Ila Vann (born 1938) is a Soul, blues and R&B singer.
Born Ila Harriet Fields in Long Branch, New Jersy, USA. Her brothers are Hampton Carlton (keyboard player for the The Mighty Clouds Of Joy) and Paul Vann.
She started out singing in church and was spotted at age 8 by Mahalia Jackson and went on the road as an opening act for her for the next 4 years. She sang with The Blind Boys Of Alabama, The Staple Singers, Clara Ward and Sam Cooke. At age 23, she recorded with Louis Armstrong. Her work with Sam Cooke led to her first recording contract with Arnold Records.
“I was working as a waitress on Broadway, and Sam Cooke came in. I told him I was interested in recording rhythm and blues. Two weeks later, I was in the studio.” A week later she recorded What’s the Matter Baby that went to number 1 in England. This led to countless recording sessions with Frank Sinatra, Kenny Rogers, Ray Charles and Louis Armstrong.
“Louis Armstrong was such a
nice man and so wise. He told me, ‘You will never make a million in the
business because you are so focused on your family, but you will be popular.’ I
turned down a lot of tours because of my children. I would never leave my
family for long. I am thankful because my children now tell me how grateful
they are I didn’t leave them with a sitter for long periods.” Throughout her
30’s, she exclusively performed in NYC. After 14 years of a loving marriage
with four kids, she was suddenly widowed.
Ila hit Broadway in 1972 in the musical Inner City and her move to Roulette resulted in a more commercial sound, and she is especially known for her version of "Can’t Help Loving That Man" from the musical "Showboat". This song later became a huge hit on the Northern Soul circuit in England. Vann broke her Roulette contract due to a lack of promotion/marketing for her work. She continued to be a sought after solo performer as well as providing distinct harmonies with pop greats Barry Manilow.
Following her Roulette recordings, she worked on Broadway musicals, toured with the USO, and the group Business Before Pleasure. She lived in Ontario, Canada for many years and performed in cities and towns around Eastern Ontario. She toured the province for three years, meeting her second husband near Bagotville where he was stationed in the military. She got married and acquired permanent residence. The couple came to Trenton in 1987 when he was posted.. Vann performed for the next four years with the R and B Boys out of Belleville. She also made occasional appearances in the UK for always appreciative Northern Soul devotees. Her husband died in 2002.
Ila continued to perform weekly for the next four years with the R and B Boys out of Belleville. Then, for the next three, she settled into a regular spot at Brandees in Kingston where the owner hired a tight band to back her. There, she met Ian Kojima, the sax player from the Fade Kings, and consequently she did many shows with them before retiring in 2017. She lives in Richmond, Virginia with one of her daughters. Ila Vann was the kind of performer you never forgot, bubbling with energy and full of life, yet was a vastly underrated performer – recognition of her contributions to the Soul Music genre is long overdue.
(Edited from Discogs, The Intelligencer, Loyal Blues & County and Quinte Living.)






1 comment:
A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday singer and for the loan of the album below.
For “Iva Vann- The Iva Vann Collection (2003)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/6CSyNnT1
1. What's The Matter Baby.mp3"
2. It Must Be Love.mp3"
3. What You Mean To Me.mp3"
4. Cruising With The Blues.mp3"
5. Can't Help Loving That Man.mp3"
6. I've Got The Feeling.mp3"
7. Got To Get To Jim Johnson.mp3"
8. Your Love.mp3"
9. Keep On Laughing Baby.mp3"
10. Every Little Living Dream.mp3"
11. My Mother Said.mp3"
12. You Made Me This Way.mp3"
13. Now That I Need Him.mp3"
14. Flying Solo Tomorrow.mp3"
15. No Good Jim.mp3"
16. Ila Vann Interview (DJ Kevin Roberts, February 2003).mp3"
There’s something eerie about hearing Ila Vann sing, and then realizing you’ve never heard heard her name before. Vann seems to have been perpetually on the cusp of stardom, working with everyone from Sam Cooke to Louis Armstrong to recording songs intended for Gladys Knight. You can sense her authenticity so often in her work, specifically with her gospel-trained voice that necessarily seats her next to Aretha Franklin and Marvin Gaye.
Comparing Vann to Franklin or Gaye, and imagining what her career might have been like in the 60s and 70s may be a futile exercise. But for a singer who lost two husbands and hasn’t really hit it big in her own country, Vann is a talent who deserves more than a retrospective head nod.
Post a Comment