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1997 Ruth Brown Ruth Brown is also an accomplished actress of stage, screen and television. Her work in "Black and Blue" resulted in a 1989 Tony Award. You have also seen her in Norman Lear's "Hello Larry," in "Little House on the Prairie," and as Motormouth Mabel in the John Waters film, Hairspray. In addition, she has served as National Public Radio's host of "Harlem Hit Parade" and "Blues Stage." Less well known but equally far-reaching are her humanitarian and activist credentials. It was Ruth Brown's landmark and successful challenge to record labels, seeking greater artist equity and recognition, which resulted in her founding of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. She is also an author, whose book, Miss Rhythm, The Autobiography of Ruth Brown, was published in 1996 by Donald Fine Books. The book received the Gleason Award from BMI and Rolling Stone. During her long career, she has influenced and been influenced by artists and other celebrities such as Billy Eckstine, Duke Ellington, Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Count Basie, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Sarah Vaughan, Little Richard, Jackie Wilson, Clyde McPhatter, Bonnie Raitt, Muhammad Ali, Robert Altman and John Waters. In her autobiography, Ms. Brown notes that, "If they're under a hundred, honey, I knows 'em!" Ms. Brown also intimately knows the underside of American culture, as an African-American artist whose career was deeply affected by racism and Jim Crow laws, as well as by music industry practices that have deprived countless artists of revenue, recognition and long-term livelihood. Throughout it all, her spirit, creativity, intelligence and determination have conspired to form an original, enduring entertainer who has made singular contributions to art and artists for well over fifty years. Singer Ruth Brown Dies
Washington Post Staff Writer Appreciation R&B's Tireless Voice Ruth Brown Made Hits And Made Sure Artists Got The Money They Deserved By Richard Harrington Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, November 18, 2006; Page C01 . Sonny Stitt Sonny Stitt performed and recorded with a panoply of greats including Billy Eckstine, Eddie Davis, Paul Gonsalves, Red Holloway, Zoot Sims, Art Pepper, Clark Terry, Dizzy Gillespie, J.J. Johnson, Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis. During the late '40s and early '50s, when Stitt and tenor saxophonist Gene Ammons had their own band, Stitt's "cutting sessions" with his band mate and other sax phenomenas of the period became the stuff of legends and endlessly recounted anecdotes. Throughout his career, Stitt heard himself compared with, and described as the successor to, Charlie (Bird) Parker. Indeed, it is said that just before Parker died, he ran into Stitt on a street corner and told him, "Man, I'm handing you the keys to the kingdom." Despite the flattering comparison, Sonny Stitt will be remembered as a prolific and wholly original sax great who stood out amid the giants of the genre. Sonny Stitt died in Washington, DC in 1982. Donald Byrd Their debut album contained the #23 R&B , #69 pop single "Do It, Fluid," while the second yielded an across-the-board smash in the #4 R&B , #6 pop "Walking in Rhythm." Rare grooves from those two classic Blackbyrd albums have been widely sampled - by such hip-hop artists as Queen Latifah and UTFO. He currently teaches at Delaware State. Copyright © 2000 by Washington Area Music Association. |
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