Barbara Mason (born August 9, 1947, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American soul singer with several R&B and pop hits in the 1960s and 1970s, best known for her self-written 1965 hit song, "Yes, I'm Ready".
Barbara Mason, one of the few ladies of Soul who not only
sang but wrote a great portion of her material, began to "mess" with
her grandmother's piano at a the tender age of twelve. While still in school,
Barbara formed several groups, comprised of both male and female members.
Barbara, the lead singer, would come up with the songs, accompany on the piano
and naturally win many of the local talent shows, which were held at a
playground near her house every summer.
Her next door neighbour was Earl Oxidine of the 4 Larks, a
vocal group from Philly and it was another member of that constellation, Weldon
Arthur McDougal III, who offered Barbara to perform during odd spots and
intervals on the 4 Larks' shows in various nightclubs around the Philadelphia
area. Weldon Arthur McDougal
III also introduced Barbara to Jimmy Bishop, one of the most popular DJ's in Philadelphia at the time.
III also introduced Barbara to Jimmy Bishop, one of the most popular DJ's in Philadelphia at the time.
Jimmy Bishop was suitably impressed with Barbara's easily
identifiable, innocent-sounding voice and self-penned material and after aiding
in the financing of her debut single "Trouble Child" on the local
Crusader Records label, Bishop signed her to his Arctic Record Company which
had a better chance of distributing its records. Barbara wrote all her songs.
One of these records would boost her stardom. That disc was originally titled “Are
you ready?”
Barbara had been a big fan of Curtis Mayfield and a song
that Curtis had written and given to Major Lance, The Monkey Time, had
particularly impressed her and became her inspiration for the song, which was
renamed "Yes, I'm ready." It was the spring of
1965 and in a short time, she reached the top and remained there for ten weeks, with peaking at number five. It was a fetching soul-pop confection that spotlighted her high, girlish vocals. One of the first examples of the sweet, lush sound that came to be called Philly soul,
1965 and in a short time, she reached the top and remained there for ten weeks, with peaking at number five. It was a fetching soul-pop confection that spotlighted her high, girlish vocals. One of the first examples of the sweet, lush sound that came to be called Philly soul,
She had modest success throughout the rest of the decade on
the small Arctic label, run by her manager, top Philadelphia disc-jockey, Jimmy
Bishop. She reached the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 again in 1965 with
"Sad, Sad Girl", and "Oh How It Hurts" in 1967. A two-year
stay with National General Records, run by a film production company, produced
one album and four singles which failed to find success.
She made numerous appearances on music television shows and
became friends with Dick Clark. She later went to Chicago in the 1970’s and signed
with Buddah Records and toughened her persona, singing about sexual love and
infidelity with an uncommon frankness at the time in songs like "Bed and
Board", "From His Woman to You", and "Shackin' Up" and
would interrupt her singing to deliver straight-talking 'raps' about romance.
She also continued to write some of her new material.
Curtis Mayfield produced her on a cover version of
Mayfield's own "Give Me Your Love", which restored her to the pop Top
40 and R&B Top Ten in 1973; "From His Woman to You" (the response
to Shirley Brown's single "Woman to Woman") and "Shackin'
Up", produced by former Stax producer Don Davis in Detroit were also solid
soul sellers in the mid-1970s. These two were to be her last top forty records.
The Disco era came into vogue, and Barbara Mason didn't want to have anything
to do with it.
After leaving Buddah Records in 1975, surprisingly after two
top ten R&B hits, she only dented the charts periodically on small labels.
They included "I Am Your Woman, She Is Your Wife", which was produced
in 1978 by Weldon McDougal who had produced her first major success, "Yes
I'm Ready", and later in 1984, "Another Man" on West End
Records.
Barbara Mason got away from performing for a number of
years. In the early 90's producer Alan Beck asked her to perform at the Greek Theatre
in Los Angeles. After a terrific performance there her career once again took
off. She has worked on commercial
ventures for companies such as Blockbuster, Sony and Toyota and has her own publishing company called Marc James Music (named for her son).
ventures for companies such as Blockbuster, Sony and Toyota and has her own publishing company called Marc James Music (named for her son).
Mason
was inducted into the Soul Music Hall of Fame on March 1, 2016. She is still
performing to sold-out audiences. She recently performed at the Jazz Café in London
during July and her next show will be at the Greek Theatre L.A, on 5th
October 2019.
(Edited from Wikipedia, discogs.com & tsimon.com)
For “Barbara Mason - Yes, I'm Ready” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.mediafire.com/file/g19pnw14rwev7w2/Barbara_Mason_-_I%27m_Ready.rar/file
1. Yes, I'm Ready 3:01
2. Come To Me 2:22
3. You Got What It Takes 2:23
4. Misty 2:26
5. Something You Got 2:50
6. Come See About Me 2:38
7. Sad, Sad Girl 3:11
8. Got To Get You Off My Mind 2:10
9. Keep Him 2:01
10. Girls Have Feelings Too 2:44
11. Moon River 3:02
12. Trouble Child 2:42
13. Bobby Is My Baby 3:21
14. Change Me If You Can 3:07
15. Hello Baby 2:52
16. You Can Depend On Me 3:14
17. You'll Lose A Good Thing 2:39
18. Don't Ever Want To Lose Your Love 2:27
19. You're The One 3:01
20. Dedicated To The One I Love 2:15
21. You Never Loved Me (At All) 3:28
22. Half A Love 3:10
23. A Crowd Is There 2:33
24. Tighten Up 1:34
25. Going Out Of My Head/Groovin' 2:58
26. Misty/More 3:13
27. Yes, I'm Ready/Sad, Sad Girl/I Need Love/Oh, How It Hurts 5:42
AllMusic Review by Andrew Hamilton
These are Barbara's early sides for Arctic Records; it's not complete, but the rest of her Arctic stuff appears on Oh How It Hurts, also on Bear Family. Buy both and you should have everything she recorded at Arctic. She cut as many remakes and originals, some were standards, which suggests Arctic had hopes of crossing her over to the pop market, which never happened to any significant degree. The remakes run the gamut from Archie Bell's "Tighten Up" to Barbara Lynn's "You'll Lose a Good Thing," a perfectly suited vehicle for Mason's innocent, sweet, aching voice.
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For “Barbara Mason – The Hits Anthology” go here:
http://uploaded.net/file/tfa8fm2p
1 Yes I'm Ready
2 Girls Have Feelings Too
3 I Need Love
4 Oh, How It Hurts
5 Sad Sad Girl
6 Bed And Board
7 Give Me Your Love
8 I'm In Love With You
9 Shackin' Up
10 Make It Last
11 I Don't Want To Lose You
12 I Am Your Woman, She Is Your Wife
13 I'll Never Love The Same Way Twice
14 She's Got The Papers (But I Got The Man)
15 She's Got The Papers (But I Got The Man) Part II
16 You Can Be With The One You Don't Love
17 Who Will You Hurt Next
18 From His Woman To You
19 Another Man
20 If This World Were Mine
"Philadelphia soul chanteuse Barbara Mason revisits all her classic soul-steeped hits in one place for the first time on this newly recorded collection, and she's overjoyed about it." (From liner notes)
No artwork but available on web.
A big thank you to Bentleyfunk-2018 blog for active link.
Thanks Boppinbob for Barbara Mason
ReplyDeleteCheers Pedro
Hello, can you reactive Barbara Mason The Hits Anthology?, the other one works. Many thanks.
ReplyDeleteHello RF, Couldn't find the file but eventually got it from a digital album download
ReplyDeletehttps://www.imagenetz.de/k99Jv
Fabulous, very grateful!!
ReplyDelete