Betty Wright, Grammy-Winning R&B Singer, Dies at 66
She was not on the list.
Betty Wright, the R&B and soul singer who released songs
like “Clean Up Woman” and “Tonight Is the Night” died on Sunday at the age of
66, her niece confirmed on Twitter.
“My auntie was a legend…. she helped me get my first
paychecks singing background,” Wright’s niece wrote on Twitter. “And I didn’t
make it to see you this past week and that’s going to haunt me …. R.I.P. Betty
Wright.”
Born in Miami, Wright got her start by singing in her
family’s gospel group, Echoes of Joy, before getting a job as a backup singer
as a teenager. She released her debut album “My First Time Around” in 1968, and
four years later, she released her breakthrough single “Clean Up Woman,” which
stayed on the Billboard charts for over three months and was certified gold in
1971.
Some of Wright’s top hits also include her Grammy-winning
1974 song “Where Is the Love?” and the 1981 single “What Are You Going to Do
With It,” which was produced by Stevie Wonder. Along with recording albums
through 2011, Wright also served as a background singer and guest vocalist for
dozens of artists like Stephen Stills, Peter Tosh and Gloria Estefan, as well
as with rappers like Nas, Ace Hood and Rick Ross.
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