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Cissy Houston
American singer

Cissy Houston (September 30, 1933 – October 7, 2024), born Emily Drinkard in Newark, New Jersey, was a renowned American soul and gospel singer who began her career with The Drinkard Singers. She gained fame as a session vocalist and co-founded the girl group The Sweet Inspirations, signing with Atlantic Records in 1967. Known for hits like "I’ll Be There" and "Think It Over," she won two Grammy Awards for Best Traditional Gospel Album. Houston was also the mother of Whitney Houston and received honors such as the Stellar Award and induction into the New Jersey Hall of Fame.

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Early life

Emily Drinkard was born on September 30, 1933 in Newark, New Jersey to Delia Mae "Dee Dee" (née McCaskill) and Nicholas "Nitch" Drinkard, the youngest of eight children.123 Houston was the granddaughter of a black landowner in Blakely, Georgia, who later shared the land he owned with Houston's father Nitch during a time when it was unusual for black people to have large landholdings. The asset was gradually depleted as they sold small portions of land over time, to resolve the continued legal troubles of a close relative, which later led to the entire family relocating to Newark during the Great Migration a decade before Houston's birth.4 Houston has claimed to be part Dutch and part Native American descent due to her grandparents Susan Bell (née Fuller) and John Drinkard Jr. respectively.5

Houston's parents emphasized the children getting educated and being involved in the church.6 Around the time of Houston's fifth birthday, her mother Delia suffered a stroke. To help her recovery, along with raising the family's spirits, Houston's father encouraged Houston and her elder siblings Anne, Nicholas Jr. ("Nicky") and Larry to sing sacred hymns, to which afterwards, they formed The Drinkard Four, singing jubilees in various churches, including their own St. Luke's A.M.E. Church. Three years later, in 1941, Houston lost her mother to cerebral hemorrhage.7 Houston claimed that she "found Christ" after listening to a sermon at the age of fourteen.8 Houston's father died of stomach cancer in March 1952 when Houston was 18.910 For a time, Houston went to live with her older sister Lee and her husband Mancel Warrick and helped to raise her two nieces Dionne and Dee Dee and nephew Mancel Jr.1112 Soprano Leontyne Price is a Drinkard cousin.1314

Houston attended South Side High School where she eventually graduated in 1952.1516 Raised Methodist Episcopal, Houston converted to the Baptist faith after she joined the New Hope Baptist Church at around 19.

Career

The Drinkard Singers

Main article: The Drinkard Singers

Houston first began singing in the sibling jubilee quartet, the Drinkard Four, at the age of five. A little while later, they changed the name to the Drinkard Jubilairs and then, after the inclusions of sisters Lee and Marie ("Reebie"), the Drinkard Singers. Houston contended in her 2013 book, Remembering Whitney: A Mother's Story of Love, Loss and the Night the Music Died, that the group didn't sing professionally until radio announcer Joe Bostic hired them to open for Clara Ward and Mahalia Jackson at the first ever gospel showcase, named the "Negro Gospel and Religious Music Festival" at Carnegie Hall in October 1951. Not long after that, the group sang on Bostic's Gospel Train New York radio show, becoming regulars on the program.

In two October dates in 1954 and 1957, the group, which now included Houston's adopted niece Judy, joined Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Mahalia Jackson as one of several gospel acts to perform at the Newport Jazz Festival, leading to appearances on two live albums recorded at the festival in those years. Shortly after their second Newport performance, they landed a recording deal with RCA Victor Records where they recorded and released the album, A Joyful Noise, in 1958, which made history as one of the first gospel albums to be released on a major label.17

By the early 1960s, the group landed on the Sunday morning television gospel show, TV Gospel Time. By the end of 1962, however, the group had permanently separated due to Houston's growing career as a session vocalist for secular recording artists.

The Sweet Inspirations

Main article: The Sweet Inspirations

By the early 1960s, Houston's nieces Dionne and Dee Dee Warrick and Sylvia Shemwell and their close friend Doris Troy had found success under the group the Gospelaires, singing background for various artists including The Drifters. One night, around late 1961, when Dionne Warrick began working with producer Burt Bacharach, Houston's then-boyfriend, John Houston Jr., who managed the Gospelaires, convinced Houston to replace Dionne for a session for Canadian-American rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins. After John Houston showed her the money she had made from the session, Houston was convinced to begin a professional singing career as a session vocalist, the group soon found themselves singing for artists such as Solomon Burke, Ben E. King and The Drifters.

In 1962, Dionne Warrick permanently separated from the group for good to begin singing professionally, working exclusively with Bacharach and his songwriting partner Hal David on Scepter Records, leading to the Gospelaires now being Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Doris Troy and Shemwell before Troy herself left at the end of 1962, leading to her being replaced by Myrna Smith. The group continued to back the newly rechristened Dionne Warwick and Troy on their solo hits, such as "Don't Make Me Over" and "Just One Look". Then, in 1963, Dee Dee Warrick left the group to began her own solo career. Her place was taken by 17-year-old Estelle Brown. The lineup of Houston, Shemwell, Smith and Brown was the nucleus to what became The Sweet Inspirations.

After singing background for the two Warwicks, Garnet Mimms, Wilson Pickett and Aretha Franklin among others for a number of years, the group was hired to back Irish soul singer Van Morrison on his composition, "Brown Eyed Girl", in 1967. After the song hit the top ten that year, Jerry Wexler of Atlantic Records offered the group, then going by the nickname "The Group", a recording contract of their own and advised them to change their name to "The Inspirations". Only after learning that another group had that name, Wexler added "Sweet" in front of their name. Their first album, The Sweet Inspirations, charted, reaching number 90 on the Billboard 200 and number 12 on the Billboard Best-Selling R&B Albums chart, producing three Billboard Hot 100 singles, including their sole top twenty Hot 100 hit, "Sweet Inspiration", which later earned the group a Grammy Award nomination for Best Rhythm & Blues Performance by a Duo or Group. The group would record three more albums during Houston's tenure and would continue to back up Aretha Franklin, who began to have a successful recording career after signing with Atlantic the same year as the Sweet Inspirations. The group backed Franklin on hits such as "Think", "(You Make Me Feel Like A) Natural Woman", "(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You've Been Gone" and "Ain't No Way", the latter of which would feature Houston's descant in the background.18 The group would also back Franklin during her concerts of this period and also occasionally appeared on TV with Franklin as they did on The Jonathan Winters Show.

In addition, the group backed psychedelic rocker Jimi Hendrix on his song, "Burning of the Midnight Lamp", which was later featured on Hendrix's final studio album during his lifetime, Electric Ladyland19 and would also back up more artists such as Otis Redding, Lou Rawls and Dusty Springfield. In July 1969, the group was hired to back up Elvis Presley on the rocker's first live performances in almost a decade at the International Hotel. Presley often introduced them at the shows by saying, "They really live up to their name, ladies & gentlemen: The Sweet Inspirations!" 20 The original Sweet Inspirations with Houston could be heard on the Presley live albums, All Shook Up and Live in Las Vegas. By September 1969, Houston had grown tired of performing on the road as her three children were growing up. That month, she decided to quit the Sweet Inspirations and stop touring to stay at home while also settling on a solo career.21 Houston would still mentor the remaining members at her home in East Orange, New Jersey and occasionally reunite with them during recording sessions, usually backing Franklin, who was by now a family friend and considered an honorary aunt to Houston's three children, all of whom affectionately nicknamed her "Aunt Ree".22

Solo career

As Cecily Blair, Houston cut her first secular solo record "This Is My Vow" on M'n'M Records in 1963, following this up in 1966 with "Bring Him Back" b/w "World Of Broken Hearts" on Congress Records. Her final solo single before recording with The Sweet Inspirations was "Don't Come Running To Me" b/w "One Broken Heart For Sale" released on Kapp Records in 1967.23 On these early singles, her name is spelled as Sissie Houston.

In 1969, Houston signed a recording contract with Commonwealth United Records and recorded her solo debut LP Presenting Cissy Houston which was released in 1970.24 It contained several well received singles, including covers of "I'll Be There" and "Be My Baby", both of which made the R&B charts as well as the pop charts.25 Following the release of her debut album, Houston's contract was sold to Janus Records.26 She recorded another album and several more singles in the early 1970s, which included the original recording of Jim Weatherly's "Midnight Train to Georgia" in 1972, which was a minor R&B and UK hit for Houston and later became a number one hit for Gladys Knight & the Pips.2728 She continued to record with Janus Records until 1975.29 Houston performed as backing vocalist on jazz flautist Herbie Mann's funky disco single "Hijack" (1975), album Discotheque (1975), and album Surprise (1976).30

In 1977, Houston was signed by Private Stock Records, working with arranger/producer Michael Zager on three albums. The first, a self-titled effort produced two modest R&B hits, including a soulful, gospel-influenced rendition of "Tomorrow". The second included her big disco hit "Think It Over", which climbed to number 32 on the Billboard Hot Selling Soul Singles chart in 1979 and number 5 on the same magazine's Disco Action Top 80 chart. That same year, Houston represented the United States at the World Popular Song Festival in Tokyo, Japan with the song, "You're the Fire", landing second place during its Grand Prix contest and winning the "Most Outstanding Performance Award". The song later appeared on her 1980 disco-flavored album, Step Aside for a Lady, again produced by Zager, but released on Columbia Records after Private Stock had folded (the same album was released on EMI in the United Kingdom).

During the mid- to late 1970s through the mid-1980s, Houston began regularly performing all over Manhattan's jazz clubs, headlining at venues such as Sweetwaters, Fat Tuesday, Reno Sweeney, Seventh Avenue South and Mikell's. During this time, Houston brought along her teenage daughter Whitney and would have her sing solos to help her get started in the record business. When Whitney Houston began attracting attention from record label scouts offering contracts, Houston would decline such offers, telling them to wait until Whitney finished high school. It was Houston who eventually convinced her daughter to sign with Arista Records in the spring of 1983, figuring that Davis was the right man to guide her daughter's career. 31 Shortly after Whitney signed with Arista, Cissy was featured on TV with her daughter following Whitney's national television debut on The Merv Griffin Show, where mother and daughter performed a medley of Aretha Franklin duets with Whitney singing "Aretha" and Houston singing "Cissy". That same year, Houston took part in the Off-Broadway musical Taking My Turn, which received a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Musical, often singing the song "I Am Not Old".32

After her daughter found musical stardom in the mid-1980s, Houston's solo output slowed, though she contributed duet vocals to her and Whitney's rendition of "I Know Him So Well" on the latter's eponymous 1987 album. The song charted in Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium, becoming Houston's biggest international hit, reaching the top twenty in the latter two countries; Houston later sang the song with her daughter on Whitney's HBO concert special, Classic Whitney: Live from Washington, D.C. a decade later. In 1992, she recorded the duet album, I'll Take Care of You, with fellow soul singer and longtime friend Chuck Jackson, on Shanachie Records. It would be Houston's final secular album as she put her focus primarily on gospel music afterwards. Two years later, Houston joined Whitney onstage for her historic South African concert performances, where she directed a South African choir of young girls while Whitney sang the Earth, Wind & Fire song "Touch the World". Houston also performed the gospel hymn, "Mary Don't You Weep" at the first annual Soul Train Music Awards and, with Whitney and son Gary, the gospel song, "Wonderful Counselor" at the 15th annual American Music Awards in 1988. That same year, she joined her daughter onstage at the Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute at London's Wembley Stadium, where she performed the gospel-R&B song, "He/I Believe", a song that Whitney had incorporated during the early years of her solo career and which Houston first recorded for her debut album in 1970.

In 1996, after signing with the independent House of Blues label, Houston released the gospel album, Face to Face, which featured a gospel rendition of Marvin Gaye's "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)". Houston would win her first Grammy Award at the 1997 Grammys showcase under the Best Traditional Gospel Album category. In 1997, she released a second album of gospel work, He Leadeth Me, for a one-off A&M Records deal, and won a second Grammy in the Best Traditional Gospel Album category for that album at the 1999 Grammys showcase. In between these recordings, she also contributed vocals on "The Lord is My Shepherd" on daughter Whitney's soundtrack to The Preacher's Wife, which her daughter produced; Houston played a minor role in the film as choir singer Mrs. Havergal, in the film. In 2006, she contributed vocals on the song "Family First" alongside her daughter Whitney, granddaughter Bobbi Kristina Brown and nieces Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick for the soundtrack to Daddy's Little Girls. In June 2012, Houston sang "Bridge over Troubled Water" as a tribute to her daughter Whitney, who had passed away that February. Two years later, Houston was seen backing up longtime friend Aretha Franklin while Franklin performed her hit, "Rolling in the Deep" on The Late Show with David Letterman.

Session musician

Houston's versatile cross-genre singing style kept her highly in demand as a session musician with some of the world's most successful recording artists. Houston, along with Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick, sang the background vocals on the original recording of Time Is On My Side by Kai Winding, released by Verve Records in October 1963. She was one of the backup singers on the Paul Simon song "Mother and Child Reunion" (1972). In 1971, Houston contributed lead vocals on several songs featured on Burt Bacharach's self-titled 1971 gold album including "One Less Bell to Answer", "All Kinds of People" and "Mexican Divorce". Houston sang back-up on Bette Midler's 1972 debut hit album, The Divine Miss M, as well as Aretha Franklin's 1972 album, Young, Gifted and Black, the latter with the Sweet Inspirations. Two years later, Houston contributed background vocals on Linda Ronstadt's Heart Like a Wheel. During 1975-76, she worked with jazz flutist Herbie Mann on three Atlantic albums, Discothèque, Waterbed, and Surprises, featuring on three tracks, "Violet Don't Be Blue", JJ Cale's "Cajun Moon", and "Easter Rising". In 1978, she contributed background vocals on Chaka Khan's self-titled solo debut, including Khan's breakthrough hit, "I'm Every Woman". Two years later, with daughter Whitney, Houston also sang on Khan's sophomore effort, Naughty. Starting in 1981, Houston would sing background on many of Luther Vandross' recordings that would last throughout Vandross' lifetime. In 1986, Houston joined Vandross, Chaka Khan and David Bowie on the song "Underground", which was Bowie's theme song from his film, Labyrinth.33 Houston would also occasionally back her daughter Whitney, singing background on the number one hit, "How Will I Know", as well as the track, "Who Do You Love", from Whitney's acclaimed third album, I'm Your Baby Tonight. Houston was one of several famed notable women that appeared in the music video of her daughter's rendition of "I'm Every Woman", which later won Whitney an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Music Video in 1994.

New Hope Baptist Church Youth Inspirational Choir

In 1953, after leaving her former church at St. Luke's A.M.E. Church, she and the rest of her family joined the New Hope Baptist Church, where shortly after being baptized, Houston, 19, began serving as the Minister of Music there, a position she would hold for more than half a century.34 She was also a driving force behind McDonald's Gospelfest, at which she regularly performed.

Personal life and death

Houston married twice. In 1955, she married Freddie Garland, with whom she gave birth to her first child, Gary Garland (b. 1957), an NBA basketball player and DePaul University Athletic Hall of Famer.353637 Houston's marriage to Garland ended in divorce in 1964.3839

Houston met John Russell Houston Jr. in 1957. The couple had two children: son Michael Houston (1961-) and daughter Whitney Houston (1963–2012), a singer who became a worldwide megastar.40 Cissy and John Houston married in 1964 and divorced in 1991.41

In the late 1990s, when Houston's daughter Whitney began to struggle with drug addiction, Houston staged several interventions to get her into rehabilitation programs. On one occasion she obtained a court order and the assistance of two sheriffs to intervene, persuading Whitney to undertake treatment at Hope For Women Residential & Therapeutic Services in Atlanta, Georgia.42 In her 2013 book, Remembering Whitney: My Story of Love, Loss, and the Night the Music Stopped, Cissy described a scene she encountered during a visit to Whitney and then-husband Bobby Brown's home in 2005 where she saw the walls and door painted with big glaring eyes and strange faces. After having seen what she thought was several disturbing scenes, this led Cissy to return with law enforcement and perform an intervention.43 Whitney would attend recovery and rehabilitation programs.44

On February 11, 2012, Whitney Houston died at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.45 After her daughter's death, Cissy expressed her distaste for the media's coverage of related events: "The media are awful. People have come from here and there, [and they] don't know what they're talking about," she said. "People I haven't seen in 20 years ... Here they come, [they] think they know everything, but that's not true. But God has His way of taking care of all of it, and I'm glad I know that."46

Cissy Houston died at her home in Newark on October 7, 2024, at the age of 91. She had been in hospice care for Alzheimer's disease.47 She was survived by her two sons as well as six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.48

Discography

Source:49[additional citation(s) needed]

With the Drinkard Singers

YearAlbumRecord label
1958A Joyful NoiseRCA Records/Victor

With the Sweet Inspirations

See Sweet Inspirations Discography
YearAlbumRecord label
1967The Sweet InspirationsAtlantic
1968Songs of Faith & Inspiration
What the World Needs Now Is Love
1969Sweets for My Sweet

Solo

YearAlbumRecord label
1970Presenting Cissy HoustonMajor Minor Records
1977Cissy HoustonPrivate Stock Records
1978Think It Over
1979Warning - DangerColumbia Records
1980Step Aside For A Lady
1992I'll Take Care of YouShanachie Records
1996Face To FaceHouse of Blues
1997He Leadeth MeA&M Records
2001Love Is Holding YouNeon
2012Walk on By FaithHarlem Records

Compilations

YearAlbumRecord label
1995Midnight Train to Georgia: Janus YearsIchiban Records
1999Cissy Houston & Whitney HoustonDelta Music
2000The Definitive CollectionConnoisseur Records
2005Cissy Houston CollectionIntersound

Collaborations

YearTitleArtist
1971Burt BacharachBurt Bacharach50
1975DiscothèqueHerbie Mann
Waterbed
1976SurprisesHerbie Mann, featuring Cissy Houston
1992I'll Take Care of YouChuck Jackson & Cissy Houston

Soundtracks

YearFilm/ShowSong
1996A Time to Kill: Original Soundtrack Album"Take My Hand, Precious Lord"
The Preacher's Wife: Original Soundtrack Album"The Lord is My Shepherd"
1998Late Show with David Letterman, December 23, episode"Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)"
2007Daddy's Little Girl: Original Soundtrack Album"Family First" (with Whitney Houston and Dionne Warwick)

Backing vocals

YearAlbumArtistTrack (only)
1965The Exciting Wilson PickettWilson Pickett"In the Midnight Hour"
1967Electric LadylandThe Jimi Hendrix Experience"Burning of the Midnight Lamp"
1968Lady SoulAretha Franklin"Ain't No Way" and "(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You've Been Gone"
1970The SourceJimmy Scott
Brook Benton TodayBrook Benton
Doin' What We WannaClarence Wheeler
MoondanceVan Morrison
Taking Care of BusinessJames Cotton
Right OnWilson Pickett
1971BlacknussRahsaan Roland Kirk
Donny HathawayDonny Hathaway
Burt BacharachBurt Bacharach
Homeless BrotherDon McLean
Paul SimonPaul Simon"Mother and Child Reunion"
Quiet FireRoberta Flack
Second MovementEddie Harris and Les McCann
Movin' OnOscar Brown, Jr.
Story TellerBrook Benton
1972Salome Bey Sings Songs From DudeGalt MacDermot and Gerome Ragni and Salome Bey
The Divine Miss MBette Midler"Do You Wanna Dance?"
JackieJackie DeShannon
ZulemaZulema
Sweet RevengeJohn Prine"Sweet Revenge", "Mexican Home"
1973Laid BackGregg Allman
1974Heart Like a WheelLinda Ronstadt
I've Got the Music in MeKiki Dee"I've Got the Music in Me"
The Doctor Is In... and OutYusuf Lateef"Technological Homosapien"51
Young AmericansDavid Bowie"Young Americans"
1976Boys in the TreesCarly Simon
Locked InWishbone Ash
We're Children of Coincidence and Harpo MarxDory Previn
1977Garden of Love LightNarada Michael Walden
Monkey IslandThe J. Geils Band
1978ChakaChaka Khan"I'm Every Woman"
1979Movin' OnVicki Sue Robinson
Take All of MeBarbara Law
1980ArethaAretha Franklin
NaughtyChaka Khan"Clouds"52
"Papillion (Hot Butterfly)"53
1981Freeze FrameThe J. Geils Band"Angel in Blue"
1981 Never Too MuchLuther Vandross
1982Forever, for Always, for LoveLuther Vandross
Silk ElectricDiana Ross
1985The Night I Fell in LoveLuther Vandross
Whitney HoustonWhitney Houston
1986LabyrinthDavid Bowie"Underground"
1987WhitneyWhitney Houston"I Know Him So Well"
1990I'm Your Baby Tonight"Who Do You Love?"
1990Some People's LivesBette Midler"From a Distance"
1991Power of LoveLuther Vandross
1995This Is Christmas"This is Christmas"
2003Dangerously In LoveBeyoncé"The Closer I Get to You"
2015Aretha Franklin Sings the Great Diva ClassicsAretha Franklin
2018Where No One Stands AloneElvis Presley

Musical arrangements

YearTrackAlbum
1976"Angels"Cissy Houston
1996"The Lord Is My Shepherd"The Preacher's Wife: Original Soundtrack Album

Musical compositions

YearTitleCollaborator
1976"Endless Waters"David Forman
1996"Deep River/Campground"Donny Harper
1997"Count Your Blessings"

Filmography

Source:54[additional citation(s) needed]

Film

  • 1978: The Wiz (uncredited voice) – The Wiz Singers Adult Choir
  • 1984: Taking My Turn (TV)
  • 1994: The Vernon Johns Story (TV) as Rose
    • aka Freedom Road: The Vernon Johns Story (UK)
    • aka The Road to Freedom: The Vernon Johns Story (USA: alternative title)
  • 1996: The Preacher's Wife as Mrs. Havergal
  • 2018: God's Not Dead: A Light in Darkness
  • 2018: Whitney

Television

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