Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Lucille Spann

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
2 August 1994

Genre
  
R&B/soul

Lucille Spann httpswwwwirzdemusicspannlucgrafikspannlu1jpg

Similar
  
Otis Spann, Mighty Joe Young, Muddy Waters

Lucille spann make you feel like a bigger man 1974


Lucille Spann (June 23, 1938, Bolton, Mississippi – August 2, 1994 Vicksburg, Mississippi), was an African-American blues singer who participated in the Chicago Blues community in the 1960s and 1970s.

Contents

Lucille was born Mahalia Lucille Jenkins in Bolton, Mississippi, the ninth child of Gertrude and Sherman Jenkins. Her mother died before she was five, and she was brought up by her father and her sisters. She started out singing gospel music,and was banned from listening to the blues. Nevertheless, she developed a liking for Bessie Smith, T-Bone Walker and other blues singers. She moved to Chicago in her teens, where she met Otis Spann whilst working as a barmaid. Soon she started working with him musically and later married him in 1969.

She became one of the musicians who record with Spivey Records alongside Otis, Muddy Waters, Luther Johnson, Sammy Lawhorn, Paul Oscher, Pee Wee Madison, S. P. Leary and Willie Smith.

After Otis Spann's death in 1970, she continued singing, making recordings with Mighty Joe Young. She also participated in a festival dedicated to Otis Spann in September 10, 1972, featuring John Sinclair, Sun Ra, Freddie King, Luther Allison, Johnny Shines, Otis Rush and Sippie Wallace.

She released two singles in 1972, Womans Lib b/w What You Do To Your Woman, and Country Girl Returns (parts 1 and 2). She also released an album Cry Before I go in 1974.

Songs

Dedicated to Otis
Women's Lib
John Sinclair - Muddy Waters - Lucille Spann: Festival Dedication to Otis Spann

References

Lucille Spann Wikipedia