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REMEMBERS RUTH BROWN
Reflections on Ruth
Brown
Welcome To The Soul-Patrol Newsletter
* 1950s R&B
Star Ruth Brown Dies at Age 78
* Biography - Ruth Brown
* My Introduction to Ruth Brown
* Dateline: Columbus, Ohio - Miss Ruth Brown
* Ruth Brown's Comeback in the 1980's
* Ruth Brown On Broadway
1950s R&B Star Ruth
Brown Dies at Age 78
By DAISY NGUYEN, Associated Press Writer
Nov. 17, 2006
LOS ANGELES - Singer Ruth Brown, whose recordings of
"Teardrops in My Eyes," "5-10-15 Hours" and "(Mama) He
Treats Your Daughter Mean" shot her to rhythm-and-blues
stardom in the 1950s, has died. She was 78. Brown, who
later in life won a Grammy and a Tony, died Friday of
complications from a stroke and heart attack at a Las
Vegas-area hospital, said Lindajo Loftus, a publicist
for the
Rhythm & Blues Foundation, which Brown helped establish.
"Ruth was one of the most important and beloved figures
in modern music," singer Bonnie Raitt said in a
statement. "You can hear her influence in everyone from
Little Richard to Etta (James), Aretha (Franklin), Janis
(Joplin) and divas like Christina Aguilera today."
"She was my dear friend, and I will miss her terribly,"
Raitt said.
Brown's soulful voice produced dozens of hits for
Atlantic Records, cementing the fledgling record label's
reputation as an R&B powerhouse. Trained in a church
choir in her hometown of Portsmouth, Va., Brown sang a
range of style from jazz to gospel-blues in such hits as
"So Long" and "Teardrops in My Eyes." She later crossed
over into rock 'n' roll with some success with "Lucky
Lips" and "This Little Girl's Gone Rockin'," a song she
co-wrote with Bobby Darin.
But as R&B and rock 'n' roll fell out of style in the
late 1950s, Brown and her musical contemporaries were
forced into retirement. She spent most of the 1960s
raising her two sons alone and earning a living as a
maid, school bus driver and teacher.
Brown enjoyed a career renaissance in the mid-70s when
she began recording blues and jazz tunes for a variety
of labels and found success on the stage and in movies.
She won acclaim in the R&B musical "Staggerlee" and won
a Tony Award for best actress in the Broadway revue
"Black and Blue."
She also played a feisty deejay in the 1988 cult movie
"Hairspray." A year later, she won a Grammy for best
jazz vocal performance for the album "Blues on
Broadway." Brown continued to perform and record in her
later years, becoming a popular host of National Public
Radio's "Harlem Hit Parade."
She also became a prominent advocate for the rights of
aging R&B musicians during her long struggle to recoup
her share of royalties from Atlantic.
Her effort led to the formation of the Rhythm & Blues
Foundation, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit dedicated to
providing financial and medical assistance, as well as
historical and cultural preservation of the musical
genre.
--Bob Davis
earthjuice@prodigy.net
Reflections on Ruth Brown
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Ruth Brown is one of the
pioneers of Black music. Her career has been so
influential that Atlantic Records is sometimes
referred to as the "House that Ruth Built" and
for good reason. Her career started in the early
1950's with Atlantic as that fabled labels very
first true superstar, preceding even
Ray Charles.
--Bob Davis
Biography -
Ruth Brown
The musical world lost a true
R&B pioneer and great person with the passing of
Ruth Brown who died from complications from a
stroke and heart attack on 11/17.
Ruth Brown had a style all her own with a little
throaty rasp that no one else could duplicate,
whether on a ballad or an up tempo record.
Atlantic records was called "The House That Ruth
Built" in the 1950s, due to her many great R&B
hits beginning with "So Long" in 1949 and ending
with "Don't Deceive Me" in 1960. In between
there were 19 other top ten hits, including five
number one songs. "Teardrops From My Eyes",
"5-10-15 Hours", "Mama, He Treats Your Daughter
Mean", "Oh What a Dream" and "Mambo Baby" all
hit the top of the charts. She even did a rocker
co-written with Bobby Darin called "This Little
Girl's Gone a Rockin".
She left Atlantic records in late 1961, having
never received any royalties after all those
hits. She recorded for Philips in 1962 and 1963,
Decca in 1964 and Mainstream in 1965. And then
she disappeared from the music world for a
while. She raised her two sons in the 1960s and
early 1970s doing domestic work and driving a
bus.
She recorded one album in 1970 for Skye records
and another was released by Mainstream in 1972.
In 1978 she put out one album on Dobre and
started her comeback in earnest. Ruth appeared
in the movie "Under the Rainbow" in 1981 and the
TV shows "Hello Larry" and "Checking In" in the
1980s and was great in the movie "Hairspray" in
1988. Her career hit overdrive at this point as
she starred in the musical "Staggerlee" and won
a Tony award for her performance in "Black and
Blue". She also recorded a pair of albums for
Fantasy records, and the second, called "Blues
on Broadway" released in 1989, won her a Grammy
award.
Ruth Brown was a pioneer in other ways as well.
She was one of the founders of the
Rhythm and Blues Foundation, an
organization dedicated to trying to retrieve
royalties due performers from their record
companies. Ruth had been denied her just
royalties and finally this injustice was repaid
by Atlantic records to Ruth and others.
Ruth was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 1993.
When I first met Ruth Brown over 25 years ago
after a performance, she thanked me for caring
enough to see her. Here was "Miss Rhythm",
thanking me! I told her how much her music had
meant to me in the 1950s and how anxious I was
for each of her records to come out, and once
again she thanked me for buying them, but told
me that unfortunately she never received any
royalties for the sales. Then she said that she
was still thankful to be performing at all.
Each time I met her after that first time, she
was always so gracious and humble, and made me
feel like it was I who was important, not the
reverse. She always seemed genuinely happy to
see me--she just had a way of making me feel
like an old friend. I loved it when she and
Charles Brown would perform together as they got
along so well. Bonnie Raitt also took them on
the road with her when she was at her peak, and
those shows were also wonderful. A lovely lady
with true courage has been lost, but her music
will be with us forever.
Danny Guilfoyle
LISTEN TO SOUL-PATROL'S -
RUTH BROWN TRIBUTE - 1. So Long, 2. I'll Get
Along Somehow, 3. Teardrops From My Eyes, 4.
5-10-15 Hours, 5. Daddy Daddy, 6. Mama, He
Treats Your Daughter Mean, 7. Wild Wild
Young Men, 8. Oh, What A Dream PLUS Tributes
from Freda Payne and the Orioles
A Few Thoughts on Ruth Brown
My Introduction to Ruth Brown
Bob, I posted a long time
ago that I was introduced to "Great R&B"
years ago by my aunt Lucille who used to
party every weekend from Friday evening 'til
early Sunday morning. I was a small kid, and
the grown-ups did not want me to see what
was going on in the living (and other )
rooms,so she would give me a Yoo-Hoo
Chocolate Drink and a couple o'packs of
"nabs," put me in the room with the record
player and let ME dj with a huge stack of
78's. You talk about PURE HEAVEN! She had
Ruth Brown's Mama, He Treats Your Daughter
Mean, and 5-10-15 Hours which I would bring
home and play when my mother wasn't
listening. Watching the
60 Minutes tribute to Ed Bradley, I
remember one of the songs I could never play
at home was Billy Ward and the Dominoes' 60
Minute Man, but I played it to death
at aunt Lucille's, and knew what it meant at
an early age lol. Thinking of Ruth Brown
brings to mind a lot of the early (for me,
anyway) Atlantic artists that we don't hear
much about like Chuck Willis and C.C. Rider;
Ivory Joe Hunter and Since I Met You Baby;
LaVern Baker and Jim Dandy, etc. I regret I
never saw Ruth Brown in person, but I have
seen her in the movie Rock and Roll Revue,
and other film clips, and she was fantastic
Fred.
LISTEN TO SOUL-PATROL'S
- RUTH BROWN TRIBUTE - 1. So Long, 2.
I'll Get Along Somehow, 3. Teardrops
From My Eyes, 4. 5-10-15 Hours, 5. Daddy
Daddy, 6. Mama, He Treats Your Daughter
Mean, 7. Wild Wild Young Men, 8. Oh,
What A Dream PLUS Tributes from Freda
Payne and the Orioles
Dateline: Columbus, Ohio - Miss Ruth Brown
Can't remember the year
but, the first thing I heard from Miss
Brown was "Mama, He Treat Yo' Daughter
Mean." Might have been Jocko, Alan Freed
or
Frankie Crocker.
(Somebody help me here ... I think I
recall her singing "Dance Wit Me Henry"
also--not sure!)
I recall looking at her album covers and
the photos of her that famous Apollo
wall. Hoped to high heaven I'd have the
kind of curves she had. I thought she
was (next to my Mama) just the perfect
looking woman.
She has a sound that kinda reminded me
of Clara Ward at times. She owned the
stage the moment she opened her mouth
and gave forth with that raw, earthy
throaty southern fried chicken sexy
don't mess with this female delivery.
Oh, for sho' there was no mistaking her
for any other artist. She came wit it.
Back in da day we called it "tough."
Miss Brown? Yeah she can blow. She be
'tough."
One of a kind, no nonsense, disciplined,
professional--a lady who knows how to
put hominy grits in every musical dish
she serves up. Class--that's what I
remember about Miss Ruth Brown.
JeannieB
LISTEN TO
SOUL-PATROL'S - RUTH BROWN TRIBUTE -
1. So Long, 2. I'll Get Along
Somehow, 3. Teardrops From My Eyes,
4. 5-10-15 Hours, 5. Daddy Daddy, 6.
Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean,
7. Wild Wild Young Men, 8. Oh, What
A Dream PLUS Tributes from Freda
Payne and the Orioles
Ruth Brown's Comeback in the 1980's
I'm just a little
too young to remember the original
stardom of Miss Brown in the early
50s. I know they call Atlantic
Records "The House that Ruth built"
since she seems to have provided all
the cash flow at Atlantic til
Ray Charles hit in the
mid-50s.
What I mostly remember about Ruth
Brown is her remarkable come-back in
the mid-80s. She had been gone from
show business for decades, and then
she was back--as Mother Maybelle in
Hairspray, and six days a week on
Broadway in
Bubbling Brown Sugar.
Then I read about her Monday night
gigs at the Lone Star Cafe in NYC.
She had one night a week off from
her Broadway show, and she spent it
just down the street with other cast
members and a weekly special guest.
The Monday I went to see her at the
Lone Star she had
Brother Jack McDuff as her
special guest. It was the one and
only time I saw Ruth Brown live, and
she was magnificent. I even got the
chance to talk to her. I told her
that 20 years earlier I'd asked my
local record store to special order
an Atlantic album for me--#8003,
Clyde McPhatter & the Drifers
Greatest Hits. Instead, Atlantic
sent #8002, Ruth Brown's Greatest
Hits. And I had bought the Ruth
Brown record, and loved her music
ever since. She smiled, and told me
that Atlantic never paid her any
money for her records.
Within a few years, I believe, Ruth
Brown and Bonnie Raitt and some
other good people had set up the
Rhythm & Blues Foundation, with the
purpose of getting some reparations
for all the old R&B people who never
got paid.
To their credit, Atlantic records
(and others) did the right
thing...finally. And I know that
Ruth Brown was inducted into the
Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame back in
the early 90s. She's had mamy honors
these past 20 years.
Her story is a remarkable one. Her
comeback 20 years ago is extremely
gratifying. We've seen a similar
story lately with
Ms. Bettye LaVette. I was so sad
to hear that Ms. Brown is on life
support machines. I'm under no
illusions that the news is going to
get any better. I'm grateful to have
met her the one time. God bless her.
Best wishes, Stu Green
LISTEN TO
SOUL-PATROL'S - RUTH BROWN
TRIBUTE - 1. So Long, 2. I'll
Get Along Somehow, 3. Teardrops
From My Eyes, 4. 5-10-15 Hours,
5. Daddy Daddy, 6. Mama, He
Treats Your Daughter Mean, 7.
Wild Wild Young Men, 8. Oh, What
A Dream PLUS Tributes from Freda
Payne and the Orioles
Ruth Brown On Broadway
Ruth Brown's
records were played in my house
for many years. As an adult, I
enjoyed "going back" and
listening to her music. I think
she became a better singer as
she got older. I'll never forget
when she was on Broadway in
"Black and Blue" co-starring
with Linda Hopkins. The night of
the Tony Awards, both
actress/singers were nominated
for Best Actress in a Musical.
When Ruth Brown's name was
called, you could see the
disappointment on Linda's face.
Brown said, "It took me 40 years
to climb those five steps."
Everybody was moved.
Jean DuShon, who
replaced Ruth before the opening
of the Broadway musical, "Blues
in the Night," is still in touch
with Brown. During one of Ruth's
illnesses she told DuShon,
"There are just a few of us
left, Jean. If you need my band,
just ask." That's the type of
person she is.
I have a video of Ruth and
Charles Brown when they were
touring with Bonnie Raitt. Both
were cooking! Real
scene-stealers. Ruth has been a
huge influence on the great
ladies of 60's soul music:
Aretha Franklin, Gladys
Knight, Etta James, to name a
few. She, and to a lesser
extent, LaVerne Baker, had it
all sewn up on the charts. Most
of Baker's hits were kind of
"novelty" tunes. Ruth's "Mama,
He Treats Your Daughter Mean"
was very adult, indeed. The only
other version of that song that
I've liked was Bonnie Bramlett's.
Oliver
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