Bette Smith
Bette Smith | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Brooklyn, New York, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 2005–present |
Labels |
|
Website | www |
Bette Smith is an American soul, rock and blues singer who has released music on the Ruf Records blues label and, as of 2024, is on the Kartel Music Group label. Of Trinidadian descent, she is a New York Blues Hall of Fame inductee and has worked work with Jimbo Mathus, Kirk Fletcher, Luther Dickinson, Patterson Hood, and Jimmy Hogarth. She tours on the North American blues festival circuit and in Europe.
Early life
[edit]Sharon Meriel Kathleen Smith, known professionally as Bette Smith, grew up in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York.[1] Her parents are Trinidadian. Her father, a choir director in the Seventh-day Adventist Church that the family attended, taught her to sing.[2] She sang featured roles in the church's gospel choir.[3]
Career
[edit]2010s
[edit]She released an album called From The Well Of My Inner Child in 2006 using the stage name "Bette Stuy." She graduated from Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Los Angeles in 2010, and studied at The New School in New York City, where in 2014 she earned a B.S. in Liberal Arts with an emphasis on Creative Arts Therapy, and at Columbia’s School of Social Work.[4] To earn a living she worked as a receptionist and on Wall Street.
She was inducted into the New York Blues Hall of Fame in 2012.[5]
In 2013 her older brother Louis, dying of kidney failure, urged her to further pursue her dreams of becoming a professional full-time singer.[6] Again using the name Bette Stuy, she released in 2015 the EP Introducing Bette Stuy: This is Neo Blues,[7][8] put together a band, and continued playing at New York City clubs and on the street.
A musician who knew Jimbo Mathus of the Squirrel Nut Zippers heard her singing at a street fair and put her in touch with Mathus.[4] Mathus decided he wanted to work with her. She went to Mississippi with him and, with a live band,[9] they recorded her debut album as Bette Smith, Jetlagger.
On July 26, 2017, Billboard premiered the video for the track "Manchild." Jetlagger was released on 29 September 2017 on Big Legal Mess Records[10] (a subsidiary of Fat Possum).[4] It included original songs as well as covers by the Staples Singers and Isaac Hayes.[11]
In 2018, WNYC Studios' Radiolab invited her to contribute an original song to its compilation project called 27: The Most Perfect Album, with each track inspired by one of the 27 U.S. Constitutional amendments.[12] She chose the 13th Amendment and contributed her song "Happy Warrior."[13]
Jetlagger received reviews in major publications.[14][15] BrooklynVegan premiered the video[16] and PopMatters the audio[17] for the track "I Found Love."
Smith toured in Europe promoting the album, appearing in 2018 at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland[18] and festivals in Spain, France and The Netherlands.[19] She toured Europe again in July 2019.[10][20][21]
2020s
[edit]Together with Kirk Fletcher she released the single "Dance Monkey" on Cleopatra Records on 6 February 2020. Also that year the same label released her single with Jesse Johnson, "Memories." The second Bette Smith album, The Good, the Bad and the Bette, came out on 25 September 2020 on blues label Ruf Records.
Produced by Drive-By Truckers’ Matt Patton and engineer Bronson Tew, The Good, the Bad and the Bette included three songs co-written by Smith[22] and includes contributions from Luther Dickinson from North Mississippi Allstars and Patterson Hood from Drive-By Truckers. Jim DeRogatis included it on his “Best Albums of 2020” list.[23] The track "Fistful of Dollars" reached #1 on the Roots Music Report in April 2021.[24] Her bookings in summer and fall 2021 included U.S. tours with the Drive-By Truckers and Kenny Wayne Shepherd, an appearance at the Telluride Blues & Brews Festival,[25] and her own "Bustin’ Out of Brooklyn Tour ‘21."[26] In 2022 she performed at the Kennedy Center.[27] Her studio collaborations in 2020 and 2021 included tracks with Joe Louis Walker, Larry Brown, Fabrizio Grossi & Soul Garage Experience, and others.
On 25 February 2022 she and Kirk Fletcher released another single on Cleopatra Records, a cover of the Rolling Stones' "Brown Sugar."[28] In August of that year, Cleopatra Records released Ben E. King's album Supernatural Soul which included the single "Stand By Me" performed by King, Smith and Ronnie Earl. Bootsy Collins and Rafael Riqueni were also guests on the album.[29]
Smith's summer 2022 festival bookings included Mempho Music Festival,[30] Calgary Folk Music Festival,[1] Blues From The Top Festival, and Kitchener Blues Festival.
In 2023 she released two more singles with Cleopatra Records – "Tennessee Whiskey" with guitarist Harvey Mandel[31] and "Sign Your Name" with guitarist Arthur Adams[32] – and was invited to perform at several festivals, including the Holland International Blues Festival,[33] Harvest Music Festival[34] and, in early 2024, on the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise with Taj Mahal, Keb' Mo', Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Shemekia Copeland and Christone "Kingfish" Ingram.[35]
In 2023 she also recorded her third album, Goodthing, teaming with producer Jimmy Hogarth. It was scheduled for release on July 12, 2024 by Kartel Music Group.[36] The title track was public radio station KCRW's "Today's Top Tune" on May 8, the day it was released as a single.[37]
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]Title | Artist | Year | Label | Producer |
---|---|---|---|---|
Goodthing | Bette Smith | 2024 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
The Good, The Bad and The Bette | Bette Smith | 2020 | Ruf Records | Matt Patton, Bronson Tew |
27: The Most Perfect Album | Bette Smith, Dolly Parton, They Might Be Giants, Devendra Banhart, Kevin Morby and Others | 2018 | Jad Abumrad, Suzie Lechtenberg, Julia Longoria, Alex Overington, Kelly Prime, Sarah Qari | |
Jetlagger | Bette Smith | 2017 | Big Legal Mess Records | Jimbo Mathus |
Introducing Bette Stuy: This is Neo Blues | as Bette Stuy | 2015 | ||
From The Well Of My Inner Child | as Bette Stuy | 2006 |
Singles as artist
[edit]Title | Artist | Year | Label | Producer |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Eternal Blessings" | Bette Smith | 2024 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
"Goodthing" | Bette Smith | 2024 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
"Beautiful Mess" | Bette Smith | 2024 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
"M.O.N.E.Y"[38] | Bette Smith | 2024 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
"Happiness" | Bette Smith | 2023 | Kartel Music Group | Jimmy Hogarth |
"Tennessee Whiskey" | Bette Smith and Harvey Mandel | 2023 | Cleopatra Records | |
"Sign Your Name" | Bette Smith and Arthur Adams | 2023 | Cleopatra Records | |
"Brown Sugar" | Bette Smith and Kirk Fletcher | 2022 | Cleopatra Records | |
"Dance Monkey" | Bette Smith and Kirk Fletcher | 2020 | Cleopatra Records | |
"Memories" | Bette Smith and Jesse Johnson | 2020 | Cleopatra Records |
Singles/tracks as featured artist
[edit]Title | Artist | Year | Label | Producer |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Stand By Me" | Ben E. King feat. Bette Smith and Ronnie Earl | 2022 | Cleopatra Records | |
"Lady in Red" | Joe Louis Walker feat. Bette Smith | 2021 | Cleopatra Records | Scott Petito |
"With or Without You" | Fabrizio Grossi & Soul Garage Experience feat. Bette Smith | 2021 | Fabrizio Grossi | |
"Life & Larry Brown: Judgement Day" | Larry Brown feat. Bette Smith et al. | 2020 | Fabrizio Grossi |
Personal life
[edit]Bette Smith lives in Brooklyn, New York.[18] She is a cousin of gospel singer Wintley Phipps.[39]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Eric Volmers (20 July 2022), 'Free to soar': Brooklyn's Bette Smith to bring some post-pandemic joy to Prince's Island for Calgary Folk Music Festival, Calgary Herald, retrieved 11 September 2022
- ^ Jim Hynes (22 September 2020), Soul Singer Bette Smith Collaborates With Jimbo Mathus, Matt Patton on Vivacious 'The Good The Bad The Bette' (ALBUM REVIEW), Glide Magazine, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Andy Downing (1 September 2021), Soul belter Bette Smith is finally doing what she loves, Columbus Alive, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ a b c Elias Leight (26 July 2017), Bed-Stuy Soul Singer Bette Smith Talks 'Cinderella Story' Signing, Premieres 'Man Child' Video, Billboard, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ An In Depth Interview with Bette Stuy, Making a Scene, 20 August 2016, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Jacob Uitti (9 September 2020), Bette Smith Talks About What Went Into "Everybody Needs Love", American Songwriter, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ John Apice (26 June 2016), New Music from Fiery NY Blues Singer Inducted in NY Blues Hall of Fame 2012, No Depression, retrieved 15 March 2022
- ^ EXCLUSIVE! 'Enigma' by Bette Stuy, Songwriting Magazine, 17 September 2015, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Album Review: Bette Smith – Jetlagger, Highway Queens, 9 February 2018, retrieved 14 March 2022
- ^ a b Annie Dinerman (29 May 2018), With Bette Smith at Bowery Ballroom, Elmore Magazine, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Bette Smith: Muscular Soul at a Fever Pitch, WNYC, 8 January 2018, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Bryan Kress (23 August 2018), 'More Perfect' Podcast Announces Compilation Album Inspired by 27 Amendments Ft. Dolly Parton, Kevin Morby & More, Billboard, retrieved 15 March 2022
- ^ The Most Perfect Album, WNYC, retrieved 15 March 2022
- ^ Hal Horowitz (28 September 2017), Bette Smith: Jetlagger, American Songwriter, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Matthew Oshinsky (9 November 2017), Watch Bette Smith Perform Live at Paste, Paste Magazine, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Andrew Sacher (20 February 2018), Bette Smith Channels Classic Soul on Debut LP, Brooklyn Vegan, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Sarah Zupko (19 September 2017), BETTE SMITH – "I FOUND LOVE" (AUDIO) (PREMIERE), PopMatters, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ a b Scott Enman (19 April 2019), "How Bette Smith, Soul Singer, Spends Her Sundays", New York Times, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Bette Smith, Moulin Blues, 4 May 2018, retrieved 15 March 2022
- ^ Jessica Saval (5 March 2018), ÉCOUTER Bette Smith remet la soul au goût du jour, Rolling Stone, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ BluesCazorla; 25 años y tan fresco, Cazorla, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Simon Redley (29 August 2020), Bette Smith: The Good, The Bad And The Bette (Ruf Records) 25th September 2020, Music Republic Magazine, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Best Albums of 2020, Sound Opinions, 11 December 2020, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ The Roots Music Report's Top 50 Soul Blues Song Chart for the Week of Apr 10, 2021, Roots Music Report, retrieved 14 March 2022
- ^ Bette Smith, Telluride Blues & Brews Festival, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Evan F. Moore (5 August 2021), After pandemic time off, soul singer Bette Smith psyched about first Chicago-area show, seeing the sights, Chicago Sun-Times, retrieved 21 March 2022
- ^ Bette Smith, Kennedy Center, retrieved 7 March 2022
- ^ Bette Smith and Kirk Fletcher combine on new version of The Rolling Stones' Brown Sugar, Blues Matters, 20 January 2022, retrieved 10 March 2022
- ^ Ben E. King – Supernatural Soul Album Review, BluesBlast, 3 January 2023, retrieved 23 August 2023
- ^ Lineup, Memphofest.com, retrieved 6 July 2022
- ^ Bill Buckley (9 March 2023), Try a Shot of Tennessee Whiskey!, Soul&Jazz&Funk, retrieved 11 August 2023
- ^ JaSupreme (25 May 2023), Soul Singer Bette Smith Releases New Single "Sign Your Name" feat. Arthur Adams, The Urban Music Scene, retrieved 11 August 2023
- ^ Holland International Bluesfestival 2023, hollandinternationalbluesfestival.com, retrieved 11 August 2023
- ^ Harvest Music Festival, harvestmusicfest.ca, 5 April 2023, retrieved 11 August 2023
- ^ LEGENDARY RHYTHM & BLUES CRUISE #40 WESTERN CARIBBEAN • JAN. 28~FEB. 4, 2024, Bluescruise.com, 24 August 2022, retrieved 11 August 2023
- ^ Genesis Miranda (8 May 2024), Brooklyn Soul Powerhouse Bette Smith Announces New Album 'Goodthing' Alongside the Release of Title Track and MV, The Urban Music Scene, retrieved 14 May 2024
- ^ Bette Smith: 'Goodthing', KCRW, 8 May 2024, retrieved 15 May 2024
- ^ Helen Evans (26 January 2024), Bette Smith announces new album Goodthing. Listen to new single 'M.O.N.E.Y', She Makes Music, retrieved 15 May 2024
- ^ Dary Nerl (11 August 2016), Bette Stuy's business is the 'Neo-Blues', The Morning Call, retrieved 10 March 2022