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Christine Kittrell

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Also known as
  
Christine Furlough

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Christine Kittrell


Years active
  
1951–1968

Instruments
  
Vocals

Genres
  
Rhythm and blues


Birth name
  
Christine Joygena Porter

Born
  
August 11, 1929 Nashville, Tennessee, United States (
1929-08-11
)

Died
  
December 19, 2001, Columbus, Ohio, United States

Albums
  
Call Her Name: The Complete Recordings 1951-1965

Record labels
  
Vee Jay Records, Republic Records, King Records, Federal Records, Champion Records, Tennessee Records

People also search for
  
Louis Brooks, Ted Jarrett, Little Richard, Gay Crosse, Calvin Carter, Gene Redd, Bill Beasley, Murray Nash

Christine kittrell call her name


Christine Kittrell (August 11, 1929 – December 19, 2001) was an American R&B singer, who first recorded tracks in 1951 with Louis Brooks and his Band.

Contents

Kittrell was born Christine Joygena Porter in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, and as a child was adopted by Fred and Roberta Pennington. She made her professional debut as a singer with Louis Brooks and his Band in 1945. She also toured with Joe Turner's band. Her first record, "Old Man You're Slipping", was made with Brooks in 1951 for the Tennessee record label, and one of her most successful records, "Sittin' Here Drinking" in 1952, featured members of Fats Domino's band.

She sang in clubs in New Orleans as well as Nashville, and became the featured singer with Paul "Hucklebuck" Williams's band in late 1952. In 1953, she started recording as a solo singer for Republic Records, with some regional success; two tracks featured Little Richard on piano and a third had Richard as backing vocalist. The following year, she worked on the west coast with Johnny Otis and Earl Bostic, and also worked with Louis Armstrong, B.B. King, and John Coltrane.

In late 1954, it was reported that she had left the recording industry to sing with the Simmons Akers gospel singers. However, she made further records after 1959 for the Champion, Vee-Jay, Federal and King labels. One of her recordings for Vee-Jay was the original version of the Leiber and Stoller song "I'm a Woman", later recorded by Peggy Lee. In the 1960s, she spent several years touring US Army bases in south east Asia to entertain the troops; in 1967, she was wounded while performing in Vietnam. She made her last recordings in 1968, but continued to perform occasionally in clubs and at blues festivals until the 1990s.

Kittrell later settled in Columbus, Ohio. As Christine Furlough, she died at the Riverside Methodist Hospital in 2001, of emphysema. A compilation CD of her recordings was subsequently issued by Bear Family Records.

Christine kittrell i m a woman


References

Christine Kittrell Wikipedia