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Willie Clayton (born March 29, 1955) is an American Chicago blues and soul-blues singer and songwriter. He has recorded over 25 albums since the 1980s.〔 Performing since the late 1960s,〔 from the 1980s onwards his chart successes span the decades. Allmusic noted that Clayton is "one of those vocalists who could sing the phone book and the result would sound perfectly phrased and memorable." Along with Buddy Guy, Koko Taylor, and Little Milton, Clayton was one of the most important figures in Chicago blues in the 1970s and 1980s. ==Biography== Clayton was born in Indianola, Mississippi, United States, as one of 11 siblings.〔 He sang gospel in his local church as a youngster. Duplex Records issued his debut single, "That's the Way Daddy Did" (1969). In 1971, Clayton relocated to Chicago, Illinois, and appeared regularly in the local clubs. He was introduced to Al Green's record producer, Willie Mitchell, who signed Clayton to a recording contract with Pawn, a subsidiary label of Hi Records. Mitchell produced several tracks with Clayton, including "I Must Be Losin' You," "It's Time You Made Up Your Mind," and "Baby You're Ready," but none of them reached the national charts. Clayton toured nationally on the same bill as Green, James Brown and Barry White, before creating his own label, Sky Hero, which issued "Living with You, But My Heart Is Somewhere Else."〔 Clayton then joined Compleat Records. They issued a couple of singles before "Tell Me", produced by General Crook, was a modest hit in 1984. It was followed into the US ''Billboard'' R&B chart by "What A Way To Put It."〔 He returned to the R&B chart in 1989, credited by Polydor Records as Will Clayton, with "Never Too Late" and "Tell Me" (a different song to his earlier hit), followed by "I Wanna Be Where You Are", on which he was co-credited with Audrey Wheeler.〔 She was a former runner-up in the Miss Black Universe contest, who also recorded with Jeff Lorber and Omar Chandler, and worked as a session singer.〔Whitburn, 1996, p.476〕 Clayton also recorded a number of albums with Ichiban Records.〔 In 1992, a joint compilation album with Bobby McClure, ''Bobby McClure & Willie Clayton'', was released by Hi Records. In 1993, Ace Records released the album, ''Let's Get Together'', followed by ''Simply Beautiful'' and ''It's About Love'' (1999). His 1998 album, ''Something To Talk About'', reached number 14 on the ''Billboard'' Top Blues Albums Chart, where Clayton enjoyed similar successes for the following ten years.〔 ''Something To Talk About'' included Clayton's duet with Tyrone Davis on the song, "Mine All Mine," along with his cover versions of the songs "Something to Talk About," and "Heart of the City." Clayton started his own record label, EndZone in the late 1990s, before signing in 2005 to Malaco Records. Clayton recorded his version of "I Can't Stand the Rain," on his 2008 album ''Soul & Blues''. ''My Tyme'', which was released the same year, was his third album in a five year period to peak at number 83 on the ''Billboard'' Top R&B Albums Chart.〔 He returned to the singles chart in 2010, after an absence of over 20 years, with his duet recording with Dave Hollister, "We Both Grown."〔 His latest album, ''I Am Rhythm & Blues'', was released in 2012. In May 2013, Clayton performed at the Leflore County Civic Center in Greenwood, Mississippi. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Willie Clayton」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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