark Wahlberg) & The Funky Bunch - "Good Vibrations" (#1 US, #14 UK; prominently features Holloway's vocals/sampling from "Love Sensation." This was Holloway's only US #1 on the Billboard Hot 100)
  • "Dreamin'" (remix) (#1, US Dance)
  • "What Goes Around Comes Around" GTS featuring Loleatta Holloway
  • "Don't Leave Me This Way - 2007" (2007 Deep Influence Mix)

See also

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Loleatta Holloway" Read more

 

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