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Etta James, R.I.P, Thank You for the Music: The New Yorker

Etta James

Cover of Etta James

Nice obituary from the New Yorker, but the absence of the one number that she’s most well-known for is glaringly conspicuous.  It is called At Last, and here’s a not-so-great YT video of it:
January 20, 2012

Etta James, R.I.P.

The death of Etta James on Friday, at the age of seventy-three, came as no surprise. She had been suffering from dementia and leukemia for the past two years, had not performed in public for longer, and had, upon the release of “The Dreamer” last November, announced that it would be her final album.

Born Jamesetta Hawkins in Los Angeles to a mother who was rarely around and a father she never knew—later in life, she speculated that it might have been the pool player Minnesota Fats—James had a Dickensian childhood, shuttled from caregiver to caregiver, treated rough, forced to grow up fast. As a teen-ager, she began to sing doo-wop, and was soon discovered by the bandleader Johnny Otis (who died, in sad coincidence, just three days before James). Her first hit, “Dance With Me, Henry”—previously known as “Roll With Me, Henry” (too risqué) and later known as “The Wallflower” (after a hit version by George Gibbs)— was an answer song to Hank Ballard’s “Work With Me, Annie,” and found James already in possession of a cannon of an instrument. To say she belted it out was an understatement.

In 1960, at the still tender age of twenty-two, James moved from Modern Records to Chess, got involved with the songwriter and singer Harvey Fuqua, and launched the second phase of her career. There were ballads (“All I Could Do Was Cry”), duets (“If I Can’t Have You”), guest appearances (she sings backup on Chuck Berry’s “Almost Grown” and “Back in the USA”), but her most successful early moment was the title track of her début album: “At Last,” which was written by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren and recorded by Glenn Miller, among others. James’s shimmering, torchy version made the song a modern standard, not to mention a staple in commercials.

James recorded for many years, in many styles, some more successful than others. For most of that time, her power as a vocalist was never in question; rather, it was how that power was deployed. Her Muscle Shoals recordings from the late sixties (“Tell Mama,” “I’d Rather Go Blind”) show her at her best, as does “Deep in the Night,” a 1978 album produced by Jerry Wexler that included covers of rock songs like the Eagles’ “Take it to the Limit” and Alice Cooper’s “Only Women Bleed.” There were highlights of almost inexpressible power, like her 1964 live album “Etta James Rocks the House,” perhaps the rawest album ever recorded by a female R. & B. singer, and her barn-burning duet with Sugar Pie DeSanto, “In the Basement.” But many albums were uneven, in part because of poor choice of material, in part because of James’s ongoing struggles with drug addiction. In the mid-nineties, she revived herself as a Billie Holiday interpreter with “Mystery Lady,” and, while she didn’t have Holiday’s otherworldly ability to communicate pain, she sang beautifully, and set herself back on course. James became the rarest of things, a hard-working icon, reliably supplying album after album of well-sung R. & B., most with predictably left-field interpretations of rock songs—”The Dreamer,” from last year, includes a cover of Guns N’ Roses’ “Welcome to the Jungle.”

It’s difficult to sum up James’s career, which was too sprawling, too erratic, too much. “Heart and Soul,” a four-disc box from last October, just scratched the surface. But here are five highlights.

“Seven Days Fool,” from “Etta James Rocks the House” (1964)

 

“In the Basement,” duet with Sugar Pie DeSanto (1966)

 

“I’d Rather Go Blind,” from “Tell Mama” (1968)

 

“Take It To The Limit,” live on the Tom Snyder Show (1980)

 

“Body and Soul,” from “Mystery Lady” (1994)

 

Ettajames

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On This Day: January 20

Updated January 19, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On Jan. 20, 1981, Iran released 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days, minutes after the presidency had passed from Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan.

Go to article »

On Jan. 20 , 1920, Federico Fellini, the Italian film director, was born. Following his death on Oct. 31, 1993, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press
1801 John Marshall was appointed chief justice of the United States.
1841 Hong Kong was ceded to Great Britain.
1896 Comedian George Burns was born Nathan Birnbaum in New York City.
1936 Britain’s King George V died.
1961 John F. Kennedy was sworn in as the 35th president of the United States.
1981 Ronald Reagan was sworn in as the 40th president of the United States.
1981 Iran released 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days.
1986 The United States observed the first federal holiday in honor of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
1987 Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite disappeared in Beirut, Lebanon, while attempting to negotiate the release of Western hostages.
2001 Bill Clinton pardoned 140 people in one of his final acts as president. The list included fugitive financier Marc Rich, whose wife was a major Democratic donor.
2001 George W. Bush took the oath of office as the 43rd president of the United States.
2001 Hundreds of thousands of protesting Filipinos forced President Joseph Estrada to step down; Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo was sworn in as the new president.
2009 Barack Obama was sworn in as the first African-American president of the United States.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press
Nikki Haley, Governor of South Carolina

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley turns 40 years old today.

AP Photo/Alice Keeney

Bill Maher, Comedian, talk show host

Comedian-talk show host Bill Maher turns 56 years old today.

AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

1924 Slim Whitman, Country singer, turns 88
1929 Arte Johnson, Comedian (“Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In”), turns 83
1930 Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, Astronaut, turns 82
1946 David Lynch, Director, turns 66
1952 Paul Stanley, Rock musician (Kiss), turns 60
1958 Lorenzo Lamas, Actor, turns 54
1963 James Denton, Actor (“Desperate Housewives”), turns 49
1965 John Michael Montgomery, Country singer, turns 47
1966 Rainn Wilson, Actor (“The Office”), turns 46
1967 Stacey Dash, Actress, turns 45
1968 Melissa Rivers, TV personality, turns 44

 

Historic Birthdays

Federico Fellini 1/20/1920 – 10/31/1993 Italian film director.Go to obituary »
44 Johannes Schein 1/20/1586 – 11/19/1630
German composer
46 Henry Cromwell 1/20/1628 – 3/23/1674
English, brief ruler of Ireland
62 Richard Henry Lee 1/20/1732 – 6/19/1794
American statesman/orator
72 Anne J. Clough 1/20/1820 – 2/27/1892
English educator/feminist
77 Johannes Jenson 1/20/1873 – 11/25/1950
Danish novelist/essayist
91 Ruth St. Denis 1/20/1877 – 7/21/1968
American dancer & choreographer
82 Walter Piston 1/20/1894 – 11/12/1976
American composer/teacher
74 Harold Gray 1/20/1894 – 5/9/1968
American “Orphan Annie” cartoonist
69 Joy Adamson 1/20/1910 – 1/3/1980
Australian conservationist/writer

 

 

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283/365/01

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