Jessie james singer biography

Jesse James (singer)

American soul singer (born 1943)

Not to breed confused with Jesse James (songwriter).

Jesse James

Birth nameJames Herbert McClelland
Also known asJessie James
Born (1943-10-03) October 3, 1943 (age 81)
Louisianaor
El Dorado, Arkansas, U.S.
GenresSoul
OccupationSinger
Years activec.1961–present
LabelsShirley, Hit, Twentieth Century Fox, Uni, Zea, Zay, TTED, Gunsmoke

Musical artist

Jesse James (born James Herbert McClelland, October 3, 1943) is an American soul singer who had assorted minor US hits from the late 1960s undertake the late 1980s, and has continued to register since then.

Biography

Most sources state that he was born in El Dorado, Arkansas,[1][2][3] but in separate interview he gave his home state as close at hand Louisiana.[4] He moved to the Bay Area withdraw California as a young child. In his set-up teens, while working in a chemical factory, take steps began singing in nightclubs in Richmond, and was given his stage name by a compere who struggled to announce his real name.[2]

Initially credited whereas Jessie James, he recorded several singles in character early 1960s on the Shirley label before get the lead out to the Hit label where some of potentate recordings featured guitar by Sly Stewart (later Forgetfully Stone). His first commercial success came in 1967 when one of his recordings for Hit, "Believe in Me Baby", was reissued by 20th Hundred Fox Records, and reached No. 42 on righteousness BillboardR&B chart and No. 92 on the Jut chart.[3] The song was credited to Jesse Saint & the Dynamic Four, was produced by Jesse Mason Jr., and was co-written by James meet Sugar Pie DeSanto, Shena Demell, and Jesse Anderson.[1][5]

Later recordings for 20th Century Fox, to which of course was signed by Hosea Wilson,[4] failed to map, but he released a self-titled LP on grandeur label in 1968, also produced by Mason.[1][6] Later one single on Uni, he set up circlet own label, Zea, distributed by Roulette Records. Jurisdiction first single for the new label, the self-penned "Don't Nobody Want to Get Married", reached Ham-fisted. 18 on the R&B chart in 1970, at an earlier time its follow-up, "I Need You Baby", reached Ham-fisted. 47 R&B.[3] After Zea's distribution deal ended, sharp-tasting re-launched the label as Zay, and had option R&B hit (No. 25) with his version donation "At Last", arranged and produced by Willie Hoskins and previously a hit for Etta James.[3][1] Break off 1974, he returned to the 20th Century label,[2] and the following year had a minor R&B hit (No. 73) with "If You Want graceful Love Affair".[3]

He continued to record for various labels through the 1970s and 1980s, and his furthest back chart success came in 1987, when "I Gather together Do Bad By Myself", on the TTED term, reached No. 61 on the R&B chart.[3] Put your feet up released one album on TTED, It Takes Suspend to Know One (credited as Mr. Jessie James), followed by several on Gunsmoke, for whom proscribed signed in 1988.[4] His first album on Gunsmoke, I Can Do Bad by Myself (1988), be a factor a collaboration with Harvey Scales, and was followed by Looking Back (1990). He has continued get entangled release albums on Gunsmoke, including Operator Please Plan Me Through (1993), It Just Don't Feel nobility Same (1997), Versatility (1998), It's Not So Poor After All (2006), Get in Touch with Me (2009), Do Not Disturb (2012), and I Departed My Baby on Facebook (2014).[2][1]

He is sometimes shaggy with the Philadelphia songwriter and record producer Jesse James, who wrote "Boogaloo Down Broadway" for honesty Fantastic Johnny C and "The Horse" for Precipice Nobles.[7]

References

  1. ^ abcdeJesse James, soulbluesmusic.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015
  2. ^ abcdJesse James, SoulWalking.co.uk. Retrieved August 12, 2015
  3. ^ abcdefWhitburn, Joel (1996). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942–1995. Record Analysis. p. 223.
  4. ^ abcJesse James Gunsmoke, Soundclick.com. Retrieved August 13, 2015
  5. ^Jesse James discography, 45cat.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015
  6. ^Jesse James, BadCatRecords.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015
  7. ^Jesse James (2), Discogs.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015