Renowned in
deep soul circles for the devastating ballad "Cry to Me," singer
Betty Harris was born in Orlando, FL, in 1941 and raised primarily in Alabama. The child of preachers, her deep church roots conflicted with her desire to sing secular
soul music, and at 17 she left home to pursue a performing career, briefly apprenticing under
R&B star
Big Maybelle before eventually landing in California, cutting the 1960 single "Taking Care of Business" for the Douglas label. Record promoter Babe Chivian recommended that
Harris relocate to New York City, promising her an audition with Brill Building producer and songwriter Bert Berns -- there she performed a slow,
gospel-inspired rendition of "Cry to Me," an uptempo Berns-produced hit for Chivian's client
Solomon Burke.
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Renowned in
deep soul circles for the devastating ballad "Cry to Me," singer
Betty Harris was born in Orlando, FL, in 1941 and raised primarily in Alabama. The child of preachers, her deep church roots conflicted with her desire to sing secular
soul music, and at 17 she left home to pursue a performing career, briefly apprenticing under
R&B star
Big Maybelle before eventually landing in California, cutting the 1960 single "Taking Care of Business" for the Douglas label. Record promoter Babe Chivian recommended that
Harris relocate to New York City, promising her an audition with Brill Building producer and songwriter Bert Berns -- there she performed a slow,
gospel-inspired rendition of "Cry to Me," an uptempo Berns-produced hit for Chivian's client
Solomon Burke.
Berns immediately dispatched
Harris to the recording studio, and in just three takes she wrapped "Cry to Me," issued on Jubilee in 1963 -- after the record became a New York radio smash, it broke nationally, cracking the
R&B Top Ten and the pop Top 40 in the process of surpassing
Burke's original. Soon
Harris headlined the legendary Apollo Theater, mounting a national tour after recording her Jubilee follow-up, "His Kiss" -- the single stiffed, however, and when "Mo Jo Hannah" met a similar fate, Berns opted to cut his losses.
During a 1965 tour,
Harris met New Orleans composer and producer
Allen Toussaint, and with the superbly slinky "I'm Evil Tonight" became the first artist to record for his fledgling Sansu label. With
Toussaint at the helm, the bluesy balladry of
Harris' Jubilee sides gave way to a funky, sensual dynamic that heralded a new era of
New Orleans R&B. The 1966 ballad "Sometime" was backed by the brilliant "I Don't Want to Hear It,"
Toussaint's edgiest and most aggressive production to date. The subsequent "12 Red Roses" further refined the approach, and with 1967's "Nearer to You"
Harris finally returned to the
R&B Top 20, delivering another sublimely emotional performance.
"Love Lots of Lovin'," a duet with fellow
Toussaint charge
Lee Dorsey, closed out the year --
Harris planned to support the record on tour with
Otis Redding, but on December 10, the
soul giant lost his life in a plane crash.
Harris forged on, with 1968's "Mean Man" delivering her grittiest effort to date; backed by a session group that would soon evolve into
the Meters, she then ended her Sansu tenure with the fierce "Trouble with My Lover," reuniting with
Toussaint for one final collaboration, the 1969
funk cult classic "There's a Break in the Road" (licensed to the SSS International label).
With her career at an impasse,
Harris abruptly retired from performing in 1970. From there her legend grew, and rumors spread that she served as
James Carr's road manager and even drove a tractor-trailer to make ends meet. In reality,
Harris simply focused on raising her family, and while she shunned the music industry she continued singing in her church choir -- after settling in Hartford, CT, in 1997, she even began offering vocal lessons. Still,
Harris remained oblivious to the growing awe afforded her '60s output by
soul aficionados, respect generated largely by the U.K. release of the Soul Perfection Plus retrospective.
Then in 2001, her daughter found several
Betty Harris fan sites on the Web, prompting the singer to join a
soul mailing list to announce her present whereabouts -- her re-emergence caused a stir in
deep soul circles, and soon Boston-based guitarist and producer Chris Stovall Brown offered to helm
Harris' first recording session in 35 years. On April 17, 2005, she also headlined her first live appearance in over three decades, performing at a benefit for her daughter's Hartford alma mater; weeks later,
Harris also performed at New Orleans' annual Ponderosa Stomp. In 2007 she released what was, amazingly, her first real studio album, the Jon Tiven-produced
Intuition. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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