Wednesday, 1 February 2023

Chris Clark born 1 February 1946

Christine Elizabeth Clark (born February 1, 1946), better known as Chris Clark, is an American soul, jazz, and blues singer, who recorded for Motown Records. Clark became known to Northern Soul fans for hit songs such as 1965's "Do Right Baby Do Right" (by Berry Gordy) and 1966's "Love's Gone Bad" (Holland-Dozier-Holland). She later co-wrote the screenplay for the 1972 motion picture Lady Sings the Blues starring Diana Ross, which earned Clark an Academy Award nomination. 

Clark was born in Santa Cruz, California. From early childhood she expressed an interest in singing. She was active in school bands and by 1960, when she was 14, Chris Clark was on stage. She went on her first tour with Jan And Dean and Dick & Dee Dee. She also was on a tour with The Coasters and The Olympics at a VFW Hall in Marin County. Other recording artists Chris Clark performed with in the early 60’s was Bobby Freeman. She went down to Los Angeles to play in a number of clubs until she was kicked out when they discovered she was underage. Her big break came near the end of 1963 when she had an audition with Motown. 

Chris Clark was the first white singer to sign with Motown. In the fall of 1965 she recorded “Do Right, Baby, Do Right.” Clark was considered America’s answer to Dusty Springfield. Clark had soul. But Motown didn’t quite know what to do with her and how to market her. The single charted in Oakland, California, but got scant airplay elsewhere. Her next single release was penned by Holland-Dozier-Holland. It was titled “Love’s Gone Bad”which reached #105 pop, and #41 R&B in the U.S. in 1966. In Canada, the song made it to #95 on the RPM 100.


                             

Her next release was “I Want To Go Back There Again”. It was a regional hit in several record markets in the USA. However, it failed to make the Billboard Hot 100. There seemed to be no breakout hit record for Chris Clark. In 1969, Motown tried once again to get her noticed. They released an album titled CC Rides Again, on the subsidiary, Weed Records. It featured Chris Clark riding an elephant. The album was full of covers. It included “Spinning Wheel” by Blood, Sweat and Tears, “With A Little Help From My Friends” and “Get Back” by The Beatles, Elvis Presley’s “In The Ghetto” and “Good Morning Starshine” from the musical Hair. However, the album was a commercial failure. 

Clark became famous in England as the "white negress" (a nickname meant as a compliment), because the six-foot platinum blonde, blue-eyed soul singer toured with fellow Motown artists, who were predominantly black. However, Chris Clark was approached by Berry Gordy Jr. to be one of several co- writers of the script for Lady Sings The Blues. The 1972 film earned five Academy Award nominations, including for Chris Clark. Clark got married to Ernest Tidyman, who co-wrote the screenplay for Shaft. She was his fourth wife. He died from complications from a perforated ulcer in 1984 in London. Clark went on to be an executive with Motown’s film and TV production studio in Los Angeles. 

In 1990, after going through rehab at the Betty Ford Clinic, Clark moved to Arizona, where she spent many years living in a cabin in the woods. She started taking double-exposure photographs and, before long, dove headfirst into the art world. She re-surfaced in 1991 when she re-recorded 'From Head To Toe' with U.K. producer Ian Levine for Motor City Records, but it was  not until 2006 that Chris Clark appeared again to sing in concert. This occasion was the Royal Albert Hall in London, UK. A Motown Collection had been released and she shared the stage with The Temptations and The Four Tops. She got the invitation from The Temptations who had her open for all of the concerts (13 or 14) in the UK. 

In 2015, Clark performed the song "The Ghosts of San Francisco", written by R. Christian Anderson and John Thomas Bullock, for the feature film When the World Came to San Francisco. The music video for the song was winner of the "Mixed Genre Jazz Film Award" at the New York Jazz Film Festival in November 2016. 

Looking back, Berry Gordy Jr. says of Chris Clark, “She just didn’t get the material. She worked with Holland-Dozier-Holland. She did one of the greatest songs I ever wrote. But she could never break that glass ceiling.” 

Gordy recalls that on stage and in the recording studio, Chris Clark was one of the best: “She was up against Smokey. She was up against Stevie. She was up against Marvin. She was up against Diana and the Supremes, Gladys Knight and the Pips, the Marvelettes. And she held her own against those people.” 

Clark Clark currently lives in Santa Rosa, California and continues to work as a screenwriter, fine art photographer and singer. In 2005 Universal Music released a 50-track double-CD entitled Chris Clark: The Motown Collection, which  includes Soul Sounds, C.C. Rides Again, and many unreleased Motown recordings. 

(Edited from Vancouver Pop Music Sinature Sounds, Wikipedia & SF Gate)

6 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Chris Clark – The Motown Collection (2005 Motown)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/fhtL9

Disc: 1
1 I Want To Go Back There Again
2 Love's Gone Bad
3 Born To Love You Baby
4 If You Should Walk Away
5 Whisper You Love Me Boy
6 Got To Get You Into My Life
7 Day By Day Or Never
8 From Head To Toe
9 Do Right Baby Do Right
10 Until You Love Someone
11 Put Yourself In My Place
12 Sweeter As The Days Go By
13 C.C. Rider
14 Spinning Wheel
15 How About You
16 Good Morning Starshine
17 With A Little Help From My Friends
18 One
19 In The Ghetto
20 Can I See You In The Morning
21 You've Made Me So Very Happy
22 Get Back
23 Don't Be Too Long
24 I Love You
25 The Beginning Of The End
Disc: 2
1 Ask Any Girl
2 Everything Is Good About You
3 Try It Baby
4 I Like Everything You
5 Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me For A Little While)
6 In The Neighbourhood
7 Yester-Me Yester-You Yesterday
8 I Just Can't Forget Him
9 If You Let Me Baby
10 Your Wonderful Love
11 Do Like I Do
12 Let Me Go
13 Mr. Maestro Play A Blue Sonata
14 Soft Touch
15 Crying In The Chapel
16 He's Got The Whole World In His Hands
17 It Must Be Love Baby
18 Stay Away From Temptation
19 He's Good For Me
20 I Just Wanna Be Lovin' You
21 Bad Seed
22 Something's Wrong
23 Mighty Good Lovin'
24 Everything's Right Everything's Wrong
25 What You Doing

A six-foot tall, platinum-blonde white woman, Chris Clark didn't fit the standard profile of a Motown artist. This, combined with the fact that she never had a top 100 pop hit, meant that she never became a household name.
Which makes this double-CD both welcome and intriguing. Comprising everything she released for the label and its affiliates, plus 25 previously unreleased tracks, it is simply a revelation. Despite her lowly sales status, she could clearly still command the highest production values (possibly helped by Berry Gordy's close personal interest), and these are highly polished pieces: even an old chestnut like "Crying in the Chapel" has new life injected into it.
How could a voice of this delicacy and control have remained so obscure for so long? (Amazon edited review)

boppinbob said...

Below are three “home compilations” which are all expertly produced by Paul @ Albums That Should Exist blog and are well worth highlighting here..

For “Chris Clark – Anthology 1965 – 1969” (2019 ATSE Compilation) go here

https://www.imagenetz.de/dQ9gj

Disc 1. Love Gone Bad - Various Songs (1965-1966)

01 Do Right Baby, Do Right (Chris Clark)
02 Don't Be Too Long (Chris Clark)
03 In the Neighbourhood (Chris Clark)
04 I Just Can't Forget Him (Chris Clark)
05 Check Yourself (Chris Clark)
06 Everything Is Good about You (Chris Clark)
07 Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday (Chris Clark)
08 Do I Love You [Indeed I Do] (Chris Clark)
09 Love's Gone Bad (Chris Clark)
10 Mighty Good Lovin' (Chris Clark)
11 Put Yourself in My Place (Chris Clark)
12 Something's Wrong (Chris Clark)
13 Never Trust a Man (Chris Clark)
14 I Still Love You (Chris Clark)

All the songs on this album pre-date her first album, which would come out in 1967, though a couple of the songs would end up on it. Only five of the 13 songs here were released at the time.

Disc 2. Soul Sounds - Alternate Version (1967)

01 From Head to Toe (Chris Clark)
02 I Want to Go Back There Again (Chris Clark)
03 Got to Get You into My Life (Chris Clark)
04 Whisper You Love Me Boy (Chris Clark)
05 Day by Day or Never (Chris Clark)
06 I Love You (Chris Clark)
07 Take Me in Your Arms [Rock Me a Little While] (Chris Clark)
08 You've Got What It Takes (Chris Clark)
09 It Hurts to Be in Love (Chris Clark)
10 Since I Fell for You (Chris Clark)
11 Sweet Lovin' (Chris Clark)
12 I Just Wanna Be Lovin' You (Chris Clark)
13 Sweeter as the Days Go By (Chris Clark)
14 From Head to Toe [Live] (Chris Clark)
15 talk [Live] (Chris Clark)
16 Who Can I Turn To - It's Not Unusual - Yesterday - Feelin' Good - Who Can I Turn To [Live] (Chris Clark)
17 Got to Get You into My Life [Live] (Chris Clark)

This collection is only very loosely based on "Soul Sounds." In fact, only four of the songs on this version were released on that 1967 version. It also includes a few live tracks of Clark when she was in her 1960s prime. It shows Clark must have put on an impressive live show.

Disc 3 Chris Clark - Various Songs (1968-1969)

01 Feelin' Good (Chris Clark)
02 I'm Gonna Be True (Chris Clark)
03 He's Good for Me (Chris Clark)
04 Bad Seed (Chris Clark)
05 Can I See You in the Morning (Chris Clark)
06 If You Let Me Baby (Chris Clark)
07 C. C. Rider (Chris Clark)
08 One (Chris Clark)
09 In the Ghetto (Chris Clark)
10 You've Made Me So Very Happy (Chris Clark)
11 My World Is Empty without You (Chris Clark)
12 The Last Thing on My Mind (Chris Clark)
13 Dream or Cry (Chris Clark)
14 Hang It Up (Chris Clark)

Four of the 14 songs here come from "CC Rides Again." Another eight songs are from 1968 or 1969, but not officially released at the time. The last two songs are strange, because they come from much, much later. After 1969, she basically gave up on her music career, but stayed with Motown Records and moved her way up in the company until she was the head creative director. She did record a few songs in the later 1970s, but they're disco tracks and not included here.)

Once again a very big thank you goes to Paul for the above labour of love.
For more of his unique compilations visit here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com

D said...

Thanks for CC, BB.
- D

rntcj said...

Hi!

Thanx for these. Only had songs on various "60's Females" comps. so goo to have "all".

Another Motown artist:

R.I.P. Barrett Strong. Passed Jan. 28, 2023. His Hit "Money (That's...)" put Motown "on the map" of US Musical History.

Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj

Guitarradeplastico,scraping oddities said...

Many thanks

ProfessorCalculus said...

Thanks For this too.