Bland, Bobby “Blue”byname of Robert Calvin Bland(born Jan. 27, 1930, Rosemark, Tenn., U.S.) American rhythm-and-blues singer noted for his rich baritone voice, sophisticated style, and sensual delivery. Bland began his career in Memphis, Tennessee, with bluesman B.B.
King and ballad singer Johnny Ace (all three were part of a loose
aggregation of musicians known as the Beale Streeters). Influenced
by gospel and by pop singers such as Tony Bennett and Andy Williams,
as well as by rhythm and blues, Bland became famous with early 1960s
hits for Duke Records such as “Cry Cry Cry,” “I Pity the Fool,”
“Turn on Your Lovelight,” and “That's the Way Love Is.” Joe Scott's
arrangements were pivotal to these successes in which Bland
alternated between smooth, expertly modulated phrases and fiercely
shouted, gospel-style ones. Long a particular favourite of female
listeners, Bland for a time sang some disco material along with his
blues ballads, and in later years he developed the curious habit of
snorting between lines. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 1992. |