Etta Britt

Etta Britt
Birth name Melissa Prewitt
Born 1958/1959
Lancaster, Kentucky
Genres R&B soul, blues
Years active 1978-present
Labels Wrinkled Records
Associated acts
Website ettabritt.com

Etta Britt (Melissa Prewitt, born Lancaster, Kentucky) is a Nashville-based R&B, soul and blues vocalist. Successful and sought after in the role of supporting artist, in 2012, Britt was approached by songwriter Sandy Knox (Reba McEntire) and music industry executive, Katie Gillon, to be the first artist to sign with Wrinkled Records as a featured artist.[1]

Early life

The Prewitt family (Arthor, Amanda and Melissa's seven siblings), moved from Lancaster, Kentucky to Louisville, Kentucky when Melissa was in the second grade, Melissa was raised in Louisville and attended Fern Creek High School. While away at sixth grade camp, Melissa won the talent competition, marking the point in her life when she knew she wanted to perform.[2]

Pet-named Etta by her sister, who in return, is pet-named Myrna, the origin of these names is obscured or forgotten.[3] Melissa started singing in the fourth grade, her sister, a cousin, and a friend sang in a gospel quartet and performed for local church-groups.[1] As a young girl singing along with The Supremes, Melissa aspired to be more like Mary Wilson rather than Diana Ross because she loved singing harmonies.[4]

Career

Melissa (at the time credited as Melissa Dean), approached Dave Roland (of Dave & Sugar) for an audition with the band and replaced the departing Vicki Hackeman in January 1979.[5] During Melissa's tenure with Dave & Sugar (1979 to 1984), the band toured with headline acts that included: Kenny Rogers, Dottie West, Tammy Wynette, Gallagher and Conway Twitty. Melissa is credited on four Dave & Sugar albums including the Billboard Magazine Country Singles #1 hit, "Golden Tears". Additional trips to the Top 10, Country Singles chart, include: "My World Begins And Ends With You" #4, "Stay With Me" #6 and "Why Did You Have To Be So Good" #4. The group had continued success with eight additional Country Singles chart hits from 1980 through 1982.[6][7]

In 1984, Melissa was residing in Nashville, Tennessee and married to studio guitarist Bob Britt, the couple soon had two daughters to support. No longer with the defunct Dave & Sugar trio, Melissa (Britt) took work waiting tables and cleaning houses while securing her real estate credentials, she also explored songwriting and singing as much as circumstances would permit.[1] Bob Britt's reputation as a guitarist was growing, credited on Leon Russell's, Solid State (1984), he toured with The Dixie Chicks, John Fogerty and Wynonna Judd, ensuing credits include, Bob Dylan's, Grammy Award winning, Time Out Of Mind (1997).[8]

According to AllMusic, the early credit for the Etta Britt stage name is on Paul Metsa's, Whistling Past the Graveyard (1993).[9] At some point, Melissa's sister had called the studio, asking to speak with Etta, Bob wrote the name "Etta Britt" on a track-sheet and the name combination later became Melissa's stage-name.[3]

Never giving up on her singing career, Britt had developed a soulful blues style as a soloist, slightly outside of the Nashville, country music, genre.[10] Etta's talent had been noted by Sandy Knox while working on Knox', Pushin' 40, Never Married, No Kids (2000); in 2012, the two had a chance encounter at a writers-night event. Knox, a songwriter with Grammy Award nominated works, heard Etta's compositions during her stage performance earlier that evening and invited her to lunch. Britt had prepared for the lunch, which also included music industry veteran Katie Gillon, with the expectation of discussing a deal on a song, not a recording contract.[1]

I literally looked around and said "me?" It was shocking," Britt said. "I was 53 at the time, and that [a record deal] was the last thing I expected to come out of either of their mouths. It was exciting and surprising; a sense of new hope just came over me.[10]

Etta Britt, Falls Church News-Press, October 3, 2012.

Britt's record deal, signed at age 53, and a well received freshman album, Out of the Shadows (2012), hitting the Living Blues Magazine's chart at #20,[11] attracted the attention of Marlo Thomas at the Huffington Post who writes: "This story is about a woman who sacrificed the spotlight to help her family survive, and has been given the chance to take center stage with her very own record deal more than 20 years later!"[1] The NBC Today Show ran a feature story on August 25, 2012,[12] covering highlights of the Huffington Post article, "Out Of The Shadows - Mom Signs Record Deal At 55", and includes video from an opening performance for Delbert McClinton at B.B. King's New York on July 27, 2012.[13]

In 2013, Britt is a featured artist on B. J. Thomas', The Living Room Sessions, singing a duet with Thomas on an unplugged arrangement of "New Looks from an Old Lover".[14]

Solo albums

Out of the Shadows (2012 LP)

Out of the Shadows

  • Released: 2012
  • Format: "LP/CD"
  • Label: Wrinkled Records (WR-1674)[15]
  • Producer: Bob Britt
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "Dog Wants In" (Etta Britt)  04:32
2. "High" (Etta Britt)  04:05
3. "The Chokin' Kind" (Etta Britt)  04:04
4. "Leap of Faith" (Etta Britt feat: Delbert McClinton)  04:14
5. "In the Tears" (Etta Britt)  05:31
6. "I Believe" (Etta Britt)  03:28
7. "Quiet House" (Etta Britt)  05:09
8. "The Long Haul" (Etta Britt)  03:58
9. "Make It Fast" (Etta Britt)  04:21
10. "Fallin'" (Etta Britt)  03:41
11. "The Bigger the Love (The Harder the Fall)" (Etta Britt)  03:56
12. "She's Eighteen" (Etta Britt)  03:55
Total length:
50:54

Reception

"Quiet House," the most interior of the two songs, does nothing less than survey the unsettling stillness within—within a house where children have left the nest to go into the world on their own, and within a parent's unsettled soul as she comes to grip with deafening silence and poignant memories, realizing "time just for me" is what she always dreamed of. But "this is nothing like I thought it'd be." Ms. Britt is fully inside the song, and barely, it seems, in control of her emotions as the piano laments softly and a cello rises hauntingly behind her until she bursts out with a piercing cry--"all aloooooo-ne…in a quiet house"—made all the more penetrating by a raspy edge in her voice, as if she were on the verge of tears.[16]

David McGee, The Bluegrass Special, May 2012.

Discography

Etta Britt discography [5][9][17][18]
Year Album Primary artist Capacity
1979Stay with Me/Golden TearsDave Rowland & Sugar Primary artist[5]
(Billboard Magazine Country Albums #20)[19]
1980New York Wine, Tennessee ShineDave Rowland & Sugar Primary artist[5]
(Billboard Magazine Country Albums #47)[20]
1981PleasureDave Rowland & Sugar Primary artist[5]
(Billboard Magazine Country Albums #31)[21]
1993Whistling Past the GraveyardPaul MetsaVocals, Vocals (Background)
1996After DarkEngelbert HumperdinckVocals (Background)
Another Man's SkyRoyal Wade KimesVocals (Background)
ScatteredBig Kat KaylorVocals (Background)
1997Greatest HitsPam Tillis Vocals (Background as M.Britt)[18]
Live: If That Ain't Country David Allan CoeVocals (Background as M.Britt)[18]
1998DorkfishBill EngvallVocals
AnthologyDave Rowland & Sugar Vocals (credited as Melissa Dean)[17]
1999American StreetGeorge McCorkle(Marshall Tucker Band)Vocals (Background)
Here's Your Christmas AlbumBill EngvallMain Personnel, Vocals
2000Blue Collar Comedy Tour LiveBlue Collar Comedy TourVocals
Pushin' 40, Never Married, No KidsSandy Knox Laughs, Vocals (Background as M.Britt)[18]
2001King Kong SerenadeAllen ShadowVocals
Rare + Well Done: The Greatest & Most Obscure RecordingsAl KooperVocals see sample
2002New GroundRobert Bradley's Blackwater SurpriseVocals (Background)
Red White and Blue ForeverMark FarnerVocals (Background)
2003MemarieMemarieVocals (Background)
2004Days of Our LivesJames OttoVocals (Background)U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums 61
I Give My HeartJohn BerryVocals (Background)
JambodiansVarious artistsVocals
Ridin With the LegendKeith BryantMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
2005A Fifth of Good Whiskey Blues: A Collection of Contemporary Blues Songs, Vol. 5Etta BrittPrimary Artist (Track #7 "Mama's Got Her Gun")
2006From the HeartThe Four Tops Vocals (Background as M.Britt)[18]
Long Stone's ThrowDan MaharMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
2007Between God And CountryAndy HerseyVocals (Background)
Blame It on the MargaritasHoward Livingston & Mile Marker 24Vocals (Background)
Everybody's BrotherBilly Joe ShaverMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
Live It SlowKeith BryantMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
20082 Man Wrecking CrewCedric BurnsideMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
Best of B.J. Thomas [Curb]B.J. ThomasVocals (Background)
Cash Cabin SessionsVince MiraVocals (Background)
Love And MoneyChuck CannonVocals (Background)
Shake RagJoel "Taz" DiGregorioMain Personnel, Vocals (Background)
2009Gale House StorybookSpadyVocals (Background)
Vince MiraVince MiraVocals (Background)
2010Bout Damn TimeKentucky ThunderGroup Member
Joy of the JourneyJimmy EugeneVocals (Background)
Sweet Home Alabama: The Country Music Tribute To Lynyrd SkynyrdVarious artistsVocals (Background)
2012What the Hell Is Goin' On?Paul ThornVocals (Background)
Out of the ShadowsEtta BrittPrimary Artist
2013Advice from a Father to a SonScott RammingerVocals
The Living Room SessionsB.J. ThomasPrimary Artist
The Way Life GoesTom KeiferVocals (Background)
2014Etta Does DelbertEtta BrittPrimary Artist

Awards

Year Nominated work Category Result Notes
Country Music Association
1979 Dave & Sugar Vocal Group of the Year Nominated Dave Rowland, Sue Powell, Etta Britt [22]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Weiss, Lori (7 November 2012). "It Ain't Over: Out Of The Shadows - Mom Signs Record Deal At 55". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  2. C.M. WILCOX; Hallie Pritts (23 May 2012). "Five Questions with Etta Britt". California Country. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  3. 1 2 "Etta Britt". Biography. Wrinkled Records. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  4. Laura, Shine (6 September 2012). "ETTA BRITT IN-STUDIO". WFPK Radio Luisville. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Brennan, Sandra. "Dave & Sugar Rowland". Artist Biography. AllMusic. Retrieved 12 October 2013. In 1977, Frantz tired of touring and was replaced by Sue Powell; the following year, Hackeman was replaced by Melissa Dean, and Dave & Sugar had their first number one hit, "Tear Time."
  6. "Dave & Sugar Rowland". Awards. AllMusic. Retrieved 13 October 2013. 1979 "Golden Tears" Billboard Country Singles 1
  7. "Dave & Sugar". Biography. MusicCityAttractions.com. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  8. "Bob Britt". Credits. AllMusic. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  9. 1 2 "Etta Britt". Credits. AllMusic. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  10. 1 2 Poster, Leslie (3 October 2012). "Press Pass:". Etta Britt. Falls Church News-Press Online. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  11. DiLorenzo, Kris (4 January 2013). "Etta Britt:". Out of the Shadows. Rock's Backpages. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  12. "Etta on Today Show". Video Link. Wrinkled Records. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  13. DiLorenzo, Kris (1 August 2012). "Delbert McClinton and Etta Britt, B.B. King's Club in New York, July 27". Rock's Backpages. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  14. Moore, Darrell (10 January 2013). "B.J. THOMAS RE-‐IMAGINES HIS GREATEST HITS WITH SPECIAL GUESTS VINCE GILL, LYLE LOVETT, KEB' MO', ISAAC SLADE OF THE FRAY, RICHARD MARX, STEVE TYRELL AND MORE FOR THE RELEASE OF "THE LIVING ROOM SESSIONS" THIS SPRING". Press Release. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  15. "Etta Britt". Out of the Shadows. AllMusic. 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  16. McGee, David (May 2012). "Beyond the Blue". Into The Light. TheBlugrassSpecial.com. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  17. 1 2 "Melissa Dean". Credits. AllMusic. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 "Melissa Britt". Credits. AllMusic. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  19. "Dave & Sugar Rowland Stay with Me/Golden Tears". Awards. AllMusic. 1979. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  20. "Dave & Sugar Rowland New York Wine, Tennessee Shine". Awards. AllMusic. 1980. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  21. "Dave & Sugar Rowland Pleasure". Awards. AllMusic. 1981. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  22. "CMA AWARDS // ARCHIVE 1979". CMT. 1979. Retrieved 12 October 2013.

External links

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