Smokestack Lightnin' had a tribute to Ruth Brown on
December 16, 2006. A Grammy Award winner was inducted to the Smokestack
Lightnin' Hall of Fame.
Ruth
Brown (January 12, 1928–November 17, 2006) was an American R&B singer.
Born Ruth Alston Weston in Portsmouth, Virginia, she brought a popular
music style to rhythm and blues in a series of hit songs for fledgling
Atlantic Records in the 1950s.
Following a resurgence that began in the mid-1970s and peaked in the
eighties, Brown used her influence to press for musicians' rights
regarding royalties and contracts. Her performances in the Broadway
musical Black and Blue earned Brown a Tony Award, and the original
soundtrack won a Grammy Award.
Early life Ruth Brown's father was a dockhand who directed the local
church choir, but the young Ruth showed more of an interest in singing
at USO shows and nightclubs. In 1945, Brown ran away from her home in
Portsmouth along with a trumpeter, Jimmy Brown, whom she soon married,
to sing in bars and clubs. She then spent a month with Lucky Millinder's
orchestra, but was fired after she brought drinks to the band for free,
and was left stranded in Washington, D.C.
Career
Blanche Calloway, Cab Calloway's sister, also a bandleader, arranged a
gig for Brown at a Washington nightclub called Crystal Caverns and soon
became her manager. Willis Conover, a Voice of America disc jockey,
caught her act and recommended her to Atlantic Records bosses, Ahmet
Ertegün and Herb Abramson. Brown was unable to audition as planned
though, because of a serious car accident that resulted in a nine-month
hospital visit. In 1948, however, Ertegün and Abramson drove to
Washington from New York City to hear her sing in the club. Although her
repertoire was mostly popular ballads, Ertegün convinced her to switch
to rhythm and blues. His productions for her, however, retained her
"pop" style, with clean, fresh arrangements and the singing spot on the
beat with little of the usual blues singer's embroidery.
In her first audition, in 1949, she sang "So Long", which ended up
becoming a hit. This was followed by Teardrops from My Eyes in 1950.
Written by Rudy Toombs, it was the first upbeat major hit for Ruth
Brown, establishing her as an important figure in R&B. Recorded for
Atlantic Records in New York City in September 1950, and released in
October, it was on Billboard's List of number-one R&B hits (United
States) for 11 weeks. The huge hit earned her the nickname "Miss Rhythm"
and within a few months Ruth Brown became the acknowledged queen of R&B.
She followed up this hit with "I'll Wait for You" (1951), "I Know"
(1951), "5-10-15 Hours" (1953), "(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean"
(1953), "Oh What a Dream" (1954), "Mambo Baby" (1954) and "Don't Deceive
Me" (1960). She also became known as Little Miss Rhythm and the girl
with the teardrop in her voice. In all, she was on the R&B charts for
149 weeks from 1949 to 1955, with 16 top 10 blues records including 5
number ones, and became Atlantic's most popular artist, earning Atlantic
records the proper name of "The House that Ruth Built."
Later
life During the 1960s, Brown faded from public view to become a
housewife and mother, and only returned to music in 1975 at the urging
of Redd Foxx, followed by a series of comedic acting gigs, including a
role in the sitcom Hello, Larry and the John Waters film Hairspray as
local DJ Motormouth Maybelle, as well as Broadway appearances in Amen
Corner and Black and Blue, which earned her a Tony Award for her
performance and a Grammy award for her album Blues on Broadway,
featuring hits from the show.
Brown's fight for musicians' rights and royalties in 1987 led to the
founding of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. She was inducted as a
Pioneer Award recipient in its first year, 1989. In 1993, she was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as The Queen Mother of the
Blues.
She has become an iconic symbol to many black women for later
generations, where she is also a favorite artist and inspiration for
later blues artists such as Bonnie Raitt. Brown recorded and sang along
with fellow rhythm and blues performer Charles Brown, a member of the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and toured with Raitt on Raitt's tour in the
late 1990s, "Road Tested". Her 1995 autobiography, Miss Rhythm, won
the Gleason Award for music journalism.
Family life
Oldest of seven children.
Husband Jimmy Brown (trumpeter): he was found to be already married
Earl Swanson (saxophonist), married in 1955; father of her son Earl
Swanson Jr.
Bill Blunt (police officer), married three years
She had a son, Ronald David Jackson ("Ronnie"), with Drew Brown, though
he grew up believing that her former companion and accompanist Willis
"Gator" Jackson was his father
She also had a brief relationship with Clyde McPhatter of the Drifters.
Her nephew Rakim is considered one of the most influential rappers in
the history of the rap genre.
Death Ruth Brown died in a Las Vegas-area hospital on November 17,
2006, from complications following a heart attack and stroke she
suffered after surgery in October 2006. A memorial concert for her was
held on 22 January 2007 at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, New
York