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Carol Fran

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Birth name
  
Carol Martin

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Carol Fran

Years active
  
Mid 1950s–present

Instruments
  
Vocals, piano


Carol Fran American Routes Carol Fran with her late husband and

Born
  
October 23, 1933 (age 90) Lafayette, Louisiana, United States (
1933-10-23
)

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, pianist, songwriter

Albums
  
Soul Sensation!, It's About Time, The Frantastic Carol Fran, See There!

Associated acts
  
Similar People
  
Clarence Hollimon, Guitar Gable, Henry Gray, Lazy Lester, Little Freddie King

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Carol Fran (born October 23, 1933) is an African American soul blues singer, pianist and songwriter. Fran is best known for her string of single releases in the 1950s and 1960s, and her later musical association with her husband, Clarence Hollimon. She has released five solo albums since 1992, her final collaboration with Hollimon being on JSP Records.

Contents

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Biography

Carol Fran STILL SINGING THE BLUES Look at Photos Richard Ziglar

Carol Anthony was born in Lafayette, Louisiana, United States. Commencing her jump blues singing career with Don Conway, she subsequently relocated to New Orleans. There she married a saxophone player, Bob Francois, which allowed a simple abbreviation to arrive at her stage name of Carol Fran. Establishing a musical presence around Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Fran also undertook a tour of Mexico. Her debut single was "Emmitt Lee", recorded in 1957 and released by Excello Records. Three more singles ensued, but lack of success saw Fran singing with Guitar Slim, and after his death in 1959, she then sang alongside Nappy Brown, Lee Dorsey, and Joe Tex.

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Lyric Records then offered a recording contract to Fran. Her next offerings were a swamp pop version of "The Great Pretender" (1962) and a cover version of "Crying in the Chapel" (1964). Despite a subsequent reissue of the latter on Josie Records, her momentum was stalled by Elvis Presley's release of his own version. Her follow-up, "You Can't Stop Me," was enhanced by an arrangement by Sammy Lowe, whilst the Bobby Darin penned "A World Without You", also failed to find sufficient buyers. After another effort, "Any Day Love Walks In," she returned to the concert circuit.

Carol Fran Lady Sings the Blues News Gambit New Orleans News

In 1967 she signed to Roulette Records and issued a version of Brook Benton's "So Close." Success still eluded her and many recordings remained unreleased. Downhearted she concentrated on performing in clubs back in Louisiana. In 1982, Fran met the session guitarist Clarence Hollimon, and they went on to marry a year later and relocated to Texas. After appearing together in concert, Black Top Records released their 1992 album Soul Sensation. Elsewhere, in 1993, Fran contributed to Guitar Shorty's album, Topsy Turvy. In 1996, Fran and Hollimon appeared at the Long Beach Blues Festival.

See There! (1994) was her next album release, before another collaboration with Hollimon saw the issue of It's About Time (2000). However, Hollimon died the same year, and Fran moved back to Lafayette, releasing Fran-tastic in October 2001.

She appears in the 2015 documentary film I Am the Blues.

References

Carol Fran Wikipedia