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Showing posts with label LITTLE ANN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LITTLE ANN. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2009

G SIDE RECORDS PRESENTS LARRY'S PLAYROOM LOUNGE WITH LITTLE ANN


In the early 60s Ann Bridgeforth's cousin opened a nightclub called Michelle’s Playroom where a matinee jam session was held on Sunday afternoons. Ann, then 16, was able to attend these events and soon began to sing for her own enjoyment and that of her audience. She got other singing dates with various bands in local clubs through word of mouth, and a guy named Eddie Grace, who worked on the local air force base, got her dates at the NCO club and acted as her manager/agent on a friendly basis. Though she had started out as Ann Bridgeforth, promoters misspelled her name so often that she reverted to her family’s pet-name of Little Ann, given to her not because she was short, but because she was the youngest of several Ann's in the family.

Track Listing:
1. DEEP SHADOWS
2. WHAT SHOULD I DO
3. LEAN LANKY DADDY
4. WHO ARE YOU TRYING TO FOOL
5. GOING DOWN A ONE WAY STREET
6. I GOT TO HAVE YOU
7. POSSESSION
8. THE SMILE ON YOUR FACE
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Friday, March 6, 2009

WHAT SHOULD I DO - LITTLE ANN





Today I've got something really special for everyone. You've got to check out this song by Little Ann. Here's another example of another great artist that never really got her true due in life. If I can dig up a few more tracks I might post a mini-comp of her work out here, until then enjoy this gift and check out the short version of Little Ann's story.
Ann Bridgeforth moved with her family from Chicago to Mount Clemens in the late fifties.
Born and bred a singer, she sang at her cousin's club, Michelle's Playroom. As she picked up on gigs, she changed her name to Little Ann. This was her family's pet name due to her being the youngest of seven brothers and sisters.
She was taken to Dave Hamilton's TCB studio on Highland by a guy named Eddie Grace.
Hamilton would record songs and lease them to other companies and "Going down a one way street", was one of them.
Apparently when they took the song to Wingate he demanded they change the lyrics and the arrangements. He also put an instrumental on the flip side.
Sadly this was Little Ann's only foray on vinyl and she thought that her career was over.
In the early eighties an acetate was uncovered by someone in England. The song was dubbed "When he's not around" by Rose Valentine and it became a monster on the Northern Soul scene.
A visit to the home of Dave Hamilton in 1990 by Gilly from England, led to the chance discovery of the song on a master tape. It was actually by Little Ann and called "What should I do?".
This magical song eventually gained release in the UK on a CD of Dave's work by Ace/Kent records.
Thirty five years after launching her career, she appeared on stage in England, to the type of adulation she would have dreamt about as a child.
Sadly, Ann died in February 2003.