Friday, 25 April 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " SHIRLEY BROWN " IS AN AMERICAN SOUL SINGER, BEST KNOWN FOR HER MILLION SELLING SINGLE " WOMAN TO WOMAN " WHICH WAS NOMINATED FOR A GRAMMY AWARD IN 1975 : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                           BLACK            SOCIAL          HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                             Shirley Brown (born January 6, 1947, West Memphis, Arkansas) is an American soul singer, best known for her million-selling single"Woman to Woman" which was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1975.

Woman to Woman

Brown was born in West Memphis, but was raised in Madison, Illinois, where she started singing in church when she was nine years old. Early experience singing gospel gave her a powerful but expressive voice likened to Aretha Franklin.[1] Albert King discovered her at age 14, singing in the Harlem Club in Brooklyn, Illinois. Young Shirley went on the road with King for nine years. While King made sure she had a tutor, Brown often cut her classes to work with the band.[1][2][3]
By 1972, Shirley was living in East St. Louis, Illinois, where she made her first record for the Abet label called, "I Ain't Gonna Tell" and "Love Built on a Strong Foundation".[3][4]Bandleader Oliver Sain produced the record; Sain worked with King on his first hit record ten years earlier.[1] By 1974, King recommended Brown to Stax Records in Memphis, Tennessee, where he had been one of the label's stars for some time.[1]
Her 1974 hit, "Woman to Woman" spent two weeks at #1 in the Billboard R&B chart[5] and climbed to #22 in the Billboard Hot 100. It sold over one million copies by December 1974, and was awarded a gold disc.[6] It was to prove to be Stax's final major hit record,[5] (the song was later covered by Barbara Mandrell in 1978 and became a top-five country hit).
A successful debut albumWoman to Woman, was released by Stax on their Truth label,[7] but by 1975, the company was struggling financially and also facing litigation. A follow-up single, "It Ain't No Fun" was only a moderate success, and Stax closed soon afterwards.[5][8]
Her signing to Arista Records in 1977 resulted in the album Shirley Brownproduced by the former Stax owner Jim Stewart and writer-producer Bettye Crutcher, who provided most of the songs. These included "Blessed Is The Woman" which reached #14 R&B (#102 pop).[5][9][10]
Brown continued to record for several labels since then, including Fantasy, on the re-formed Stax label, and Sound Town.[10] She has been with the Mississippi based blues and soul label, Malaco Records since 1989.[11] She remains a popular live performer, mainly in southern states of the US, without having found the recording success of her earlier years.[5][12]

Discography

Albums

YearTitleUnited States R&BUS Pop
1975Woman to Woman1198
1979For the Real Feeling--
1984Intimate Storm--
1989Fire & Ice66-
1991Timeless63-
1995Diva of Soul67-
2009Unleashed-

Singles

YearTitleUnited States R&BUS PopAlbum
1974"Woman to Woman"122Woman to Woman
1975"It Ain't No Fun"3294
1979"After a Night Like This"73-For The Real Feeling
1989"Ain't Nothin' Like The Lovin' We Got"46-Fire & Ice
1995"You Ain't Woman Enough (To Take My Man)"80-Diva of Soul

Grammy Award history

  • Grammy Award
    • 1975, Best Song of The Year: "Woman to Woman" (Nominated)



























































































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