Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Kathi McDonald obit

Kathi McDonald Dead At 64

 

She was not on the list.


Kathi McDonald, best known for her 1980 hit with Long John Baldry ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling’, has passed away at the age of 64.

Kathi’s career dated back to the late 60s when she sang on a session for Ike & Tina Turner. Through the 70s she sang on The Rolling Stones ‘Exile On Main Street’, Joe Cocker’s ‘Mad Dogs & Englishmen’, Leon Russell’s ‘Shelter People’ and with Big Brother & The Holding Company.

In 1979 she recorded ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling’ with Long John Baldry for his ‘Baldry’s Out’ album. The song was a Top10 hit in Australia.

Kathi recorded her debut solo album ‘Insane Asylum’ in 1974 but didn’t record a solo album again until 1994.

A statement from her record label Marin Records reads:

Dear Friends, It is with great sadness that I inform you of the passing of Kathi McDonald. A legendary RocknRoll and Blues singer and a beloved friend of many. As I release further information here and on facebook I do so, entrusted to fulfill Kathi’s wishes and welcome your Love, support and grace to help provide Kathi’s desires of a proper funeral and the celebration of her life. I believe a memorial in both her native Seattle and her second home in the Bay Area are needed to comfort each other and reflect on this great singer and wonderful human being. She has shared her life with my family and welcomed me into hers and her friends have kindly done the same. For those able or willing donations can be made to the Kathi McDonald Life.

McDonald was born in Anacortes, Washington, on September 25, 1948.[2] McDonald began singing at an early age. The first song she fully learned was "Goodnight Irene" by Huddie Leadbetter and at age two she would sing all five verses from her crib. McDonald performed professionally for the first time around Seattle when she was 12 years old. Her musical influences were Gail Harris and Tina Turner.[4]

 

From 1963 to 1968, McDonald was a vocalist in several bands that played Bellingham, Anacortes, Mount Vernon, Oak Harbor and other Pacific Northwest venues. McDonald sang with regional bands such as The Accents or Bellingham Accents (1963–1965), The Checkers (1964–1965), The Unusuals (1965–1967), and Fat Jack (1966–1968).

McDonald was 17 years old when "Babe, It's Me" peaked at number-one on the Top 50 at Bellingham's rock radio station KPUG in early April 1966. The song remained at the top of the chart for four to five weeks. The single, released on the Panorama label, was the first release by The Unusuals (formerly The Bellingham Accents) and it featured vocals by McDonald and Laurie Vitt who wrote the song and was a founding member of the band. Shortly thereafter, with McDonald as soloist, the Unusuals released their second single "Summer is Over" and, while it received airplay on local radio, it was a lesser hit in the Pacific Northwest. Kathi & The Unusuals toured with Dewey Martin (pseudonym Sir Raleigh and previously Sir Raleigh and the Cupons).

 

While living in Seattle, McDonald developed strong San Francisco music connections and promoter Chet Helms invited her to audition for Big Brother and the Holding Company in 1966. He also invited a then-unknown Janis Joplin from Austin, Texas. Joplin arrived in San Francisco before McDonald and was hired to front the band. McDonald held some resentment for losing the job to Joplin, who people often compared her voice to, she stated: "I used to hate doing Janis songs...It really was annoying for a lot of years, but I finally made my peace with it. I read some books about her and I realized what a pathetic life she had, with all kinds of screwups. It was terrible. The poor thing. Anything that could have gone wrong, did go wrong. I thought it was just one big freakin' party, but it wasn't. She had a lot of heartbreak."

McDonald relocated to San Francisco at the age of 19. At an Ike & Tina Turner concert at promoter Bill Graham's Carousel Ballroom (Fillmore West) in San Francisco, McDonald caught the attention of bandleader Ike Turner when she was singing along to "River Deep, Mountain High". She was pregnant at the time and he invited her to record as an Ikette in the studio. As an Ikette, she sang on their album Come Together (1970). She then recorded with Big Brother and the Holding Company after Joplin split with the band.

Around this time, McDonald became one of Leon Russell's Shelter People . She sang on Russell's album Leon Russell And The Shelter People (1971). McDonald also contributed backing vocals to four tracks that appear on The Rolling Stones album Exile on Main Street (1972), including the hit single "Tumbling Dice".[2] During this period, she sang with various artists, including Freddie King, Joe Cocker, Rita Coolidge, and Delaney & Bonnie.

In 1973, she recorded her debut solo album, Insane Asylum, for Capitol Records. The album was co-produced by David Briggs and Pete Sears. Sears was also her musical arranger and played keyboards and bass, as well as writing several of the album's songs with McDonald. The album featured musicians such as Nils Lofgren, John Cipollina and Neal Schon on guitar, Aynsley Dunbar on drums, Boots Hughston on horns. McDonald sang a cover of Willie Dixon's "Insane Asylum" with Sly Stone. The album was released in 1974 and reached #156 on the Billboard 200. Rufus was McDonald's opening act when she performed at The Whisky in May 1974.

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