Artist:
Etta James
Title:
Complete Recordings 1955-1962
Year Of Release:
2013
Label:
Playtime
Genre:
Blues, R&B, Soul, Jazz, Gospel
Quality:
FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 3:33:16
Total Size: 0.98 GB
WebSite:
Album Preview
Tracklist:01. The Wallflower (Roll with Me Henry)
02. Hold Me, Squeeze Me
03. Hey Henry
04. Be Mine
05. Good Rockin' Daddy
06. Crazy Feeling
07. W-O-M-E-N
08. That's All
09. Number One (My One and Only)
10. I'm a Fool
11. Shortnin' Bread Rock
12. Tears of Joy
13. Tough Lover
14. What Fools We Mortals Be
15. Dance with Me Henry
16. Good Lookin'
17. Then I'll Care
18. The Pickup
19. Market Place
20. Come What May
21. By the Light of the Silvery Moon
22. Strange Things Happening
23. Sunshine of Love
24. Baby Baby Every Night
25. I Hope You're Satisfied
26. If It Ain't One Thing
27. How Big a Fool
28. My Heart Cries
29. It's a Crying Shame
30. Anything to Say You're Mine
31. My Dearest Darling
32. Trust in Me
33. A Sunday Kind of Love
34. Tough Mary
35. I Just Want to Make Love to You
36. At Last
37. All I Could Do Was Cry
38. Stormy Weather
39. Girl of My Dreams
40. Don't You Remember
41. Hickory Dickory Dock
42. Nobody Loves You Like Me
43. We're in Love
44. You Know What I Mean
45. Don't Cry Baby
46. Fool That I Am
47. One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)
48. In My Diary
49. Seven Day Fool
50. It's Too Soon to Know
51. Dream
52. I'll Dry My Tears
53. Plum Nuts
54. Don't Get Around Much Anymore
55. Waiting for Charlie to Come Home
56. Guess Again
57. A Lover's Mourn
58. You Can Count on Me
59. If I Can't Have You
60. Something's Got a Hold on Me
61. My Dear
62. Nobody but You
63. Let Me Know
64. Spoonful
65. Don't Take Your Love from Me
66. How Do You Speak to an Angel
67. Fools Rush In
68. Don't Blame Me
69. Someone to Watch over Me
70. Again
71. I Want to Be Loved
72. It Could Happen to You
73. These Foolish Things
74. Prisoner of Love
75. Stop the Wedding
76. Street of Tears
77. Next Door to the Blues
78. Would It Make Any Difference to You
Few female R&B stars enjoyed the kind of consistent acclaim Etta James received throughout a career that spanned six decades; the celebrated producer Jerry Wexler once called her "the greatest of all modern blues singers," and she recorded a number of enduring hits, including "At Last," "Tell Mama," "I'd Rather Go Blind," and "All I Could Do Was Cry." At the same time, despite possessing one of the most powerful voices in music, James only belatedly gained the attention of the mainstream audience, appearing rarely on the pop charts despite scoring 30 R&B hits, and she lived a rough-and-tumble life that could have inspired a dozen soap operas, battling drug addiction and bad relationships while outrunning a variety of health and legal problems.
Etta James was born Jamesetta Hawkins in Los Angeles, California on January 25, 1938; her mother was just 14 years old at the time, and she never knew her father, though she would later say she had reason to believe he was the well-known pool hustler Minnesota Fats. James was raised by friends and relatives instead of her mother through most of her childhood, and it was while she was living with her grandparents that she began regularly attending a Baptist church. James' voice made her a natural for the choir, and despite her young age she became a soloist with the group, and appeared with them on local radio broadcasts. At the age of 12, after the death of her foster mother, James found herself living with her mother in San Francisco, and with little adult supervision, she began to slide into juvenile delinquency. But James' love of music was also growing stronger, and with a pair of friends she formed a singing group called the Creolettes. The girls attracted the attention of famed bandleader Johnny Otis, and when he heard their song "Roll with Me Henry" -- a racy answer song to Hank Ballard's infamous "Work with Me Annie" -- he arranged for them to sign with Modern Records, and the Creolettes cut the tune under the name the Peaches (the new handle coming from Etta's longtime nickname). "Roll with Me Henry," renamed "The Wallflower," became a hit in 1955, though Georgia Gibbs would score a bigger success with her cover version, much to Etta's dismay. After charting with a second R&B hit, "Good Rockin' Daddy," the Peaches broke up and James stepped out on her own.
James' solo career was a slow starter, and she spent several years cutting low-selling singles for Modern and touring small clubs until 1960, when Leonard Chess signed her to a new record deal. James would record for Chess Records and its subsidiary labels Argo and Checker into the late '70s and, working with producers Ralph Bass and Harvey Fuqua, she embraced a style that fused the passion of R&B with the polish of jazz, and scored a number of hits for the label, including "All I Could Do Was Cry," "My Dearest Darling," and "Trust in Me." While James was enjoying a career resurgence, her personal life was not faring as well; she began experimenting with drugs as a teenager, and by the time she was 21 she was a heroin addict, and as the '60s wore on she found it increasingly difficult to balance her habit with her career, especially as she clashed with her producers at Chess, fought to be paid her royalties, and dealt with a number of abusive romantic relationships. James' career went into a slump in the mid-'60s, but in 1967 she began recording with producer Rick Hall at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama and, adopting a tougher, grittier style, she bounced back onto the R&B charts with the tunes "Tell Mama" and "I'd Rather Go Blind."
Deep in the NightIn the early '70s, James had fallen off the charts again, her addiction was raging, and she turned to petty crime to support her habit. She entered rehab on a court order in 1973, the same year she recorded a rock-oriented album, Only a Fool, with producer Gabriel Mekler. Through most of the '70s, a sober James got by touring small clubs and playing occasional blues festivals, and she recorded for Chess with limited success, despite the high quality of her work. In 1978, longtime fans the Rolling Stones paid homage to James by inviting her to open some shows for them on tour, and she signed with Warner Bros., cutting the album Deep in the Night with producer Jerry Wexler. While the album didn't sell well, it received enthusiastic reviews and reminded serious blues and R&B fans that James was still a force to be reckoned with. By her own account, James fell back into drug addiction after becoming involved with a man with a habit, and she went back to playing club dates when and where she could until she kicked again thanks to a stay at the Betty Ford Center in 1988. That same year, James signed with Island Records and cut a powerful comeback album, Seven Year Itch, produced by Barry Beckett of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. The album sold respectably and James was determined to keep her career on track, playing frequent live shows and recording regularly, issuing Stickin' to My Guns in 1990 and The Right Time in 1992.
Mystery Lady: Songs of Billie HolidayIn 1994, a year after she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, James signed to the Private Music label, and recorded Mystery Lady: Songs of Billie Holiday, a tribute to the great vocalist she had long cited as a key influence; the album earned Etta her first Grammy Award. The relationship with Private Music proved simpatico, and between 1995 and 2003 James cut eight albums for the label, while also maintaining a busy touring schedule. In 2003, James published an autobiography, Rage to Survive: The Etta James Story, and in 2008 she was played onscreen by modern R&B diva Beyoncé Knowles in Cadillac Records, a film loosely based on the history of Chess Records. Knowles recorded a faithful cover of "At Last" for the film's soundtrack, and later performed the song at Barack Obama's 2009 inaugural ball; several days later, James made headlines when during a concert she said "I can't stand Beyoncé, she had no business up there singing my song that I've been singing forever." (Later the same week, James told The New York Times that the statement was meant to be a joke -- "I didn't really mean anything...even as a little child, I've always had that comedian kind of attitude" -- but she was saddened that she hadn't been invited to perform the song.)
The DreamerIn 2010, James was hospitalized with MRSA-related infections, and it was revealed that she had received treatment for dependence on painkillers and was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, which her son claimed was the likely cause of her outbursts regarding Knowles. James released The Dreamer, for Verve Forecast in 2011. She claimed it was her final album of new material. Etta James was diagnosed with terminal leukemia later that year, and died on January 20, 2012 in Riverside, California at the age of 73. ~ Mark Deming