Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Terry Callier

 
Artist: Terry Callier
See Terry Callier Lyrics
  • Born: May 24, 1945, Chicago, IL
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "What Color Is Love," "I Just Can't Help Myself," "Essential: The Very Best of Terry Callier"
  • Representative Songs: "Ordinary Joe," "I Don't Want to See Myself (W," "Dancing Girl"

Biography

For far too long, folk-jazz mystic Terry Callier was the exclusive province of a fierce but small cult following; a singer/songwriter whose cathartic, deeply spiritual music defied simple genre categorization, he went all but unknown for decades, finally beginning to earn the recognition long due him after his rediscovery during the early '90s. Born in Chicago's North Side -- also home to Curtis Mayfield, Jerry Butler, and Ramsey Lewis -- and raised in the area of the notorious Cabrini Green housing projects, Callier began studying the piano at the age of three, writing his first songs at the age of 11, and regularly singing in doo wop groups throughout his formative years. While attending college, he learned to play guitar, eventually setting up residency at a Chicago coffeehouse dubbed the Fickle Pickle and in time coming to the attention of Chess Records arranger Charles Stepney, who produced Callier's debut single "Look at Me Now" in 1962.

In 1964, Callier met Prestige label producer Samuel Charters, and a year later they entered the studio to record his full-length bow The New Folk Sound of Terry Callier; upon completion of the session, however, Charters traveled to Mexico with the master tapes in tow, and the album went unreleased before finally appearing to little fanfare in 1968. Undaunted, Callier remained a fixture of the Windy City club scene, and in 1970 he and partner Larry Wade signed on with his boyhood friend Jerry Butler's Chicago Songwriters Workshop. There they composed material for local labels including Chess and Cadet, most notably authoring the Dells' 1972 smash "The Love We Had Stays on My Mind." The song's success again teamed Callier with Stepney, now a producer at Cadet, and yielded 1973's Occasional Rain, a beautiful fusion of folk and jazz textures which laid the groundwork for the sound further explored on the following year's What Color Is Love?

Despite earning strong critical notices and building up a devoted fan base throughout much of urban America, Callier failed to break through commercially, and after 1975's I Just Can't Help Myself he was dropped by Cadet; in 1976, he also suffered another setback when Butler closed the Songwriters Workshop. Upon signing to Elektra's Jazz Fusion imprint at the behest of label head Don Mizell, Callier resurfaced in 1978 with the lushly orchestrated Fire on Ice; with the follow-up, 1979's Turn You to Love, he finally cracked the pop charts with the single "Sign of the Times," best known as the longtime theme for legendary WBLS-FM disc jockey Frankie Crocker. He even appeared at the Montreux Jazz Festival. However, when Mizell exited Elektra, Callier was quickly dropped from his contract; after a few more years of diligent touring, he largely disappeared from music around during the early '80s; a single parent, he instead accepted a job as a computer programmer, returning to college during the evenings to pursue a degree in sociology.

Despite essentially retiring from performing, Callier continued composing songs, and in 1991 he received a surprise telephone call from fan Eddie Pillar, the head of the U.K. label Acid Jazz. Pillar sought permission to re-release Callier's little-known, self-funded single from 1983, "I Don't Want to See Myself (Without You)"; seemingly overnight, the record became a massive success on the British club circuit, and the singer was soon flown to Britain for a pair of enormously well-received club dates. In the coming months, more gigs followed on both sides of the Atlantic, and in 1996, Callier even recorded a live LP, TC in DC. In 1997, he teamed with British singer Beth Orton, another of his most vocal supporters, to record a pair of tracks for her superb EP Best Bit; the following year, Callier also released his Verve Forecast debut Timepeace, his first major-label effort in close to two decades. Lifetime followed in 1999, and two years later came Alive, recorded live at London's Jazz Cafe. Callier returned in 2002 with Speak Your Peace and 2005 with Lookin' Out. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Terry Callier
Top
Terry Callier

Background information
Born May 24, 1945 (1945-05-24) (age 64)
Chicago, U.S.
Genre(s) Folk, Jazz, Soul
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, computer programmer
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, piano
Years active 1962-1983, 1990s-00s

Terry Callier (born May 24, 1945, Chicago, Illinois) is an American jazz, soul and folk guitarist and singer-songwriter.

Contents

Biography

Callier, a childhood friend of Curtis Mayfield, began recording in 1963 but never reached stardom despite a series of regional hits in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1983, he gained custody of his 12-year-old daughter Sundiata and decided to retire from music to look for a steadier income. He took classes in computer programming and landed a job at the University of Chicago in 1984.

He reemerged from obscurity when British DJs discovered his old recordings and began to play his songs in clubs in the late 1980s. Acid Jazz Records head Eddie Piller brought Callier to play clubs in Britain beginning in 1991 and he began to make regular trips to play gigs during his vacation time from work.

In the late 90s Callier began his comeback to recorded music, contributing to Beth Orton's Best Bit EP in 1997 and releasing the album Timepeace in 1998, which won the United Nations' Time For Peace award for outstanding artistic achievement contributing to world peace. Curiously, his colleagues at the University of Chicago never learned of Callier's life as a musician, but after the award the news of his secret life became widely known and subsequently led to his firing.[1]

Callier today is continuing his recording career having currently released five albums since Timepeace.

May 2009 saw his album Hidden Conversations featuring Massive Attack released on Mr Bongo records.

Discography

Studio albums

  • The New Folk Sound of Terry Callier (1964)
  • Occasional Rain (1972)
  • What Color Is Love (1973)
  • I Just Can't Help Myself (1974)
  • Fire On Ice (1977)
  • Turn You To Love (1978)
  • TC in DC (recorded live in Washington D.C. 1982) (1996)
  • Timepeace (1998) #92 UK
  • Lifetime (1999) #96 UK
  • Live at Mother Blues (1964) (2000)
  • Alive With Terry Callier (2001)
  • Speak Your Peace (2002) #156 UK
  • Total Recall (remixes) (2003)
  • Lookin' Out (2004)
  • Welcome Home (Live) (2008)
  • Hidden Conversations (2009)

Compilations

  • The Best Of Terry Callier on Cadet (1991)
  • Essential - The Very Best Of Terry Callier (1998) #193 UK
  • First Light (1998)
  • As We Travel (Harmless Records Compilation) (2002)
  • Life Lessons (40 Years and Running, Double CD) (2006)

DVD/video

  • Terry Callier - Live in Berlin (Universal Music 2005) Prod.: Modzilla Films/Beatrice Tillmann

Appearances

References

  1. ^ Hodgkinson

External links


 
 
Learn More
Terry Callier: Live in Berlin (Music Film)
Essential: The Very Best of Terry Callier (1998 Album by Terry Callier)
Fred Jackson, Jr. (Rock Artist, '70s-2000s)

Who is Terry From Hatchet? Read answer...
Is terry a cat? Read answer...
Who is Terry Bradshaw? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Is Frances Calliers A Commedian?
How tall is Frances Callier?
What is 'a terris'?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

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 "Terry Callier" Read more

 

Mentioned in