But her personal problems have seldom affected her singing. James has
hung in there from the age of R&B and doo wop in the mid-'50s through soul's
late-'60s heyday and right up into the '90s and 2000s (where her 1994 disc
Mystery Lady paid loving jazz-based tribute to one of her idols, Billie
Holiday). Etta James' voice has deepened
over the years, coarsened more than a little, but still conveys remarkable
passion and pain.
Jamesetta
Hawkins was a child gospel prodigy, singing in her Los Angeles Baptist
church choir (and over the radio) when she was only five years old under the
tutelage of Professor James Earle Hines. She
moved
to San Francisco in 1950, soon teaming with two other girls to form a
singing group. When she was 14, bandleader Johnny Otis gave the trio an
audition. He particularly dug their answer song to Hank Ballard
& the Midnighters' "Work With Me Annie."
Against her mother's wishes, the young singer embarked for L.A. to record
"Roll With Me Henry" with the Otis band and vocalist Richard
Berry in 1954 for Modern Records. Otis inverted her first name to
devise her stage handle and dubbed her vocal group the Peaches (also Etta's
nickname). "Roll With Me Henry," renamed "The Wallflower" when some radio
programmers objected to the original title's connotations, topped the R&B
charts in 1955.
The Peaches dropped from the tree shortly thereafter, but Etta James
kept on singing for Modern throughout much of the decade (often under the
supervision of saxist Maxwell Davis). "Good
Rockin' Daddy" also did quite well for her later in 1955, but deserving
follow-ups such as "W-O-M-A-N" and "Tough Lover" (the latter a torrid rocker cut
in New Orleans with Lee Allen on sax) failed to catch
on.
James
landed at Chicago's Chess Records in 1960, signing with their Argo subsidiary.
Immediately, her recording career kicked into high gear; not only did a pair of
duets with her then-boyfriend (Moonglows lead singer Harvey
Fuqua) chart, her own sides (beginning with the tortured ballad "All I Could
Do Was Cry") chased each other up the R&B lists as well. Leonard Chess
viewed James as a classy ballad singer
with pop crossover potential, backing her with lush violin orchestrations for
1961's luscious "At Last" and "Trust in Me." But James' rougher side wasn't
forsaken -- the gospel-charged "Something's Got a Hold on Me" in 1962, a kinetic
1963 live LP (Etta James Rocks the House) cut at Nashville's New Era Club, and a
blues-soaked 1966 duet with childhood pal Sugar Pie De Santo, "In
the Basement," ensured that.
Although Chess hosted its own killer house band, James traveled to Rick Hall's
Fame studios in Muscle Shoals in 1967 and emerged with one of her all-time
classics. "Tell Mama" was a searing slice of upbeat Southern soul that
contrasted markedly with another standout from the same sessions, the
spine-chilling ballad "I'd Rather Go Blind." Despite the death of Leonard Chess,
Etta James
remained at the label into 1975, experimenting toward the end with a more
rock-based approach.
There were some mighty lean years, both personally and professionally, for Miss Peaches.
But she got back on track recording-wise in 1988 with a set for Island, Seven
Year Itch, that reaffirmed her Southern soul mastery. Her following albums have
been a varied lot -- 1990's Sticking to My Guns was contemporary in the extreme;
1992's Jerry Wexler-produced The
Right Time, for Elektra, was slickly soulful,
and her most other '90s outings have explored jazz directions. In 1998, she also
issued a holiday album, Etta James Christmas. She was inducted into the Blues
Hall of Fame in 2001, and in 2003 received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.
That year also saw the release of her Let's Roll album, followed in 2004 by a CD
of new blues performances, Blues to the Bone, both on RCA Records.