Anita Kerr
Anita Kerr | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Anita Jean Grilli |
Born | Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. | October 13, 1927
Died | October 10, 2022 Carouge, Geneva, Switzerland | (aged 94)
Genres | Country, pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, arranger, conductor |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, piano |
Years active | 1950s–2022 |
Anita Jean Kerr (née Grilli; October 13, 1927 – October 10, 2022) was an American singer, arranger, composer, conductor, pianist, and music producer. She recorded and performed with her vocal harmony groups in Nashville, Los Angeles, and Europe.
Career
Nashville
Kerr was born in Memphis, Tennessee. In 1947, she married Al Kerr, and they moved to Nashville the following year so that he could take a job as a dee-jay on WKDA. The performances of a vocal quintet she organized attracted the attention of a WSM radio program director, who then hired her to lead and arrange an octet choir on the radio station's "Sunday Down South" broadcasts. Joining her were singers Carl Garvin, Jim Hall, Doug Kirkham, Mary Ellen Puckett, Evelyn Wilson, Mildred Kirkham, and Don Fotrell. The group's first recording session was with Red Foley, and their collaboration resulted in a No. 16 hit on Billboard's Pop chart in 1950: Our Lady of Fatima. The following year, producer Owen Bradley signed them to record for Decca Records. Their talents in demand, Kerr's group continued to sing backup for other country artists in Nashville, including Eddy Arnold, Burl Ives, and Ernest Tubb. The group's recording sessions—initially averaging two per week—increased to eight sessions weekly by 1955.[1]
In 1956, Anita Kerr's singers won a contest on the Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts national television program. Now, cut to a quartet at Godfrey's suggestion, the group travelled to New York City two weeks out of every six to appear with Godfrey on his daily television and radio broadcasts. The group contributed backup vocals on Patsy Cline's first studio album. A few years later, Kerr and her singers performed five times a week with Jim Reeves on his national radio program at WSM. The quartet's roster at this time featured tenor Gil Wright (1930 – April 30, 2017),[citation needed] baritone Louis Nunley (October 15, 1931 – October 26, 2012),[2] alto Dorothy "Dottie" Dillard (August 3, 1923 – May 6, 2015),[3][4] and Kerr herself as both soprano and arranger. Singers and arranger soon began contributing to between twelve and eighteen recording sessions weekly.[1] Having previously backed Faron Young, Chet Atkins, and Webb Pierce on SESAC radio transcription sessions, the Anita Kerr Singers were invited to record their own songs for SESAC. Between 1959 and 1963, the group waxed sixty SESAC tracks. In 1960, as "The Little Dippers," the group recorded a hit single, "Forever", for the university label. Crediting herself as "Anita & Th' So-And-So's," Kerr multi-tracked her own voice to record the song Joey Baby, in 1961.
The Anita Kerr Singers signed with RCA Victor in 1961. Their first album for the label was From Nashville...The Hit Sound. Subsequent RCA Victor LPs extended the quartet's repertoire as they explored the soul songs of Ray Charles and the compositions of Henry Mancini.
The group's 1965 album We Dig Mancini won a
In the 1960s, Kerr composed and recorded numerous jingles for use by various American radio stations, including: Gene Autry's KMPC AM-710 in Los Angeles, California; WMCA AM-570 in New York City; WLS AM-890 in Chicago and at WGH AM-1310 in Newport News, Virginia.
Los Angeles
The Anita Kerr Singers or The Jordanaires sang background on just about every Nashville hit in the late 1950s and early 1960s. After she and Al Kerr divorced, she disbanded the Nashville version of her Anita Kerr Singers and relocated to Los Angeles in August 1965 with her second husband, Swiss businessman Alex Grob, and her daughters Suzie & Kelly. She no longer wanted to just be a background singer or arranger on country songs – she wanted to do pop music, jazz and "do more orchestral writing and music that was not just country.".
In early 1967, Kerr signed on as choral director for the first season of
Europe
Kerr moved to Switzerland in 1970. Her recording sessions held in London, she launched the Anita Kerr Singers anew with UK talent: Anne Simmons,
In 1972, Kerr wrote—and
During these years, Kerr also wrote choral and instrumental arrangements for
In 1975, Kerr received a special ASCAP Award saluting "[a] lady of class and a first-class musician for her significant contributions to the birth and development of the Nashville sound."[11] Between 1977 and 1988 she continued to perform and record for a variety of record labels. Her work from this period includes: Anita Kerr Performs Wonders, as singer/arranger; The Sound of Warm, as pianist/arranger; and In The Soul, as composer/arranger.
In 1985, Kerr conducted her own composition of Piano, Piano as the Swiss entry for the
Personal life and death
Anita married Al Kerr in 1947. They had two daughters, and later divorced. She later married Alex Grob in 1965. Kerr died in Carouge, Geneva, Switzerland on October 10, 2022, three days short of her 95th birthday.[12]
Awards and honors
- 1965: The Anita Kerr Singers album We Dig Mancini won a Grammy Awardfor Best Performance by a Vocal Group.
- 1965: Grammy Awardfor Best Gospel or Other Religious Recording (Musical).
- 1966: The Anita Kerr Singers single "A Man and A Woman" won a Grammy Awardfor Best Performance by a Vocal Group.
- 1970: The Anita Kerr Singers album The Anita Kerr Singers Reflect on the Hits of Burt Bacharach & Hal David won an Edison Award.
- 1976: The Anita Kerr Singers album Gentle as Morning was nominated for a Grammy Awardfor Best Inspirational Performance.
- 1976: The Anita Kerr Singers album Walk a Little Slower won a GMA Dove Award for Best Gospel Record Album of the Year by a Non-Gospel Artist.
- 1977: The Anita Kerr Singers album Precious Memories was nominated for a Grammy Awardfor Best Inspirational Performance.
Discography
- Voices in Hi-Fi (Decca, 1958) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- On This Holy Night (Sesac, 1958) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- The Velvet Voices (Sesac, 1959) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- Velvet Voices Through The Night (Sesac, 1960) As Anita Kerr Singers
- For You, For Me, Forevermore (Decca, 1960) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- From Nashville...The Hit Sound (RCA, 1962) As Anita Kerr Singers
- The Genius in Harmony (RCA, 1962) As Anita Kerr Singers
- Love Well Seasoned (Sesac, 1963) As Anita Kerr Singers
- Tender Words (RCA, 1963) As Anita Kerr Singers
- We Dig Mancini (RCA, 1965) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- The Scene Changes (RCA, 1965) As Anita Kerr Quartet with Perry Como
- Mellow Moods of Love (RCA, 1965) As Anita Kerr Singers
- Sunday Serenade (RCA, 1966) As Anita Kerr Quartet
- And Now...the Anita Kerr Orchestra! (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1966)
- Slightly Baroque (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1966)
- All You Need Is Love (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1967)
- Bert Kaempfert Turns Us On (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1967)
- Sounds (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1968)
- Georgia on my Mind (RCA Camden, 1968) As Anita Kerr Singers
- Touchlove (Dot, 1969)
- Anita Kerr Presents Les Tres Guitars (Dot, 1969)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Velvet Voices and Bold Brass (Dot, 1969)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Spend This Holiday With Me (Dot, 1969)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Reflect on the Hits of Burt Bacharach & Hal David (Dot, 1969)
- The Anita Kerr Singers It's Anita Kerr Country (Dot, 1970)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Simon & Garfunkel Songbook (Philips, 1971)
- The Anita Kerr Singers We've Got A Groovy Thing Goin' (Philips, 1971)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Grow To Know Me (Philips, 1971)
- The Anita Kerr Singers I Sang with Jim Reeves (Philips, 1972)
- The Anita Kerr Singers A Christmas Story: Angel in the Faded Blue Jeans (Ampex, 1972)
- The Anita Kerr Singers My Coloring Book (Philips, 1973)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Daytime, Nighttime (Philips, 1973)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Sentimental Journey (Philips, 1974)
- The Anita Kerr Singers Round Midnight (Philips, 1974)
- The Anita Kerr Singers (RCA, 1975)
- Gentle as Morning (Word, 1975)
- Hallelujah Brass (Word, 1975)
- Hallelujah Guitars! (Word, 1976)
- Hymns with Kurt Kaiser (Word, 1977)
- Precious Memories (Word, 1977)
- The Sound of Warm (Monte Rosa, 1977)
- Anita Kerr and the French Connection (RCA Victor, 1977)
- Anita Kerr Performs Wonders (Century, 1979)
- Together with Harry van Hoof, Pieter van Vollenhoven (Philips, 1979)
- The Anita Kerr Singers With Love, from Anita (Carlin Music Corporation 1981)
- In the Soul (Gaia, 1988)
With Chet Atkins
- The Amazing Chet Atkins (Sesac, 1960)
- RCA Victor, 1961)
With Perry Como
- The Scene Changes (RCA Victor, 1965)
With Rod McKuen & the San Sebastian Strings
- The Earth (Warner Bros., 1967)
- The Sea (Warner Bros., 1967)
- The Sky (Warner Bros., 1968)
- Home to the Sea (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1968)
- For Lovers (Warner Bros./Seven Arts, 1969)
- The Soft Sea (Warner Bros., 1970)
- Winter (Warner Bros., 1972)
- Spring (Warner Bros., 1973)
- With Love (Warner Bros., 1975)
References
- ^ a b c "Anita Kerr". Anitakerr.com. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ "Obituary Louis Dean Nunley Sr. October 15, 1931 – October 26, 2012)". dignitymemorial.com. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ "Dorothy Ann "Dottie" Dillard". The Tennessean. May 10, 2015. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ "Dorothy Ann Dillard 1923 – 2015 Obituary". gormanscharpf.com. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
- ^ "Anita Kerr". Anitakerr.com. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ "Anita Kerr". Anitakerr.com. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ "Anita Kerr" – Billboard, April 28, 1979
- ^ "Queen Studio Experience". Mercuryphoenixtrust.com. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ "Limbo". IMDb.com. February 15, 1973. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ "Anita Kerr". GRAMMY.com. November 23, 2020. Retrieved September 8, 2021.
- ^ a b "Untitled Document". Anitakerr.com. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
- ^ Friskics-Warren, Bill (October 11, 2022). "Anita Kerr, an Architect of the Nashville Sound, Dies at 94". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
External links
- Anita Kerr discography at Discogs
- Anita Kerr at IMDb
- Anita Kerr at IMDbas The Anita Kerr Singers