Friday, February 18, 2011

African American Music by Marcel Cassiano

Barry Eugene Carter
Barry White was a pop culture icon
Born: September 12, 1944, Galveston, TX
Died: July 04, 2003, Los Angeles, CA
Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
Genres: Rhythm & Blues
Instrument: Vocals, Keyboards
Representative Albums: "All-Time Greatest Hits", "Barry White's Greatest Hits", "Just for You"
Representative Songs: "You're the First, the Last, My Everything", "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe", "Never, Never Gonna Give You Up"
Music: You're the First, the Last, My Everything.
Life: Barry White was known as "the Walrus of Love," a nickname that encompassed his size, his deep voice and his reputation as one of R&B's most romantic singers. White grew up in Los Angeles and got into the music business at an early age. By the late 1960s he organized and produced a girl group called Love Unlimited, whose 1972 hit "Walkin' in the Rain With the One I Love" featured Barry's voice through a telephone. His own debut album, I've Got So Much To Give (1973), included the hit "I'm Gonna Love Ya Just a Little More, Baby." White's distinctive, smooth bass voice was backed by the Love Unlimited Orchestra, and during the '70s he had several hits, including "Love's Theme," a slickly-produced soul song that signalled the beginning of the disco era. During the '80s his career waned, but in the '90s his career was revived, thanks in part to appearances on the TV shows Ally McBeal and The Simpsons. After selling millions of records over three decades, White won his first Grammy with his album Staying Power (1999). By the time of his death, White was a pop culture icon whose name was synonymous with intimate mood music.
One of the most important singer in American Culture and Black Culture around the world. He gave rich contribution for personality of American Music. one of the creators of Rhythm & Blues.

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