The Staple Singers |
She had battled Alzheimer’s disease for the last decade and
passed away peacefully at her Chicago
home on Thursday morning, February 21.
According to Sarah Hearn at examiner.com, Staples was born
April 11, 1934 in Drew , Mississippi . She was the first-born child of
Roebuck “Pops” Staples and his wife, Oceola. The family moved to Chicago in 1936 for better
job opportunities.
The group began to sing on WTAQ 1360 AM Chicago radio and
made its first recording with “These Are They” for Pops’ own Royal Records in
1953.
The Staples enjoyed a run of Top Forty hitsat Stax Records,
becoming known as “God’s greatest hitmakers” with such songs as “Heavy Makes
You Happy (Sha-Na-Boom Boom Yeah)” (1971), “This World” (1972), “Oh La De Da”
(1973), “Touch A Hand, Make A Friend” (1974) and “City in the Sky” (1974). The
iconic million-seller “I’ll Take You There” spent a week at Number One on the
Billboard pop singles chart and four weeks at that spot on the R&B singles
chart. The group also earned two other million-sellers at Stax with “Respect
Yourself” (1971) and “If You’re Ready (Come Go With Me)” (1973).
The Staple Singers moved to Curtis Mayfield’s Curtom label
in the mid-1970’s, where they scored another number one smash, “Let’s Do It
Again,” in December 1975 before signing with Warner Bros. Records.
Cleotha’s last recordings were with the Staple Singers for
backing sessions on Abbey Lincoln’s "Devil Got Your Tongue" CD (1993)
and Pops Staples’ two solo albums, "Peace To The Neighborhood" (1992)
and the Grammy Award-winning "Father Father" (1994). After Pops died
in 2000, the Staple Singers ceased to perform as a group.
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