Peggy Scott-Adams

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peggy Scott-Adams (born ?) is a Soul and R&B African-American female singer. Although not well-known, she is known minorly with the former name of Peggy Scott. Sometimes she is also known as "the Little Lady with the Big Voice".

Contents

[edit] Early life and Career

Peggy Scott-Adams grew up as a child from a very small typical town of Opp in Alabama. Throughout her early career, Peggy Scott toured with Ben E. King as a teenager and hit the Top 40 three times as a duet act with Jo Jo Benson back in the 1960s. She came back strong in the late 1990s after decades of inactivity with a current top-seller song called "Bill," a wildly popular contemporary blues song about a story of a woman whose man has been fooling around --- with another man.[1]

Not long after that, Peggy Scott had been out of the music business since the late 1960s, and subsequently she was working as a lounge singer in Pensacola, Florida until she moved to California and married a Compton city commissioner in 1988ad. She was then persuaded to return to the studio by songwriter/producer Jimmy Lewis, from there is where Scott-Adams recorded her first debut album entitled "Help Yourself" in the mid-1996ad and it was released on October 22, 1996ad i.e. a few months later that followed.[2]

[edit] Solo career

One of the Jimmy Lewis songs was a novelty track which twisted the common complaint of a wife keeping her man faithful. The twist was that her man had romantic and sexual desires for another man. This complaint is more commonplace today. Released as a single the song, "Bill", initially just to blues radio stations, it also began getting airplay on Urban contemporary radio and soon gained most-requested status at several larger stations. It peaked at #87 on the Billboard Hot 100. The music video to "Bill" also became popular. The album, "Help Yourself" began selling well, making The Billboard 200 albums chart peaking at #72, #48 on the R&B chart and #1 on the Top Blues Albums chart.[3]

The release of "Contagious" later in 1997 also featured a socially conscious hit single called, "Spousal Abuse" which tackle the issue of domestic abuse in relationships. Her third album "Undisputed Queen" released in 1999 was not quite as strong overall, but it did have it's moments.[4]

Henceforth, Scott-Adams continued to belt out frank and honest contemporary blues in the year 2000 with "Live in Alabama & More" which featured the the ballad, "When I'm With You" and the funky dance track, "Sweaty Men." Both became hits. The album "Hot & Sassy" is her strongest since "Hel Yourself" featuring the hits "Mr. Right Or Mr. Wrong" and "Your Divorce Has Been Denied." "Busting Loose" (2003ad). In 2004ad, she balanced her hot-blooded topical repertoire with a gospel album entitled "God Can, And He Will".[5]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Singles

  • "Bill"
  • "I Intend To Take Your Place"
  • "I'll Take Care of You"
  • "I'm In Love"
  • "If I'm Not Still Married"
  • "If You Wanna Hear Me Holler, Lick Me Up Some Dollars"
  • "Mr. Right Or Mr. Wrong"
  • "See You Next Weekend"
  • "Slow Drag"
  • "Spousal Abuse"
  • "Sweaty Men"
  • "That's How I Do It"
  • "When I'm With You"
  • "When You're Married to a Fool"
  • "Your Divorce Has Been Denied"

[edit] Albums

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The Biography of Peggy Scott-Adams" by John Bush, All Music Guide from MSN music.
  2. ^ "The Biography of Peggy Scott-Adams" by John Bush, All Music Guide from MSN music.
  3. ^ "The Biography of Peggy Scott-Adams" by John Bush, All Music Guide from MSN music.
  4. ^ "The Biography of Peggy Scott-Adams" by John Bush, All Music Guide from MSN music.
  5. ^ "The Biography of Peggy Scott-Adams" by John Bush, All Music Guide from MSN music.

[edit] External links

In other languages