Ora Denise Allen (July 16, 1939 – January 8, 2018), known by the stage name Denise LaSalle, was an American blues, R&B and soul singer, songwriter, and record producer who, since the death of Koko Taylor, had been recognized as the "Queen of the Blues".
The Jackson, Tennessee-based LaSalle was raised in Belzoni,
Mississippi, but she got started singing in local churches around Leflore
County. She was born July 16, 1939, as Ora Denise Allen, as the youngest of
eight children, to Nathaniel A. Allen Sr. and Nancy Cooper. Her family worked
as sharecroppers, and she had to pick cotton and take up other paid labour to
support her family. Growing up, she listened to Grand Ole Opry radio
broadcasts, and then lived across the street from a juke joint in Belzoni.
LaSalle's early influences, from the jukeboxes around Belzoni and over the
radio, included Ruth Brown, Dinah Washington, and LaVern Baker.
LaSalle moved north to Chicago when she was in her early twenties and would attend shows at the Regal Theatre, always returning home to write songs. She got to know blues musicians and began giving her songs to them, until one day a Chess Records executive stopped by at Mixer's Lounge, where LaSalle was working as a bar maid. He listened to one of her songs and took it down to Chess Records, and the company later signed her as a vocalist, but never recorded her.
LaSalle moved north to Chicago when she was in her early twenties and would attend shows at the Regal Theatre, always returning home to write songs. She got to know blues musicians and began giving her songs to them, until one day a Chess Records executive stopped by at Mixer's Lounge, where LaSalle was working as a bar maid. He listened to one of her songs and took it down to Chess Records, and the company later signed her as a vocalist, but never recorded her.
Two years later, LaSalle recorded and produced her own
record with the help of Billy "The Kid" Emerson, the Chess executive
who'd originally shown an interest in her. Her first single, "A Love
Reputation", was a modest regional hit. After the record made some waves on local
radio, Chess stepped in and purchased the master and took it to Europe.
Meanwhile, LaSalle continued writing songs and sitting in with blues musicians
around the Chicago clubs.
LaSalle's first big hit came about in 1971 when her "Trapped by a Thing Called Love" broke on the radio in Chicago and then Detroit. This reached #1 on the national R&B chart and #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. She also wrote successful follow-ups, "Now Run and Tell That" and "Man Sized Job", which made #3 and number 4 in the R&B Top Ten and also charted in the Hot 100.
Her early hits were recorded at the Hi recording studios in Memphis, operated by Mitchell, using the best southern session players. She continued to have hits on Westbound and then on ABC Records through the mid-1970s, including "Love Me Right" she also continued to perform live and to produce.
She also wrote successful follow-ups, "Now Run And
Tell That" and "Man Sized Job" which made #3 and #4 in the
R&B Top Ten and also charted in the Hot 100. Her early hits were recorded
at the Hi recording studios in Memphis, operated by Willie Mitchell, using the
cream of southern session players. She continued to have hits on Westbound and
then on ABC Records through the mid-1970s, including "Love Me Right"
(#10 R&B, #80 pop) She continued to produce and perform live. Her co-penned
song, "Married, But Not to Each Other" (#16 R&B) was included in
the 1979 The Best of Barbara Mandrell, compilation album.
In the early 1980s, she signed as a singer and songwriter
with Malaco Records, for whom she released a string of critically acclaimed
albums over more than 20 years, starting with Lady in the Street (1983) and
Right Place, Right Time (1984). Both albums became major successes among soul
blues, R&B and soul fans and on urban radio stations. In 1985, she enjoyed
her only recognition in the UK Singles Chart, when her cover version of Rockin'
Sidney's, "My Toot Toot", reached #6.
LaSalle appeared at the 1984 and 1993 versions of the
Long Beach Blues Festival, and also in 1993, she performed at the San Francisco
Blues Festival. Her album Smokin' In Bed (1997) sold well. After more than a
decade away, when she recorded three albums with small Memphis-based soul-blues
label, Ecko, she returned to Malaco for her 2010 outing called "24 Hour
Woman". She continues to work as a live performer, particularly at festivals,
and more recently has branched out into the gospel genre. In 2011, she was
inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
LaSalle now lives with her husband, James E. Wolfe, in
Jackson, Tennessee, where she opened a restaurant called Blues Legend Café. The
restaurant was located at 436 E. Main Street and has since closed.
In 2013 and 2014, LaSalle was nominated for a Blues Music
Award in the 'Soul Blues Female Artist' category. On June 6, 2015 LaSalle was
inducted into the Official Rhythm & Blues Music Hall of Fame in Clarksdale,
MS.
After suffering from heart problems, and with complications
from a fall having resulted in her right leg being amputated in October 2017,
LaSalle died surrounded by her family, at the age of 78, on January 8,
2018. (Edited from Wikipedia & All
Music)
5 comments:
For Denise LaSalle, Making a Good Thing Better: The Complete Westbound Singles 1970-1976
Go here:
http://www41.zippyshare.com/v/jSGtH4WR/file.html
1.Hung Up, Strung Out
2.Heartbreaker of the Year
3.Trapped by a Thing Called Love
4.Keep It Coming
5.Now Run and Tell That
6.The Deeper I Go (The Better It Gets)
7.Man Sized Job
8.I’m Over You
9.Making a Good Thing Better
10.What It Takes To Get a Good Woman (That’s What It’s Gonna Take to Keep Her)
11.Do Me Right
12.Your Man and Your Best Friend
13.What Am I Doing Wrong
14.Don’t Nobody Live Here (By the Name of Fool)
15.Good Goody Getter
16.Get Up Off My Mind
17.The Best Thing I Ever Had
18.Trying to Forget
19.We’ve Got Love (The Good Part About It)
20.My Brand on You
21.Any Time is the Right Time
22.Here I Am Again
23.Married, But Not to Each Other
24.Who’s the Fool
25.Trapped by a Thing Called Love – Radio Ad
26.On the Loose – Radio Ad
Tracks 1-2 from Parka 2302/Westbound 162, 1970
Tracks 3-4 from Westbound 182, 1971
Tracks 5-6 from Westbound 201, 1972
Tracks 7-8 from Westbound 206, 1972
Tracks 9-10 from Westbound 215, 1973
Track 11 from Westbound 6146 102 (UK), 1972
Tracks 12-13 from Westbound 219, 1973
Tracks 14-15 from Westbound 221, 1973
Tracks 16-17 from Westbound 223, 1974
Tracks 18-19 from Westbound 229, 1974
Tracks 20-21 from Westbound 5004, 1975
Track 22 from Westbound 5008, 1975
Tracks 23-24 from Westbound 5019, 1976
Tracks 25-26 previously unreleased
Hello Bob,
Is a repost possible...thanks.
Hiya Bib, Just back from the Med....Here's Denise'
https://www.imagenetz.de/cgaqh
Actually, Ms. LaSalle was born on July 16, 1934. Her given name was Ora D. (or Ora "Dee") Allen (she spelled it both ways at different times). The person who stopped by Mix's Lounge in 1963 (that was the name as she remembered it) was actually singer/songwriter/keyboardist Billy "The Kid" Emerson, who would soon become her manager and who co-wrote her first local hit, "A Love Reputation," along with Lee Baker, who is now known worldwide as the late bluesman Lonnie Brooks. He wasn't a Chess executive, though -- he had his own record label, Tarpon, on which he released "A Love Reputation" in 1967 (or possibly late 1966).
Tragically, her leg amputation in 2017 was not the result of an injury sustained in a fall, but of inadequate health care. She had contracted a staph infection in the hospital, which was misdiagnosed. By the time the error was realized, gangrene had set in and she lost the leg.
Thanks JMC, As with all of my research I tend to go with the main reputable sources available at the time of editing and in this instance I find they actually give July 16 as her birthday. So in this case the error is totally mine. Why I stated June instead of July is beyond me! (probably too much time behind the monitor screen.) Any corrective input is always welcome and I have now corrected her birthday. Regards, Bob.
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