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J J Barnes

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Birth name
  
James Jay Barnes

Name
  
J. Barnes

Years active
  
1960–


Instruments
  
Vocals

Occupation(s)
  
Singer

Role
  
Singer

J. J. Barnes JJ Barnes Page

Born
  
November 30, 1943 (age 80) Detroit Michigan, U.S. (
1943-11-30
)

Albums
  
The Very Best Of J. J. Barnes, The Best of J. J. Barnes

Genres
  
Soul music, Pop music, Rhythm and blues

Record labels
  
Motown, Ric-Tic Records, Buddha Records

Similar People
  
Darrell Banks, Edwin Starr, Shirley Myers

J j barnes you are just a living doll


James Jay "J. J." Barnes (born November 30, 1943, Detroit, Michigan) is an American R&B singer and songwriter.

J. J. Barnes cpsstaticrovicorpcom3JPG400MI0000199MI000

He recorded several singles, starting in 1960. His early releases including "Just One More Time" and "Please Let Me In", on the record labels Mickay and Ric-Tic, had relatively little success, but were subsequently picked up as Northern soul favorites in the UK. He later was signed to Motown Records, where he contributed as a songwriter but did not have any recordings released as a singer. Some of his Motown material has subsequently been released on the A Cellarful of Motown! compilation album series.

J. J. Barnes The Groovesville Masters JJ Barnes Songs Reviews

His biggest hit single came in 1967 with "Baby Please Come Back Home" on the Groovesville label, which, like many of his records, he co-wrote. The song reached #9 on the US Billboard R&B chart. However, subsequent singles on a variety of labels, including covers of "Black Ivory" at Today/Perception Records, failed to repeat the success.

J. J. Barnes JJ Barnes Page

On the recommendation of his friend, Edwin Starr, Barnes moved to England in the 1970s, becoming very popular. Starr had arranged for Barnes to appear on a series of shows which led to him signing a deal with Contempo. He became a favorite artist of the UK Northern soul scene, and performed frequently in the UK. Early recordings from Barnes, such as "Please Let Me In" and "Real Humdinger", were re-released in the UK on the Tamla Motown label to cater for the buyers of Northern soul records. In the 1970s Contempo records released seven singles and an album, Sara Smile, from Barnes, all without chart success. In the 1980s he released five more records including a version of the Northern soul favorite by Frank Wilson, "Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)".

J. J. Barnes King of Northern Soul The Very Best of JJ Barnes JJ Barnes

His song "Chains of Love", originally the B-side to his 1967 hit "Baby Please Come Back Home", achieved further renown when it was covered by The Dirtbombs on their Ultraglide in Black album in 2001.

J. J. Barnes JJ Barnes Best of JJ Barnes Amazoncom Music


J. J. Barnes J J Barnes Discography at Discogs


J. J. Barnes JJ Barnes Biography Albums Streaming Links AllMusic

References

J. J. Barnes Wikipedia