Blues Women
 

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JAZZ WOMEN
BLUES WOMEN
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Quest For E. T.

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Joan Cartwright and Jazz Hotline

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Last Month

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Ladies and Gents,

Send Jay your CDs. He'll play them!

Joan,

Thanks for the article on these lovely ladies  of song. You are the only person I know that truly keeps the lives of female instrumentalists, composers, vocalists and others in print. If they send me music, I'll make sure they are featured on my show and other radio shows.

John Edwards
P.O. Box 840
Red Oak, GA 30272

Peace
Jay (WCLK 91.9 FM)

Jay Edwards is an On-Air Announcer for WCLK 91.9FM. He hosts Jazz Tones on Sunday's 9-11pm. He has also written line notes for jazz artists and articles for magazines.   His career has been over twenty years in radio and voice-overs.

Email: jay@atlantajazz.info

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IN PURSUIT OF A MELODY
by Joan Cartwright

Get the whole story of how WOMEN IN JAZZ brought jazz music to the world. Cartwright's book chronicles the lives of several women who were notable instrumentalists and singers in America and around the world and includes the artwork of Charles Mills. Joan launched her book on April 19, 2007. Buy at www.trafford.com/05-0819

October/2007 
Dear Subscriber,

This month, I added a new career to my resume -- Music Teacher.

Our 10th issue features my dear friend Sandy Patton, Vocal teacher at the Swiss Jazz School, in Berne. Our October Blues Woman is the great Etta James, most noted for her rendition of the song "At Last".

Enjoy our newsletter and know that we welcome your ideas, suggestions and submissions for future issues.  (Photo by Jean Willy Gerdes)

Love and music,
Diva JC
Publisher

JAZZ WOMEN

SANDY PATTON

Born on March 8, in Inkster, Michigan, Sandy Patton began singing as a little girl. Her passion for music led her to a 3-year stint with Lionel Hampton's Band.

sandypattonmic.jpg (24328 bytes)Sandy Patton has been the Jazz Vocal Professor at the Swiss Jazz School (Hochschule der Künst) in Berne, since 1993. Before joining the school, she performed with some of the great Who's Who of Jazz including Lionel Hampton, Dizzy Gillespie, Paquito D'Rivera, Jimmy Woode, Al Grey, Junior Mance and Benny Bailey.

Patton has toured throughout Europe, America, Russia, Siberia, the Middle and Far East. She's given workshops in France, Germany, Italy and U.S.A.

  • JAZZ WORKSHOPS-ELANGEN, GERMANY

  • LANGNAU NIGHTS MASTER CLASS- LANGNAU, SWITZERLAND

  • STAGE DE JAZZ VOCAL-ROGNES, FRANCE

  • STAGE DE JAZZ VOCAL- LA CIOTA

  • DUE LAGHI JAZZ WORKSHOP-AVIGLIANA, ITALY

  • ALABAMA JAZZ AND BLUES WORKSHOP-MONTGOMERY, AL

She produced and directed six Jazz in Theater Shows with her students, with a performance workshop that she designed, called "New Dimensions", including

  1. BROADWAY MY WAY

  2. MOTOWN GOES JAZZY

  3. THE MUSIC OF RODGERS & HART

  4. THE MUSIC OF THE WIZ

  5. A JAZZ ANTHOLOGY

  6. TRILOGY PLUS

Patton performs her concept show "Sandy Loves Sammy", a tribute to the great Sammy Davis, Jr. and is promoting her new Bass and Vocal Duo CD, "Painting Jazz" with Thomas Dürst.

"CATCH HER, IT’S MAGIC!" and visit her website - www.sandypatton.com

Sandy recorded Joan Cartwright's song, LONELIBLUE on her debut CD with Jan van Naeltwijck - Quest For E. T. Below she joins Cartwright and Jazz Hotline at Erny's Jazz Club in Delray Beach, Florida.

    BLUES WOMEN

ETTA JAMES

Etta James was born Jamesetta Hawkins on January 25, 1938, in Los Angeles, California. She is a noted blues, soul, R&B, and jazz singer and songwriter. In the 1950s and 60s, she had her biggest success as a blues and R&B singer. She is best known for her 1961 ballad "At Last", which has been classified as a "timeless classic" and has been featured in many movies and television commercials since its release.

She received her first professional vocal training at the age of five, from James Earle Hines, musical director of the Echoes of Eden choir at St. Paul Baptist Church in Los Angeles.

Her family moved to San Francisco in 1950, and James joined two other girls to form a singing group. When the girls were fourteen, they auditioned for bandleader Johnny Otis, singing an answer to Hank Ballard's "Work With Me, Annie " called "Roll With Me Henry." Otis liked the song, and against her mother's wishes, James and the trio went to Los Angeles to record the song in 1954, on Modern Records. They renamed the song "The Wallflower (Dance with Me, Henry)" and released it in 1955, when it went to #1 on the R&B Charts for the vocal trio called "The Peaches".

Etta left the group and continued to record successful albums. Her next hit, "Good Rockin' Daddy" was released in the late fifties. Though "Tough Lover" and "W-O-M-A-N" were less successful, James toured with Johnny "Guitar" Watson and Otis Redding and called Watson the most significant influence on her style.

In 1960, Etta signed with Chess Records and recorded her biggest and most memorable hits. This company went into high gear with James, releasing duets with her boyfriend Harvey Fuqua, the lead singer of the Moonglows. One duet, "If I Can't Have You", became a hit on the R&B charts in 1960. As a solo artist, she had greater success. One of her first singles released in 1960 was "All I Could Do Was Cry". This Blues number became a big hit on the R&B charts for James whose sassy vibe added a significant touch of personality to the song.

Leonard Chess, one of the founders of Chess Records, saw the potential for James to go into a direction more pop oriented. The year 1961 brought great changes for James with the release of her most famous song, "At Last" that reached #2 on the R&B charts and #22 on the Pop charts, proving that the Pop crossover was successful for her because it made the Top 30 and became her signature song.

Other songs that were successful for James were "Trust In Me" and "Something's Got a Hold On Me" recorded in 1962, in the England by Elkie Brooks, showing James' Gospel side, a genre she had sung in since childhood.

The next boost to her career was the 1963 album Etta James Rocks the House recorded at the New Era Club in Nashville. She had other big hits in the sixties, on the R&B charts, including "Pushover" in 1963, and "Stop the Wedding", "Fool That I Am" and "Don't Cry Baby", recorded between 1961 and 1963.

James became one of the most successful R&B artists of the 1960s, with several Top Ten and Top Twenty hit singles on the charts. She is classified as one of the pioneers of the Blues, among artists  like B.B. King who performed in Memphis, Tennessee, the city where blues started. In 1967, she release the single, "Tell Mama" that was a Top Ten hit on the R&B charts, making Etta James a household name. The follow-up, "Security" proved James' staying power.

After the death of Leonard Chess, Etta stayed with the Chess label until the end of 1975, when she moved into rock music. Etta recorded for numerous labels and continued to release albums, like Deep In the Night on Atlantic Records, in 1978.

Etta received accolades for her 1981 rendition of Randy Newman's "God's Song". The 1988 album Seven Year Itch displayed her Soul side. In 1989, Etta recorded "Avenue D" with David A. Stewart of Eurythmics fame. This song was featured on the soundtrack of the Robert Wise film "Rooftops". She performed with the Grateful Dead for two shows, in 1982, demonstrating the diveristy of her admirers.

Well into the nineties, she recorded and performed. Her albums varied, widely, in styles and genres of music. The Right Time was (1992) was an upbeat Soul album on Elektra Records. She recorded Jazz on many of her 1990s albums. In 1998 she released "An Etta James Christmas".

Etta is known for the Muddy Waters song I Just Wanna Make Love to You, used in television commercials for Coca-Cola and John Smith's Bitter. Though it was recorded by The Rolling Stones, Chuck Berry and Foghat, Etta's version was a surprise Top 10 UK hit in 1995.

Drugs, obesity and romantic problems interfered with her career, but James maintained notoriety throughout the latter half of the 20th century. She reached more than 400 pounds, experienced strained mobility and knee problems and needed a wheelchair. In 2003, she underwent gastric bypass surgery and lost over 200 pounds.

James was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993, and the Blues Hall of Fame in 2001. Her pioneering contribution to the genre has been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. In 2003, she got her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame as well as a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2004, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked her #62 on the list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time. She was still toured, in 2007.

James won three Grammy's for Best Jazz Vocal Performance for Mystery Lady in 1994; Best Contemporary Blues Album for Let's Roll in 2003; and Best Traditional Blues Album for Blues to the Bone in 2004. A new album released in 2006, was All the Way, on RCA Records.

**EXTRA, EXTRA** - Diva JC has a new career - Read about it at her BLOG!

Visit Ms. Cartwright's teaching blog - www.fyicomminc.com/blog.htm

READ DIVA JC'S INTERVIEWS with B. B. King, Natalie Cole, Patti Labelle and other notable stars.

 

Women in Jazz South Florida, Inc.  is a non-profit organization with the mission of promoting Women in Jazz through contacts, books, articles,  interviews, workshops, lectures, history, recordings, performance and recognition.

Love and Music,
Joan Cartwright
Women in Jazz South Florida, Inc.

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