Monday 1 May 2023

Marva Whitney born 1 May 1944

Marva Whitney (May 1, 1944 – December 22, 2012) was an American funk singer commonly referred to by her honorary title, Soul Sister #1. Whitney was considered by many funk enthusiasts to be one of the "rawest" and "brassiest" music divas. 

Born Marva Ann Manning in Kansas City, Kansas, her performing career started as early as three years old while touring with her family's gospel group, the Manning Gospel Singers. At the age of 16 she joined the Alma Whitney Singers and two years later she married Harry Olander Whitney with whom she had a daughter Sherrie Whitney. She began singing R&B music for the first time in 1963 at a Kansas City venue and studied music at college. Whilst working at a garment factory, she continued performing in nightclubs and at local talent competitions, and by the mid-1960s had joined local group Tommy (Gadson) & The Derbys as their lead singer. The group opened for many leading performers passing through Kansas City. In 1967, she left the group, and turned down offers to tour with Bobby Bland and Little Richard before joining the James Brown Revue as a featured vocalist. Her marriage to Harry Olander Whitney ended in divorce in 1965. Subsequently, she was married, albeit briefly to disc jockey Phil Wardell. 

Her first solo single, "Your Love Was Good To Me", was recorded for King Records in mid-1967, but was unsuccessful as were two follow-up singles. She toured Europe, Asia and Africa with James Brown with whom she was in a relationship, and in early 1968 he produced her fourth solo single, "Unwind Yourself", in a more funky style. Although the record was not a chart hit, it was later sampled numerous times. Whitney's first chart hit came with "It's My Thing (You Can't Tell Me Who to Sock It To). Her only studio LP, It's My Thing, was released in 1969 and has been heavily bootlegged and sampled by numerous DJs. 

She followed up with two smaller hits, "Things Got To Get Better (Get Together)" (R&B number 22) and "I Made A Mistake Because It's Only You Pt. 1" (R&B number 32), and also recorded songs like "I'm Tired, I'm Tired, I'm Tired (Things Better Change Before Its Too Late)", and "If You Don't Work (You Can't Eat)." After recording three albums - Unwind Yourself (1968), Live and Lowdown at the Apollo and It's My Thing (1969) - and about 13 singles with James Brown as producer and writer or co-writer, an exhausted Whitney left the Brown stable in 1969 (or 1970) and returned to Kansas City. 

                               

Clarence Cooper and Allan Bell took over her management and initially struggled to get Whitney into major venues. A trip to Chicago in 1970 and a visit to producer Floyd Smith resulted in a contract for the Isley Brothers' T-Neck label.

After divorcing Phil Wardell, she married Ellis Taylor of Forte Records with whom she had a son, and recorded further singles for the label, including "Daddy Don't Know About Sugar Bear", her most successful post Brown single that was picked up for national distribution by Nashville's Excello records. She retired from recording for several years making only local appearances in Kansas City, returning to the studio in 1977 for a Forte single with her brother Melvin Manning. She divorced Taylor in 1977 and had a stint touring with The Platters. 

In the early 1980s, she briefly joined a group, Coffee, Cream & Sugar, formed by singer Alfred "Pico" Payne and Mary Lou Flesh. Later in the 1980s, she started to perform regularly with former James Brown band members such as Maceo Parker, Fred Wesley, Pee Wee Ellis, and Lyn Collins, as the JB Allstars. She returned to Kansas City as it became apparent that Funk music was essentially unfashionable and opportunities were sparse. She later married for the fourth time a preacher and returned to her gospel roots. 

In 2006, Whitney collaborated with German born DJ/collector/manager DJ Pari and Japanese funk orchestra Osaka Monaurail to produce a new single, "I Am What I Am". Osaka Monaurail style themselves on the James Brown sound and the single was produced in the fashion of an authentic release of the recordings she produced with Brown in 1969. Two successful tours of Japan and a full-length album release followed, also entitled "I Am What I Am". In 2007, 2008 and 2009, the tour was also brought to Europe where she maintained a cult following. 

In December 2009, Whitney had a stroke on stage during a concert in Lorne, Australia, while performing with The Transatlantics at Falls Festival. The remaining dates of her tour were cancelled; after Whitney made a partial recovery she performed again in 2010. On December 22, 2012 Whitney died from complications of pneumonia at her home in Kansas City. She was 68. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & Record Collector) 

6 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Marva Whitney – It's My Thing (2000 Soul Brother)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/dGCi7

1. It's My Thing (Part 1)
2. It's My Thing (Part 2)
3. Things Got To Get Better (Get Together)
4. What Kind Of Man
5. If You Love Me
6. In The Middle (Instrumental)
7. Unwind Yourself
8. You Got To Have A Job (If You Don't Work, You Can't Eat)
9. I'll Work It Out
10. Get Out Of My Life
11. I'm Tired I'm Tired I'm Tired (Things Better Change Before)
12. Shades Of Brown (Instrumental)
13. I Made A Mistake Because It's Only You (Part 1)
14. I Made A Mistake Because It's Only You (Part 2)
15. What Do I Have To Do To Prove My Love To You
16. He's The One
17. This Girl's In Love With You
18. Sunny (Duet With James Brown)

Like any disc produced by James Brown and featuring the mighty JB's as a backing group, It's My Thing is a stone-cold funky record. Marva Whitney sang in the James Brown Revue from 1967 to 1969, and in 1969 she released this record. Not only did Brown produce but he wrote or co-wrote most of the tracks and it basically sounds like a James Brown record with a female singer. The disc has five bonus tracks added to the original album, including the slow-burning "I Made a Mistake Because It's Only You, Pts. 1 & 2" and a duet with James Brown on "Sunny." This is a great record and it is a pity that it is on such a tiny label and not one of the major reissue labels, because Marva deserves wider recognition.(AllMusic review)

A big thank you to egroj for the loan of the above album. Here’s my contribution…..

For “Marva Whitney With Osaka Monaurail – I Am What I Am (2006 Shout)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/dejCC

1. I Am What I Am (Parts 1 & 2) 4:38
2. Soulsisters (Of The World Unite) 5:26
3. He's Mine 2:49
4. It's Her Thing 6:41
5. (Let A Sister Come In And) Wrapp Things Up (Part 3) 5:18
6. Saving My Love For My Baby 3:03
7. Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose 5:40
8. Every Little Bit Hurts 4:19
9. We Sing Soul 4:05
10. Peace In The Valley 6:24

Apart from a few tours on the back of the James Brown’s Funky People compilations, the powerhouse singer’s career languished in the doldrums until it was resurrected in 2005 when she joined the German Soulpower organisation. This superlative album – her first since 1969’s Live & Lowdown – sounds like she’s never been away. In fact, with its lean, horn-led JB-style funk grooves provided by the Japanese funk act, Osaka Monaurail, I Am What I Am sounds like it could have been recorded in the late 60s. The title song is pure funk dynamite, with Whitney’s stentorian vocal riding a juiced-up juggernaut groove. She also turns in a blistering cover of the Godfather’s Give It Up Or Turnit A Loose and a revamp of her Northern soul favourite, Saving My Love For My Baby. A sensational comeback. (Record Collector review)

egroj.jazz said...

Many thanks!

JennyD said...

W-O-W!! She is fabulous! Thank you so, so much, Bob :D

Bob Mac said...

Many thanks for "Marva Whitney With Osaka Monaurail"

Rev. bIGhIG said...

Bob, a good place to ask I think:
I'd sure like to get an earful of Darlene Love's "Introducing .." (in 2015,after all those years!) And thanks for the Marva -- my King LP is old and scratchy.

boppinbob said...

Hello Rev, Go here for your earful, Regards, Bob

https://fromthevaults-boppinbob.blogspot.com/2015/07/darlene-love-born-26-july-1941.html