Friday 6 May 2022

Wendy Rene born 1947


Wendy Rene was the stage name of soul singer and songwriter Mary Frierson, later Mary Cross (1947 – December 16, 2014). She recorded for Stax Records in the mid 1960s. 

Mary Frierson was born in Memphis, Tennessee. Her father was of mixed race and married a Memphis musician who was nearly 20 years his junior; the couple had three sons and one daughter. The family were members of the Church of God in Christ. 

As a teenager, Mary Frierson formed a singing quartet, the Drapels, with her brother Johnnie Frierson and two friends, Marianne Brittenum and Wilbur Mondie. They auditioned for Stax co-founder Jim Stewart in 1963, and were immediately offered a recording contract. Before leaving, Mary showed Stewart some of the songs she had written, and was also offered a solo contract. While in her teens, she married a military man, but the young couple soon parted ways. 


                             

She needed a stage name, and several options came up including the name Wendy Storm, suggested by Stax receptionist-turned PR head Deanie Parker. Otis Redding then came up with the name Wendy Rene, which she preferred, and she used that name regularly as a solo artist. 

Her first solo single, "After Laughter (Comes Tears)", co-written with her brother, was released in August 1964, and became a local hit but failed to make the national R&B chart (the single did, however, reach Billboard's Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart in Oct. 1964). The record featured Booker T. Jones on organ. The song had been recorded by the Drapels, but was released under Wendy Rene's name. The group split up soon afterwards. 

Her second solo single, "Bar-B-Q", was released in November 1964, to cash in on the popularity of dance craze records. Featuring Steve Cropper on guitar, it failed to reach the charts. However, she continued to record and to tour with Stax stars, including Rufus Thomas and Otis Redding, and to sing backing vocals on their records. In 1967, she married songwriter and Stax employee James Cross. In December of that year, she was scheduled to fly with Redding and the Bar-Kays for what would have been her final live performance for the foreseeable future. A new mother, she backed out at the last minute to stay home with her child. Tragically, the plane crashed in Madison, Wisconsin leaving Redding and six others dead. 

Wendy Rene then retired from the music business and, as Mary Cross, devoted herself to her family and church, the Bountiful Blessing Church of God in Christ in Memphis. 

She and James Cross have five sons and one daughter. In 2010, she returned to the stage briefly at the Ponderosa Stomp in New Orleans. 

Several of her songs have been used in films (Gegen die Wand, The Fighting Temptations, Lucky Number Slevin, The Wackness, Felix and Meira, The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun) and sampled/redone by current artists such as Wu-Tang Clan (in "Tearz"), Metro Boomin, Ariana Grande, Alicia Keys and Lykke Li. Chili's Restaurant used Rene's "Bar-B-Q" single for their 2013 commercial. 

An anthology, After Laughter Comes Tears, was issued by Light in the Attic Records in 2012. 

Wendy Rene died on December 16, 2014, after a stroke. She was 67. (Edited from Wikipedia) (Last photo appears on various blogs as Wendy Rene. Can anyone confirm?)  

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Wendy Rene – After Laughter Comes Tears
(Complete Stax & Volt Singles + Rarities 1964-1965)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/14116710/Wendy_Rene_ALCT.rar.html

1 Wendy Rene– Bar-B-Q 2:31
2 Wendy Rene– Gone For Good 2:20
3 The Drapels– Your Love Is All I Need 2:26
4 Wendy Rene– After Laughter Comes Tears 3:03
5 Wendy Rene– I Wish I Were That Girl 2:38
6 Wendy Rene– What Will Tomorrow Bring 2:43
7 The Drapels– Wondering (When My Love Is Coming Home) 2:17
8 Wendy Rene– Deep In My Heart 2:55
9 Wendy Rene– Give You What I Got 3:33
10 Wendy Rene– Crying All By Myself 2:38
11 Wendy Rene– Crowded Park 3:14
12 Wendy Rene– Last Love 3:05
13 Wendy Rene– Love At First Sight 2:57
14 Wendy Rene– She's Moving Away 3:30
15 Wendy Rene– He Hasn't Failed Me Yet 3:28
16 The Drapels– Please Don't Leave Me 2:12
17 Wendy Rene– The Same Guy 3:00
18 The Drapels– Young Man 2:37
19 Wendy Rene– Can't Stay Away 2:27
20 Wendy Rene– First Kiss 3:23
21 Wendy Rene– Reap What You Sow 2:54
22 Wendy Rene– Young And Foolish 3:08

First ever anthology of Southern soul legend Wendy Rene including all her recordings for Stax & The Drapels singles for the Volt label.

Much of Rene's work was recorded when she was in high school (and after she quit), and you can hear it in her voice, which is breathtakingly clean and pure, filled with the sense that she's singing with every ounce of her body. Part of the collection's urgency too is because of the backing band: The tracks feature the Stax session players -- Charles "Packy" Axton and the members of Booker T. and the MGs at the peak of its powers, including Steve Cropper on guitar and Booker T. Jones on organ. The 22 songs on "After Laughter" are as sturdy as Shaker chairs: tight, compact, to the point -- and simply striking. Of particular note is the previously unreleased "Deep in My Heart," a woozy, funky, absolutely vibrant song -- a hit that never was.

Tracks 05, 08, 15 and 20: Previously unreleased.
Tracks 07+16: Volt #114 (1964) - The Drapels.
Tracks 03+18: Volt #119 (1964) - The Drapels.
Tracks 04+06: Stax #154 (1964).
Tracks 01+22: Stax #159 (1964).
Tracks 09+21: Stax #171 (1965).

J. said...

Tnx Great Album You Provid Us Just Great Thanks Again Grtzz

Rev. bIGhIG said...

Had a few tracks of Ms. Rene, but now much more!
Thanks.