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Jackie Wilson |
Jackie Wilson
- Mr. Excitement
Jackie Wilson became one of the
first R&B vocalists to enjoy success in the early rock and roll era and
became to be regarded as one of the first great soul singers.
Jackie "Sonny" Wilson was born
June 9,1934 in Detroit, Michigan and grew up in Highland Park, Michigan. The
only child of Jack and Eliza Mae Wilson from Columbus, Mississippi, Wilson's
father was an alcoholic and generally unemployed. Eliza Mae who had lost two
earlier children doted on Wilson and was a powerful influence on his life.
Wilson began singing at an
early age. In his early teens Jackie formed a quartet, the Ever Ready Gospel
Singers Group, which became a popular feature of churches in the area. Jackie
wasn't religious, he just loved to sing and the cash came in handy for the
cheap wine which he drank from the age of nine.
Growing up in
North End, a rough section of Detroit,
Wilson was an habitual truant, belonged to a gang called the Shakers, and was
continuously in and out of trouble. Twice he was sent to detention in the
Lansing Correctional Institute. It was there that he learned how to box.
Wilson dropped out of the school in the ninth grade, in 1950 at 16. At sixteen Wilson became a
Golden Gloves boxing champion in Detroit.
In February 1951 Wilson married
Freda Hood, whom he had known since he was ten, after she had become
pregnant. It was the first of her 15 pregnancies. A daughter was born the
next month. At this time he was singing in a group that consisted of Levi
Stubbs, Sonny Woods and Lawson Smith. They only knew a few songs, but were
welcome additions at house parties where they split the five dollars they
were paid to perform.
After dropping out of high
school, Wilson began performing at local clubs. He was discovered at a talent
show by
Johnny Otis in 1951. Wilson sang with the
Thrillers before they
changed their name to the
Royals, an R&B quartet. Before Wilson could become
a full fledged member of the group they signed with
King Records and left him
behind. He the briefly recorded with
Dizzy Gillespie's Dee Gee label ("Danny
Boy" 1952) before he successfully audition for
Billy Ward's Dominoes in 1953.
He eventually replaced
Clyde McPhatter when McPhatter left the group to form
the
Drifters. The Dominoes first release with Wilson, "You Can't Keep a Good
Man Down," became a near R&B hit and was soon followed by the R&B hit "Rags
to Riches." Wilson was lead singer on the Dominoes first pop hit, "St.
Therese of the Roses" in 1956.
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Billy Ward and the Dominoes
Jackie Wilson on the far right |
In 1957 Wilson left the
Dominoes for a solo career. Al Green, a music publisher and manager, who
already managed singers
Johnnie Ray,
Della Reese and
LaVern Baker, took over
as Wilson's manager. Green went to New York, met
Decca Records' Bob Theile,
and secured Wilson a contract with Decca's
Brunswick label. The day before
the deal was to be signed, Al Green died. Upon Green's death , Nat Tarnopol,
a Green business associate, became Wilson's manager.
Signing with Brunswick Records,
Wilson soon had a minor hit with "Reet Petite," co-written with Berry Gordy,
Jr and Roquel "Billy" Davis. Gordy/Davis also co-wrote Wilson's major pop and
R&B smash hits "To Be Loved," "That's Why," and "I'll Be Satisfied," and his
top R&B and pop hit classic "Lonely Teardrops." Wilson appeared in the film
Go, Johnny, Go singing "You Better Know It."
The initial success Wilson had
with the song writing team of Davis/Gordy ended due to disagreements between
them and Tarnopol over inadequate payment. Tarnopol felt confident he could
do without them, despite the remarkable success the team had, and refused to
pay what they felt was owed them. Without knowing it, Tarnopol did Davis and
Gordy a favor, as both went on to have successful careers.
Berry Gordy used his royalties on the nine hits he'd co-written for Jackie to
establish his Hitsville USA Studios - destined to become the enormous Motown
recording label. Davis joined
Chess Records in Chicago as A&R manager, song
writer and producer, achieving success for himself and other black acts.
Jackie trusted Nat Tarnopol
implicitly and foolishly signed over power-of-attorney to him. Deciding that
Wilson should not limit himself to singing rock and roll, Tarnopol had
veteran band leader and Decca arranger Dick Jacobs produce most of Jackie's
recordings from 1957 through 1966. Jacobs knew Jackie could sing and reveled
in all styles, so he combined him with huge orchestral accompaniments.
Performing engagements at major
Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and New York nightclubs and recording a variety of
material, including bland pop material and classical adaptations such as
"Night," "Alone at Last," and "My Empty Arms," Wilson suffered through
intrusive arrangements and critical neglect in the early '60s. Nonetheless,
he scored four two sided crossover hits in 1960-1961 with "Night"/"Doggin'
Around," "All My Love"/"A Woman, a Lover, a Friend," "Alone at Last"/ "Am I
the Man," and "My Empty Arms"/"The Tear of the Year." "Night" was a pop
smash, while "Alone at Last" and "My Empty Arms," were near pop smashes. "Doggin'
Around" and "A Woman, a Lover, a Friend" were top R&B hits.
Later in 1961
Wilson had major pop and R&B hits with "Please Tell Me Why" and "I'm Comin'
Back to You," followed by moderate pop hit with "Years from Now" and "The
Greatest Hurt." He subsequently formed a songwriting partnership with Alonzo
Tucker that yielded a top R&B and smash pop hit with "Baby Workout" in 1961.
Later R&B and pop hits included "Shake a Hand" and "Shake! Shake! Shake!"
By 1961 Jackie was involved
with Harlean Harris, a former girlfriend of
Sam Cooke and a Ebony magazine
fashion model while at the same time having a relationship with a Juanita
Jones.
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Leaving the hospital after
being
shot with
mother Eliza
Wilson and wife Freda |
February 15, 1961, Jones shot
Wilson twice as he returned with Harris to his Manhattan apartment. Despite
his wounds, Wilson made it downstairs where he was taken to the Roosevelt
Hospital. Life saving surgery was performed followed by weeks of medical
care. Wilson lost a kidney and would carry the bullet that was to close to
his spine to be removed, around for the rest of his life.
A month and a half later Jackie was discharged and, apart from a limp and
discomfort for a while, he was quickly on the mend. He discovered that
despite being at the peak of success, he was broke.
Around this time the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) seized Jackie's Detroit family home. Tarnopol and his
accountant were supposed to take care of such matters. At the time Jackie had
declared annual earnings of $263,000, while the average salary a man earned
then was just $5,000 a year. Yet the fact was he was nearly broke.
Fortunately Jackie made arrangements with the IRS to make restitution on the
unpaid taxes and to re-purchase the family home at auction.
However, Freda's patience had finally run out due to Jackie's notorious
philandering and she filed for divorce. Jackie didn't contest it and so their
thirteen year marriage was annulled in 1965. Freda was granted the house,
$10,000 and a modest $50-per-week for each of their four children. For the
rest of her life Freda regretted seeking the divorce and, moreover, Jackie
still treated her as though she was still his wife.
In March 1967 Jackie and his
friend and drummer,
Jimmy Smith, were arrested in South Carolina on morals
charges. Both were arrested in a motel with two 24-year-old white women.
Lurid details of the case appeared in the newspapers. Tarnopol decided that
to restore Jackie's public image, a marriage to long-time girlfriend Harlean
had to be held. The civil ceremony was held the next month. Jackie had been
going with Harlean from at least 1960 and they'd had a son in 1963. Jackie
and Smith were only fined a few hundred dollars and the "morals charges" were
soon forgotten.
Although he continued to have
hits over the next three years, Wilson didn't have another major pop and
smash R&B hit until he began recording in Chicago with producer Carl Davis.
Under Davis, Wilson staged a dramatic comeback with "Whispers (Getting
Louder)," and the classic "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher," a
top R&B and smash pop hit, and "I Get the Sweetest Feeling." Wilson recorded
with Count Basie in 1968 and managed his last near smash R&B and moderate pop
hit with "This Love is Real" in the late '70s. He was subsequently relegated
to the oldies revival circuit, despite having continued R&B hits.
September 1970 Wilson's oldest
son, 16-year-old Jackie Jr., was shot and killed during a confrontation on
the porch of a Detroit neighbors' home.
On the night of September 29, 1975 while performing at the Latin Casino near
Cherry Hill, New Jersey Wilson was stricken with a massive heart attack. One
of the first to reach Jackie was Cornell Gunter of the
Coasters group who
immediately noticed he wasn't breathing. Gunter applied resuscitation and got
him breathing again. An ambulance quickly got him to the nearby hospital
where he remained in a coma for over three months.
Jackie gradually improved to the stage of semi-coma state, but obviously he
had suffered severe brain damage and, at 41, a tremendous career was ended.
Although he never uttered another word, he remained clinging to life for a
further eight and a quarter years. He remained hospitalized until his death
on January 21, 1984, at the age of forty-nine.
Jackie Wilson was inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.