Baker, Anita(born Jan. 26, 1958, Toledo, Ohio, U.S.) American singer whose three-octave range and powerful, emotional delivery brought her international acclaim in the 1980s and '90s. She was one of the most popular artists in urban contemporary music, a genre that her sophisticated, tradition-oriented soul and rhythm-and-blues singing helped to define. Baker's talent first became apparent when she sang in church
choirs in Detroit, Michigan, where she grew up. Against her family's
wishes, she dropped out of community college to pursue a singing
career, performing in nightclubs with local bands and joining the
funk group Chapter 8, with whom she toured for several years and
recorded an album that included the hit “I Just Want to Be Your
Girl.” Discouraged when the band was dropped by its record company,
Baker ceased performing. Lured back into the business by Beverly
Glen Records, she recorded The Songstress
(1983), a solo album that sold more than 300,000 copies and spent
more than a year on the charts. Moving to Elektra, she served as
executive producer of her next album,
Rapture (1986), which won two Grammy Awards, sold more than
five million copies, and spawned two hit singles: “Sweet Love” and
“You Bring Me Joy.” The album Giving You the
Best That I've Got and a three-month tour with Luther
Vandross followed in 1988, and Compositions
was released in 1990; both albums won Grammys. Personal issues led
Baker to take a four-year hiatus, but in 1994 she returned with the
album Rhythm of Love. In 1996 she
signed with Atlantic Records. She also was the founder of the
Bridgforth Foundation, an organization that supported education in
Detroit. |