Artist: Barbara McNair
Profile:
Despite a recording career that extended for nearly two decades, including a stint at the famed Motown label, Barbara McNair remains better-known as an actress than as a singer, utilizing both skills as the star of her own eponymously-titled television variety series. Born January 1, 1934, in Chicago, and raised in Racine, Wisconsin, McNair began singing as a child and, after spending a year at UCLA, she relocated to New York City, working as a secretary for the National Foundation of Settlements while fruitlessly auditioning for countless Manhattan nightclub gigs. Impresario Max Gordon finally booked her at the legendary Village Vanguard, followed by appearances on The Arthur Godfrey Talent Scout Show and The Ed Sullivan Show. While performing at Las Vegas’ Silver Slipper Casino, McNair came to the attention of famed newspaper columnist Walter Winchell, whose favorable reviews earned her a deal with Coral Records; her debut single, “Till There Was You,” appeared in 1958, with the B-side, “Bobby,” becoming a hit. That same year, she also made her Broadway debut in The Body Beautiful, later returning to the stage in The Pajama Game.
McNair recorded three more singles for Coral in 1958 — “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands,” “Indiscreet,” and “Too Late This Spring,” respectively — followed in 1959 by “Goin’ Steady With the Moon,” “Lover’s Prayer,” and “Telephone Conversation,” the latter a duet with Billy Williams. She also toured with Nat King Cole, appearing in his stage shows I’m with You and The Merry World of Nat King Cole. McNair then signed to the Signature label for three 1960 singles — “He’s a King,” “All About Love,” and “Kansas City” — followed by a tenure at Roulette that yielded 1961’s “That’s All I Want From You,” and the following year’s “Honeymoonin.'” She landed at KC for “Cross Over the Bridge,” and in 1963 made her film debut opposite Henry Fonda in Spencer’s Mountain — she also appeared in guest roles on a number of TV series, among them Dr. Kildare, I Spy, and Hogan’s Heroes.
After a one-off 1965 effort for Warner Bros., “Wanted Me,” later that same year McNair signed to Motown, scoring her biggest hit with her label debut “You’re Gonna Love My Baby.” “Everything Is Good About You” and “My World Is Empty Without You” followed in 1966, as did sessions for “Baby a Go-Go,” arguably her strongest disc to date — remarkably, Motown head Berry Gordy rejected the single, however, and it went unreleased for decades, until bootleg copies earned rave reviews from the DJs and dancers populating Britain’s Northern Soul club circuit. (Motown finally gave “Baby a Go-Go” a legitimate release on the 2002 compilation A Cellarful of Motown!) McNair’s Motown run ended with a pair of 1968 singles, “Where Would I Be Without You” and “You Could Never Love Him”; from that point forward she directed more and more of her energies into her acting career, returning to the big screen in the crime drama If He Hollers, Let Him Go! followed in 1969 co-starring with a role in the Elvis Presley vehicle Change of Habit.
The syndicated variety series The Barbara McNair Show also premiered in 1969, running for three seasons; in 1970, McNair scored her biggest screen role to date appearing opposite Sidney Poitier in They Call Me Mister Tibbs!, the sequel to the Oscar-winning In the Heat of the Night. She also co-starred in the follow-up, 1971’s The Investigation, but was largely out of the spotlight for the remainder of the decade, appearing on stage, in nightclubs and the occasional TV guest shot while taking time-out in 1976 to record one last single for TEC, “Because of You.” In 1984, McNair accepted a recurring if short-lived role on the daytime soap opera General Hospital, and in 1996 she returned to feature films after a quarter century absence in the little-seen Neon Signs. In addition to her own headlining nightclub dates, she also starred in Sophisticated Ladies, a stage tribute to the music of Duke Ellington. Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
The Racine, WI, singer’s second Motown album mixes Motown originals and remakes with a couple of outside tunes — “What Now My Love” and “You Lost That Loving Feeling” — thrown in for good measure. Rehashes of Mary Wells and Brenda Holloway’s “When I’m Gone,” the Marvelettes’ “The Hunter Gets Captured By the Game,” the Miracles’ “If You Can Want,” and the Supremes’ “I Hear a Symphony” are solid and McNair’s clear enunciation makes lyric sheets unnecessary. Gems like James Dean, Stanley McMullen, and William Weatherspoon’s “Just One Teardrop (From a Broken Heart)” and Frank Wilson/Dennis Lussier’s “Where Would I Be Without You” are additional reasons why a CD of McNair’s Motown tracks is long overdue. Andrew Hamilton, All Music Guide
Easily Barbara’s most soulful set for Motown – recorded at the end of the 60s with a joyous, bouncy groove that’s really sweet! Barbara’s still got some of the more serious vocal approaches of other albums, but also loosens up here in a well-crafted Motown mode – almost setting the stage for the solo recordings of Diana Ross on a few of the album’s numbers. Titles include “Who Invented Heartache”, “Where Would I Be Without You”, “When I’m Gone”, “If You Can Want”, “Just One Teardrop”, and “It Happens Every Time”.
Album: The Real Barbara McNair
Release date: 1969
Tracklist:
01. Where Would I Be Without You
02. You Could Never Love Him (Like I Love Him)
03. Who Invented Heartache
04. The Hunter Gets Captured By The Game
05. You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’
06. Forget You Ever Met Me Baby
07. I Hear A Symphony
08. When I’m Gone
09. What Now My Love
10. It Happens Every Time
11. Just One Teardrop (From A Broken Heart)
12. If You Can Want
‘It Happens Every Time’ On YouTube
Vinyl Covers (Click On The Thumbnails)
