Cissy Houston | |
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Born | Emily Drinkard September 30, 1933 [1] [2] Newark, New Jersey, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1938–present |
Spouses | Freddie Garland (m. 1955;div. 1957)John Houston Jr. (m. 1964;div. 1991) |
Children | 3, including Whitney and Gary |
Relatives |
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Musical career | |
Genres | |
Instrument | Vocals |
Labels |
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Emily Drinkard (born September 30, 1933), [3] known professionally as Cissy Houston, is an American soul and gospel singer. After a successful career singing backup for such artists as Roy Hamilton, Dionne Warwick, Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin, and Chaka Khan, Houston embarked on a solo career, winning two Grammy Awards for her work.
Houston is the mother of singer and actress Whitney Houston, the aunt of singers Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick, and a cousin of opera singer Leontyne Price. Houston was the grandmother of Whitney Houston's only child, Bobbi Kristina Brown.
Born Emily Drinkard in Newark, New Jersey, [3] to Nitcholas "Nitch" Drinkard (1895–1952) and Delia Mae Drinkard (née McCaskill) (1901–1941), she was the eighth and final child; older siblings were brothers William (1918–2003), Handsome (1925–1986), Nicky (1929–1992), and Larry (1931–2012); and sisters Lee (1920–2005), Marie (1922–2007), and Anne (1927–2003). [4] Houston's father Nitcholas Drinkard was born to Susan Bell (called Delia) Drinkard (née Fuller), of Dutch and African-American descent. [5] His father John Drinkard, Jr., was of Native American descent. [5] The Drinkards had owned a substantial amount of farmland in Blakely, Georgia, at a time when it was unusual for black people to have large landholdings. The asset was gradually depleted as they sold small portions of land over time, to resolve the continued legal troubles of a close relative. [5]
After Houston's three oldest siblings were born, the family relocated to New Jersey during the Great Migration. [5] Her parents emphasized the children getting educated and being involved in the church, and her father encouraged Houston and her siblings to sing. [5] In 1938, five-year-old Cissy's mother Delia suffered a stroke and died of cerebral hemorrhage three years later. [6] Houston's father died of stomach cancer in March 1952 when Houston was 18. [5] [7] Cissy went to live with her older sister Lee and her husband Mancel Warrick. [8] The Warricks had three children: a son, Mancel Warrick Jr. and two daughters Marie Dionne Warrick and Delia Juanita (Dee Dee) Warrick. [9] Soprano Leontyne Price is a Drinkard cousin. [10] [11]
Houston was raised Methodist Episcopal and has said that she "found Christ" at age 14. [12]
Houston attended South Side High School. [13]
Houston's singing career began in 1938 when she joined her sister Anne and brothers Larry and Nicky in the gospel singing group the Drinkard Four. Lee (who would later become the mother of singers Marie Dionne Warwick and Delia Juanita (Dee Dee) Warrick, later joined the group along with Anne Drinkard Moss and Marie Drinkard Epps, and the group was renamed The Drinkard Singers. It was while performing on Drinkard Singers that Cissy Houston made her television debut on TV Gospel Time. Houston and the Drinkard Singers regularly performed at New Hope Baptist Church and later recorded a live album for RCA called A Joyful Noise , becoming one of the first gospel acts to release a gospel album on a major label. [14] The Drinkard Singers also earned success performing at Carnegie Hall and the Newport Jazz Festival.
In 1963, then about to give birth to daughter Whitney Houston, she formed the Sweet Inspirations with Doris Troy and niece Dee Dee Warrick. Later, under contract to Atlantic Records, Sylvia Shemwell, Estelle Brown and Myrna Smith form the line-up. During the mid-1960s, the Sweet Inspirations provided backup vocals for a variety of artists, including Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Lou Rawls, The Drifters, Dusty Springfield, and Houston's niece Dionne Warwick. They appeared on Van Morrison's single "Brown Eyed Girl". Houston performed the descant on the Aretha Franklin hit "Ain't No Way". [15] In 1967, The Sweet Inspirations sang background vocals for The Jimi Hendrix Experience on the track "Burning of the Midnight Lamp". [16]
In 1969, they were hired to sing backing vocals for American singer Elvis Presley in Las Vegas on his return to live performances during July and August 1969. Presley often introduced them at shows by saying, "They really live up to their name, ladies & gentlemen: The Sweet Inspirations!" [17] Many of these performances can be heard on the All Shook Up and Live In Las Vegas live records. [17] Performing with Elvis Presley was Houston's final gig with The Sweet Inspirations. As her children were growing bigger, she decided to stop touring and focus on her career as a recording artist. [17]
As Cecily Blair she cut her first secular solo record "This Is My Vow" on M'n'M Records in 1963 following this up in 1966 with "Bring Him Back" b/w "World Of Broken Hearts" on Congress. Her final solo single before recording with The Sweet Inspirations was "Don't Come Running To Me" b/w "One Broken Heart For Sale" released on Kapp Records in 1967. [18] On these early singles her name is spelled as Sissie Houston. In 1969, Houston signed a recording contract with Commonwealth United Records and recorded her solo debut LP Presenting Cissy Houston which was released in 1970. [17] It contained several well received singles, including covers of "I'll Be There" and "Be My Baby", both of which made the R&B charts. [19]
Following the release of her debut album, Houston's contract was sold to Janus Records in 1970. [19] She recorded another album and several more singles in the early 1970s, which included the original recording of Jim Weatherly's "Midnight Train to Georgia" in 1972, later a number one hit for Gladys Knight & the Pips. [19] [20] She continued to record with Janus Records until 1975. [21] Houston performanced as backing vocalist on jazz flautist Herbie Mann's funky disco single "Hijack"(1975), album "Discotheque"(1975), and album "Surprise"(1976). [22]
In 1977, Houston was signed by Private Stock Records, working with arranger/producer Michael Zager on three albums. The second included her big disco hit "Think It Over", which climbed to No. 32 on the Billboard R&B chart in 1979. She represented USA at the World Popular Song Festival in 1979 with a track called "You're the Fire", landing second place and winning the "Most Outstanding Performance Award". This also appeared on her 1980 disco-flavored album, Step Aside for a Lady , again produced by Zager, but released on Columbia Records (on EMI in the United Kingdom).
Houston's versatile cross-genre singing style has kept her highly in demand as a session musician with some of the world's most successful recording artists. Houston, along with Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick, sang the background vocals on the original recording of Time Is On My Side by Kai Winding, released by Verve Records in October 1963. She was one of the backup singers on the Paul Simon song "Mother and Child Reunion" (1972)
Houston sang back-up on Bette Midler's 1972 debut album, The Divine Miss M . In 1974, Houston sang back-up on Linda Ronstadt's multi-Platinum Heart Like A Wheel , a seminal album that topped Billboard′s Pop and Country Album Charts in early 1975. In 1971, Houston was featured on three tracks of Burt Bacharach's self-titled solo album: "Mexican Divorce", "All Kinds of People" and "One Less Bell to Answer". During 1975 and 1976, she worked with jazz flutist Herbie Mann on three Atlantic albums, Discothèque , Waterbed and Surprises , featuring on three tracks, "Violet Don't Be Blue", JJ Cale's "Cajun Moon" and "Easter Rising". In addition to her work as choirmaster at New Hope Baptist Church in Newark, NJ, Cissy performed frequently at clubs in NYC including Mikell's, Sweetwaters, Seventh Avenue South, and Fat Tuesday from the late 1970s through the 1980s. Whitney Houston, her daughter and backup singer, increasingly sang solos with Cissy's band. They would collaborate on "Ain't No Way" (originally a Cissy Houston and Aretha Franklin vehicle), on which Cissy sang "Cissy" and Whitney sang "Aretha".
In 1996, Houston received the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album for Face to Face , an album that contained a Gospel version of "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)".[ citation needed ] The same year, she contributed one song to the gospel soundtrack album for the film The Preacher's Wife , which starred her daughter Whitney Houston. In 1998, she won her second Grammy for her album He Leadeth Me .[ citation needed ] She has also continued to record infrequent secular material and in 1987, Houston and her daughter Whitney recorded a duet titled "I Know Him So Well", a cover of the original by Barbara Dickson and Elaine Paige from the Broadway show, Chess . This song also became a single in early 1989 as the 6th and last single release (in selected European countries) from Whitney's album Whitney . In 1992 she teamed up with Chuck Jackson for an album of solo and duet recordings entitled I'll Take Care of You .
In 2006, she recorded the song "Family First" with niece Dionne Warwick and daughter Whitney Houston for the soundtrack to the movie Daddy's Little Girls . In 2010, Cissy attended the third annual BET Honors with her daughter Whitney, who received the entertainment award. In 2012, Cissy performed "Bridge over Troubled Water" at the tribute for her daughter at the BET Music Awards. On September 29, 2014, at 80 years old, Cissy sang backup to a standing-ovation performance with Aretha Franklin of Adele's "Rolling in the Deep", and "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" on The Late Show with David Letterman .
For more than fifty years, Houston was the Minister of Music at New Hope Baptist Church (Newark). [23] She is a driving force behind and performs annually at the McDonald's Gospelfest.
In 1955, Houston married Freddie Garland and had a son, Gary Garland (b. October 12, 1957), an NBA basketball player and DePaul University Athletic Hall of Famer. [24] [23] [25]
In the spring of 1957, when she was 24, Houston met John Russell Houston Jr. and embarked on a romance that led to the births of son Michael (b. August 14, 1961), a songwriter and road manager, and daughter Whitney (August 9, 1963 - February 11, 2012), who went on to be a world-renowned singer, actress and entertainer. [26] [27] [28] During the early years of the relationship, John was still married to his first wife, Elsie Hamilton. After Houston's first marriage ended in divorce in April 1964, Cissy and John married the following month. [23] [29] John Houston Jr. was a former Army veteran who served his country during World War II and was working as a taxi and truck driver when he met Cissy. He first entered the entertainment business managing his nieces-in-law's vocal group, the Gospelaires, in 1959. After his wife formed The Sweet Inspirations, he served as their manager until Cissy left the group in 1969 to start her solo career. After John survived a near-fatal heart attack in 1976, John and Cissy's marriage turned volatile and by 1977, they agreed to legally separate, though they remained married until 1991. [30] Houston has six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. [23] [ failed verification ]
In the late 1990s, when her daughter Whitney began to struggle with drug addiction, Cissy staged several interventions to get her into rehabilitation programs. On one occasion she obtained a court order and the assistance of two sheriffs to intervene, persuading Whitney to undertake treatment at Hope For Women Residential & Therapeutic Services in Atlanta, Georgia. [31] In her 2013 book, Remembering Whitney: My Story of Love, Loss, and the Night the Music Stopped, Cissy described a scene she encountered during a visit to Whitney and then-husband Bobby Brown's home in 2005 where she saw the walls and door painted with big glaring eyes and strange faces. After having seen what she thought was several disturbing scenes, this led Cissy to return with law enforcement and perform an intervention. [32] Whitney would attend recovery and rehabilitation programs. [33]
On February 11, 2012, Whitney Houston died at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California. [34] After her daughter's death, Cissy expressed her distaste for the media's coverage of related events: "The media are awful. People have come from here and there, [and they] don't know what they're talking about," she said. "People I haven't seen in 20 years ... Here they come, [they] think they know everything, but that's not true. But God has His way of taking care of all of it, and I'm glad I know that. [35]
Year | Album | Record label |
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1958 | A Joyful Noise | RCA Records/Victor |
Year | Album | Record label |
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1967 | The Sweet Inspirations | Atlantic |
1968 | Songs of Faith & Inspiration | |
What the World Needs Now Is Love | ||
1969 | Sweets for My Sweet |
Year | Album | Record label |
---|---|---|
1970 | Presenting Cissy Houston | Major Minor Records |
1977 | Cissy Houston | Private Stock Records |
1978 | Think It Over | |
1979 | Warning - Danger | Columbia Records |
1980 | Step Aside For A Lady | |
1992 | I'll Take Care of You | Shanachie Records |
1996 | Face To Face | House of Blues |
1997 | He Leadeth Me | A&M Records |
2001 | Love Is Holding You | Neon |
2012 | Walk on By Faith | Harlem Records |
Year | Album | Record label |
---|---|---|
1995 | Midnight Train to Georgia: Janus Years | Ichiban Records |
1999 | Cissy Houston & Whitney Houston | Delta Music |
2000 | The Definitive Collection | Connoisseur Records |
2005 | Cissy Houston Collection | Intersound |
Year | Title | Artist |
---|---|---|
1971 | Burt Bacharach | Burt Bacharach [36] |
1975 | Discothèque | Herbie Mann |
Waterbed | ||
1976 | Surprises | Herbie Mann, featuring Cissy Houston |
1992 | I'll Take Care of You | Chuck Jackson & Cissy Houston |
Year | Film/Show | Song |
---|---|---|
1996 | A Time to Kill: Original Soundtrack Album | "Take My Hand, Precious Lord" |
The Preacher's Wife: Original Soundtrack Album | "The Lord is My Shepherd" | |
1998 | Late Show with David Letterman , December 23, episode | "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)" |
2007 | Daddy's Little Girl: Original Soundtrack Album | "Family First" (with Whitney Houston and Dionne Warwick) |
Year | Track | Album |
---|---|---|
1976 | "Angels" | Cissy Houston |
1996 | "The Lord Is My Shepherd" | The Preacher's Wife: Original Soundtrack Album |
Year | Title | Collaborator |
---|---|---|
1997 | "Count Your Blessings" | |
1996 | "Deep River/Campground" | Donny Harper |
1976 | "Endless Waters" | David Forman |
Whitney Elizabeth Houston was an American singer, actress, film producer, and philanthropist. Known as "the Voice", she is one of the most awarded entertainers and one of the best-selling music artists of all time, with sales of over 220 million records worldwide. Houston’s crossover appeal on the popular music charts and her performances influenced the breaking down of gender and racial barriers, as well as popular culture. Known for her vocal delivery and distinctive timbre, Rolling Stone ranked Houston second on their list of the greatest singers of all time. Her life and career have been the subject of multiple documentaries and television specials.
Marie Dionne Warwick is an American singer, actress, and television host.
Doris Troy was an American R&B singer and songwriter, known to her fans as "Mama Soul". Her biggest hit was "Just One Look", a top 10 hit in 1963.
Delia Juanita Warrick, known professionally as Dee Dee Warwick, was an American soul singer. Born in Newark, New Jersey, she was the sister of singer Dionne Warwick, the niece of Cissy Houston, and a first cousin of singers Whitney Houston and Leontyne Price.
Judy Clay was an American soul and gospel singer, who achieved greatest success as a member of two recording duos in the 1960s.
The Sweet Inspirations are an American R&B girl group mostly known for their work as backup singers on studio recordings for other R&B and rock artists. A founding member of the group was Dionne Warwick, who was later replaced by her aunt, Cissy Houston.
Myrna Yvonne Smith was an American songwriter and singer.
The Drinkard Singers were an American Gospel singing group, most successful in the late 1950s and important in the careers of singers Cissy Houston, Dionne Warwick, Dee Dee Warwick, and Judy Clay.
Jackie Verdell was an American gospel singer, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
Bobbi Kristina Brown was an American reality television personality and singer. She was the only child of singers Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown. Her parents' fame kept Brown in the public eye, as did her appearances on the reality show Being Bobby Brown.
The Pacific Rim Tour was a concert tour of arenas and stadiums by American Pop/R&B singer Whitney Houston. The tour included 10 concert dates in Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, Australia and United States in 1997. The tour was in support of her 1996 multi-platinum album, The Preacher's Wife.
"Ain't No Way" is a song written by singer-songwriter Carolyn Franklin and sung by her elder sister Aretha Franklin as the B-side to her 1968 hit, "(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You've Been Gone". This song should not be confused with a different song of the same title, recorded by Aretha Franklin on her 2003 CD So Damn Happy: "Ain't No Way" by Barry J. Eastmond and Gordon Chambers.
The 1987 Soul Train Music Awards aired live on March 23, 1987, honoring the best in R&B, soul, rap, jazz, and gospel music from the previous year. The show was held at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Los Angeles, California and was hosted by Luther Vandross and Dionne Warwick.
Gary Joseph Houston is an American former professional basketball player for the Denver Nuggets in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played one season with the Nuggets (1979–80). Gary is the half-brother of singer Whitney Houston and also half-brother to Michael Houston. Gary, Michael, and Whitney are the children of singer Cissy Houston. Gary is the cousin of singers Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick and the uncle of Bobbi Kristina Brown, Whitney's daughter with singer Bobby Brown. Garland has toured several times as a background singer and an occasional duet partner with Whitney Houston. Garland has also studied at DePaul University.
The McDonald's Gospelfest is an annual gospel music festival, talent competition, and fundraiser in Newark, New Jersey.
New Hope Baptist Church is a Baptist church in Newark, New Jersey, located at 106 Sussex Avenue in University Heights. It is affiliated with the National Baptist Convention, USA.
Songs of Faith & Inspiration is the second album by American recording gospel/soul female group the Sweet Inspirations, released in the U.S. on Atlantic Records in 1968. The album is the follow-up to the group's self-titled debut The Sweet Inspirations, and the sound is predominantly centered in the gospel genre.
A Joyful Noise is a live album by American gospel singing group The Drinkard Singers, released in the U.S. in 1958 on RCA Records. It is a live recording of gospel tunes performed by the family act which comprised Emily Drinkard, her sisters Anne Moss, Lee Warrick, and brothers Nickolas and Larry Drinkard and Marie Epps. Anne Drinkard left and was replaced by Lee's adopted daughter Judy Guions, who was later known as Judy Clay.
What the World Needs Now Is Love is the third album by American recording gospel/soul female group the Sweet Inspirations released in 1968 on the label Atlantic Records. The album was produced by Tom Dowd and arranged by Arif Mardin. It features their cover versions of the classic songs; "Alfie", "Unchained Melody", "What the World Needs Now Is Love" and the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody".
Whitney is a 2018 documentary film about the American singer and actress Whitney Houston. The film was directed by Kevin Macdonald and produced by Simon Chinn, Jonathan Chinn and Lisa Erspamer. Whitney was screened out of competition at the world premiere as part of the 2018 Cannes Film Festival on 16 May 2018 with a cinema release on 6 July 2018. The film was also released on home media where it debuted at number one on the UK Official Music Video Chart. The film received positive reviews from critics and audiences and grossed $4.7 million worldwide at the box office. In December 2018, Whitney was nominated at the 61st Grammy Awards for Best Music Film.
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: CS1 maint: location (link)I see the love and the passion that my mother had for me and she walks in with these sheriffs and she says 'I have a court junction here. Either you do it my way or we're just not going to do this at all. We're going to go on TV and you're going to retire and say you're going to give this up. Because this is not worth it. It's not worth it. And if you move Bobby (Brown), they're going to take you down. Don't you make one move. Let's go. Let's do this. I'm not losing you to the world. I'm not losing you to Satan. I want my daughter back. I'm not doing this. I want my daughter back. I want you back. I want to see that glow in your eyes, that light in your eyes. I want to see the child I raised. You weren't raised like this. And I'm not having it.'