Betty Wright
(born December 21, 1953) [1]) (not to be mistaken for the late wife of famed gospel singer, the late Rev. Timothy Wright) is a Miami-based soul and R&B singer, who influenced a generation of female singer-songwriters and has also influenced the world of hip hop, which has sampled some of her more famous material.
|
BETTY WRIGHT TICKETS
|
Music career
From singing
gospel with the family group, the Echoes of Joy,
Wright began switching to R&B music in 1965 when she was only eleven years old. In 1967, she discovered singers
George and
Gwen McCrae, and helped them sign to
Henry Stone's Alston record label. In 1968, she released her first
album,
My First Time Around
, at the age of 15, and scored her first
hit single, "Girls Can't Do What Guys Can Do".
on Alston, part of Stone's TK studio and record company in Florida. But it was not until the end of 1971 that the most successful phase of her career took place.
The
song, "
Clean Up Woman", became a major
pop and R&B hit, remaining at #2 for eight weeks on the R&B chart and reaching #6 on the pop listing. "Clean Up Woman" was
written by
Steve Alaimo and stayed for 14 weeks in the
Billboard Hot 100 chart.
It sold over a million copies with the
R.I.A.A. gold disc award on 30 December 1971.
and would later influence a
remix of
Mary J. Blige's "
Real Love"
single with the
sample of its
guitar riffs; R&B girl
trio SWV's "I'm So Into You" also featured a sample from "Clean Up Woman," as did
Afrika Bambaataa's song "Zulu War Chant", and
Sublime's "Get Out!"
remix.
Beyoncé has sampled "Girls Can't Do What The Guys Do" for her hit "
Upgrade U".
In 1978, Wright scored with a re-worked live version of a song she had written with producer Willie Clarke, "Tonight is the Night" (about a real-life love affair that happened with Wright when she was a teenager). The original version had done reasonably well three years earlier but the new, much longer version climbed to #11 R&B. This was later sampled by both
Candyman for his one-hit wonder "Knockin' Boots" and
Sheek Louch's single, "
Good Love" . Another single, "Where is the Love" which was written and Produced by Harry Wayne Casey aka( KC & The Sunshine Band), Richard Finch, Willie Clarke, and Betty Wright won her a
Grammy for
Best R&B Song in 1975.
In 1978, Wright sang a
duet, "No Tricks", with
Alice Cooper. In late 1979, she appeared as a special guest on most
Survival Tour concerts of reggae superstar
Bob Marley.
After experiencing a brief slump in the early 1980s, she rebounded to set up her own
record label, Ms. B Records, and in 1988 made music history by being the first woman to have a
gold record on her own label, with the release of
Mother Wit
, which featured two of her biggest hits in years, "No Pain No Gain" and "After The Pain." On both songs, Wright displays her upper register capabilities and her ability to sing in the seventh octave. Wright also charted in a 1990 duet with
Grayson Hugh on a remake of the 1981
Champaign hit "
How 'Bout Us", and sang on fellow
Miami vocalist
Gloria Estefan's 1991 chart-topper "
Coming Out of the Dark."
When R&B group
Color Me Badd released their hit, "
I Wanna Sex You Up", in 1991, it generated controversy because the sample from "Tonight is The Night" had not been cleared; Wright soon took the band to court for
royalties and was awarded 35% percent of royalties for writing the song.
DJ Quik used a sample of "Tonight is The Night" on his first single " Tonite".
Her
cover of the song, "Shoorah! Shoorah!", which she recorded in 1974, was used in the
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
movie. The song, which was written by
Allen Toussaint and first recorded by
Frankie Miller, also appears on the
soundtrack to the second series of the UK
Channel 4 comedy drama,
No Angels
.
In 2001, a
compilation album,
The Very Best of Betty Wright,
was released, along with her first
studio album for several years,
Fit for a King
.
[2]. In 2002, the underground Hip-Hop artist
RJD2 used a sample from Wright's song "Secretary" in his most commercially successful track, "
Ghostwriter". "Ghostwriter" has since gone on to be used in multiple advertisements and commercials.
On 24 December 2005, her 21-year-old
son Patrick Parker was shot and killed after a dispute at a Christmas party in
Opa-locka, a Miami suburb.
[3]
In 2006, Wright appeared on the
TV show
Making the Band
as vocal coach appointed by
Sean Combs, for new female group
Danity Kane. She now mentors several young singers and has done vocal
production for the likes of
Gloria Estefan,
Jennifer Lopez and
Joss Stone. Wright currently resides in her
hometown of Miami.
Discography
Albums
- My First Time Around
(1968)
- I Love the Way You Love
(1972)
- Hard to Stop
(1973)
- Danger High Voltage
(1974)
- ...Explosion!...
(1976)
- This Time for Real
(1977)
- Betty Wright Live
(1978), (TK-Records 4408)
- Betty Travelin' in the Wright Circle
(1979)
- Betty Wright
(1981)
- Wright Back at You
(1983)
- Sevens
(1986)
- Mother Wit
(1988)
- 4u2njoy
(1989)
- Passion and Compassion
(1990)
- B-Attitudes
(1994)
- ''Pain (1998)
- Fit for a King
(2001)
Singles
- 1968: "Girls Can't Do What Guys Do" (#33 U.S., #15 R&B)
- 1970: "Pure Love" (#40 R&B)
- 1971: "Clean Up Woman" (#6 U.S., #2 R&B)
- 1972: "Baby Sitter" (#46 U.S., #6 R&B)
- 1972: "Is It You, Girl?" (#18 R&B)
- 1972: "I'm Gettin' Tired Baby" (#42 R&B)
- 1973: "It's Hard to Stop (Doing Something When It's Good to You)" (#72 U.S., #11 R&B)
- 1973: "Let Me Be Your Lovemaker" (#55 U.S., #10 R&B)
- 1974: "Secretary" (#62 U.S., #12 R&B)
- 1975: "Where is the Love?" (#96 U.S., #15 R&B, #2 Disco, #2 Club Play, #25 UK)
- 1975: "Tonight is the Night" (#28 R&B)
- 1975: " Shoorah! Shoorah!" (#28 R&B, #27 UK)
- 1976: "Slip and Do It" (#21 R&B)
- 1976: "If I Ever Do Wrong" (#23 R&B)
- 1977: "Life" (#64 R&B)
- 1977: "You Can't See for Lookin'" (#73 R&B)
- 1978: "Tonight is the Night, Pts. 1 & 2 (live)" (#11 R&B)
- 1979: "Lovin' Is Really My Game" (#68 R&B)
- 1979: "My Love Is" (#48 R&B)
- 1981: "What Are You Gonna Do With It?" (#42 R&B, #61 Dance)
- 1986: "Pain" (#42 UK)
- 1988: "No Pain, No Gain" (#14 R&B)
- 1988: "After the Pain" (#57 R&B)
- 1989: "From Pain to Joy" (#39 R&B)
- 1989: "Quiet Storm" (#88 R&B)
- 1989: "Keep Love New" (#71 R&B)
- 2007: "Baby" (with Angie Stone) (#22 R&B, #3 Dance)
References
- The Book of Golden Discs
- Biography by Greg Prato & Christine Ohlman
- Miami.com