| LAVERN
BAKER (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
LaVern Baker
(November 11, 1929 – March 10, 1997) was an American Rhythm & Blues
singer, originally billed as “Little Miss Sharecropper”, then “Bea
Baker”. She had taken the first name “LaVern” by 1952, when she
began recording with Todd Rhodes and his band.
Born Delores Baker (she is occasionally known as Delores Williams
because of an early marriage to a Eugene Williams) in Chicago,
Illinois; by 1953 Baker had signed with Atlantic Records, and
immediately began releasing hits, such as “Soul on Fire” and
“Tweedlee Dee”. Georgia Gibbs scored the bigger hit with her version
of “Tweedlee Dee”, for which Baker unsuccessfully attempted to sue
her.
In addition to singing, Baker also did some work with Ed Sullivan
and Alan Freed on TV and in films. In the late 1960s, Baker fell ill
after a trip to Vietnam to entertain American soldiers, and she
stayed in semi-retirement until 1988. (A friend recommended that she
stay on as the entertainment director at a Marine Corps niteclub at
the Subic Bay Naval Base, and that’s what she had done for 20 years.)
At that point, she performed at Madison Square Garden for Atlantic
Records’ 40th anniversary. She then worked on the soundtrack to Dick
Tracy and appeared in Black & Blue, a Broadway musical, and released
a comeback disc that sold moderately well.
In 1991, she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Her
song “Jim Dandy” was named one of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s
500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.
LaVern Baker died from coronary complications in 1997, and was
interred in the Maple Grove Cemetery in Kew Gardens, New York. |