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Sad News - Loleatta Holloway RIP

Sad News - Loleatta Holloway RIP magazine cover

In these days of regular sad news, I do find that with some artists its not to the actual day of the news that really appreciate just what they have done.

Loleatta Holloway is one of these artists, looking back I think its fair to say that her work must have touched many soul or even pure dance music fans some time in some shape or form.

Sad news today indeed

 

A couple of information clips from web sources

 

The Soul Book (the influential book by Clive Anderson, Ian Hoare et al-.-Methuen, 1975) said of her "there is no shortage of singers waiting in the wings, artists like Loleatta Holloway who have been making ripples in the business for some years. Numbers like her impassioned Cry To Me...continue to knock insistently at the door". By the late 1970s, the door to fame had opened for Loleatta and she went on to become one of the great disco divas of the era.

The sides she cut for Aware between 1971 and 1975, however, (including 1974's Cry To Me) stand alongside the very finest soul music ever made.

 

ace website notes on kent cd The Hotlanta Soul Of Loleatta Holloway

 

http://www.acerecord...=59&release=994

 

 

 

Wikiopedia

 

Early career

Holloway began singing gospel with her mother in the Holloway Community Singers and recorded with Albertina Walker in the Caravans gospel group. Holloway was also a cast member of the Chicago troupe of Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope. Around this time, she met her future producer, manager, and husband Floyd Smith, and recorded "Rainbow '71" in 1971, a Curtis Mayfield song that Gene Chandler had recorded in 1963. It was initially released on the tiny Apache label, but shortly thereafter, it got picked up for national distribution by Galaxy Records.

 

1970s

In the early 1970s, Holloway signed a recording contract with the Atlanta-based soul music label Aware, part of the General Recording Corporation (GRC), owned by Michael Thevis. Holloway recorded two albums for the label, both of them produced by Floyd Smith "Loleatta (1973) and Cry to Me (1975). Holloway later married Smith. Her first single from the second album, the ballad "Cry to Me" rose to #10 Billboard R&B and #68 on the Hot 100, but before the label could really establish Holloway, it went out of business.

Top Philadelphia arranger and producer Norman Harris quickly signed Holloway in 1976 for his new label, Gold Mind, a subsidiary of New York's Salsoul Records. The first release from the album Loleatta was another Sam Dees ballad, "Worn-Out Broken Heart," which reached #25 R&B, but the B-side, "Dreaming," climbed to #72 on the pop chart and launched her as a disco act. She contributed vocals to "Re-Light My Fire" for Dan Hartman, who then wrote and produced the title track of her fourth and final album for Gold Mind, "Love Sensation" (1980). Eighteen songs of hers charted on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, including four #1s. However, it was a ballad that proved to be another big R&B hit for her. "Only You" was written and produced by Bunny Sigler, who also sang with Holloway on the track, and it reached #11 in 1978.

 

1980s to the present

In the early 1980s, she had another dance hit with "Crash Goes Love" (#5 on the U.S. Dance chart, #86 on the US R&B Chart). She also recorded one single, "So Sweet," for the fledgling house-music label DJ International Records. In the late 1980s, her vocals from "Love Sensation" were used in the UK #1 hit "Ride on Time" by Black Box. Holloway, however, was uncredited for her vocals and both Holloway and her attorneys successfully sued the group, which lead to an undisclosed court settlement in Holloway's favor. In 1992, she also had a hit with dance band Cappella. There she appeared billed as Cappella featuring Lolleatta Holloway on the single "Take Me Away" (UK #25). Holloway's fortunes dramatically improved, however, when she had her first US #1 hit when Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch featured her vocals in the chart-topping "Good Vibrations" (1991). Holloway also performed with Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch to promote the single, and she received full vocal credit and a share of the royalties.

More recent dance chart entries include "What Goes around Comes Around" (credited to GTS featuring Loleatta Holloway) in 2000, and "Relight My Fire" (credited to Martin featuring Loleatta Holloway), which hit #5 in 2003. While not a single, "Like a Prayer", a Madonna cover, was a track on the Madonna tribute album Virgin Voices. "Love Sensation '06," peaked at #22 in the Dutch Top 40,[4] and reached #37 on the UK Singles Chart as well as #49 in Australia.

Whitney Houston sampled Holloway's 1976 track "We're Getting Stronger" on her 2009 hit single "Million Dollar Bill".

Holloway died on March 21, 2011 after slipping into a coma. She was 64 years old.

Wikiopedia http://en.wikipedia....leatta_Holloway

(note the usual wikipedia issues apply with the above info)

 

Thanks to Paul for passing on the sad news in the thread below

 

Refosoul Loleatta Holloway Clip Page

 

http://www.soul-sour...atta%20holloway

 

loleatta holloway - we did it

 

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ccs-1-0-98550800-1300807453_thumb.jpg

 

 



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