(May 10, 2020) We are devastated to report the death of legendary singer and songwriter Betty Wright, at age 66.
One of the most talented and underrated vocalists of her generation, Betty Wright has only recently received a fraction of the accolades she deserves for her notable career as a singer, songwriter and pioneering independent recording artist. She was recently honored in an episode of TV One’s flagship series, Unsung. Fans were alerted to her health issues when Chaka Khan issued a tweet last week, asking for prayers.
A native and lifelong Miami resident, Wright landed on the music scene as a teenager with the minor hit “Girls Can’t Do What Guys Can Do” but became a star with her 1971 smash “Clean Up Woman,” a love-gone-bad song the theme of which belied the fact that Wright was only 18. It was the highest charting song of Wright’s career but not nearly the last. While she never again made a significant dent on the pop charts, Wright continued to score on R&B radio with frank, relationship-driven songs like “Let Me Be Your Lovemaker,” “Shoorah Shoorah,” “Tonight Is The Night” and “Where Is The Love.” She also began a lifelong mission of helping to find and establish other talent, initially helping George (“Rock Your Baby”) and Gwen McCrae (“Rocking Chair”) get signed to the TK label, and soon after aiding disco star Peter Brown (Wright also sang on his smash hit “Dance With Me”).
Her hitmaking days were largely behind her when she moved to Epic Records in 1981 for the enjoyable but sadly overlooked Betty Wright, featuring a fine Stevie Wonder song (“What Are You Going to Do”) and two excellent ballads (“I Come To You” and “One Bad Habit”). However, she received new interest in her music via her classic guest appearance on Richard Dimples Fields’ “She’s Got Papers On Me,” playing the role of the scorned wife who was going to take her scorn out on his hide.
In the mid-80s Wright took a pioneering leap, creating her own independent record label (an almost unheard of move by a female artist) and finding a second chart life through songs like “After the Pain” and “No Pain No Gain.” Through her courageous move, she became the first African American female vocalist to score a gold record (Mother Wit) on her own label.
Wright continued recording through the 90s and eventually became an icon for a new generation of singers ranging from Angie Stone to Mary J. Blige to Joss Stone, who became Wright’s protege en route to two consecutive gold albums. She appeared on Stone’s 2007 release The Art of Love and War, sounding fabulous dueting with Stone on the track “Baby.”
Wright returned four years later with Betty Wright: The Movie, an album where she teamed with The Roots and an all-star cast of collaborators, many of whom viewed Wright as an iconic, influential artist who had never fully received her due. Some of these artists had sampled Wright’s work over the years.
Today we pay tribute to this all-time great artist. Rest In Peace