RIP Janis Martin "The Female Elvis"

topic posted Wed, September 5, 2007 - 3:42 PM by  SEAN
Share/Save/Bookmark
Advertisement
Janis Martin, Singer Billed as the Female Elvis, dies at 67

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: September 5, 2007

DANVILLE, Va., Sept. 4 (AP) — Janis Martin, a rockabilly pioneer billed as the Female Elvis, died on Monday. She was 67.

Her death, at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., was announced Tuesday by her husband, Bradley Whitt, who said the cause was cancer. She learned that she had cancer shortly after what turned out to be her last public performance, a cancer benefit in Richmond in March, Mr. Whitt said.


Ms. Martin rose to fame in the 1950s as Elvis Presley’s label mate at RCA Victor, which promoted her as the Female Elvis. Her first record and biggest hit, “Will You Willyum,” was released in 1956, when she was just 15. The song made the Billboard Top 10 for one week and sold about 750,000 copies.


She appeared on the “Tonight” show and “American Bandstand” and toured with Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Faron Young, Hank Snow, Porter Wagoner and Jim Reeves. She became a star in Europe, where she is still popular, Mr. Whitt said.


Ms. Martin was voted Billboard’s most promising female artist in 1956. She formed her own band, the Marteens, and played clubs and fairs before retiring from show business in 1958. She remained largely inactive in the business until the late 1970s, when the rockabilly revival led to extensive tours in Europe and introduced Ms. Martin to a new generation of fans.


She had been scheduled to perform at the Americana, an international rockabilly show in Britain, on July 4, but had to cancel because of her illness, Mr. Whitt said.

Along with performing, Ms. Martin managed the Danville Golf Club.

In addition to her husband, she is survived by a sister, Geraldine Connor of South Boston, Va.; a granddaughter; and a great-granddaughter. She had a son, who died, by a previous marriage.

“She was a free-spirited lady who was devoted to her fan base,” Mr. Whitt said in a telephone interview. “She would stay for hours after a show and never leave a person standing, taking pictures and signing for them for four or five hours.”

Wiki Bio

Janis Martin (March 27, 1940 – September 3, 2007) was an American rockabilly and country music singer. Janis Martin was one of the few female rock & roll artists to be making records, proving to the male-dominated rock & roll industry that women too could sell a large amount of records and score rock & roll hits. This opened doors for other rock & roll singers to come, like Brenda Lee.

She was nicknamed The Female Elvis, for her impressive dance moves she did on stage, similar to that of Elvis Presley.

Early life & rise to fame

Janis Martin was one of the few women working in the male-dominated rock & roll music field during the 1950s. Among the popular male rock & roll singers at the time were, Jerry Lee Lewis, Eddie Cochran, and Elvis Presley. Martin however, became one of rock & roll's pioneering singers, and also one of country music's earliest female innovators.

She was born in 1940 in Sutherlin, Virginia. Her mother was a stage mother, and her father and uncle were both musicians, who practiced in hopes of gaining a professional career in the music industry. It was not surprising that Janis soon began becoming interested in music also. Before she was six years old, Martin was already singing and playing the guitar, and credited her influences from the Country Music singers Eddy Arnold and Hank Williams. She was soon a fixture in talent shows and other contests, and won most of them. She soon started appearing on a local radio show WDVA Barndance in Virginia at the young age of 11. When she was in her mid-teens, she started appearing alongside other Country singers, like Ernest Tubb, Sonny James, and Jean Shepard. Her experience at such a young age brought Martin to performing rock & roll. Martin claimed she was getting tired or singing and performing Country music.

According to some people, Martin's timing in the music business was perfect. She started singing R&B music, and started sending demos to various record companies. At only age 15, Martin was signed to her first record company, RCA Records. This was only two months after Elvis Presley signed on with them.

A young teen rock & roll star

In 1956, Martin released her debut record under RCA, called "Drugstore Rock'n Roll". The song, ina all ist entirety became the biggest hit of her career, and the record sold 750,000 copies. The song was not just a pop/rock & roll hit, but also a Country hit. Most rock & roll artists at the time had their singles become hits on the Country charts as well as the Pop charts. Soon, Martin was performing on America's most well-known shows, like American Bandstand, The Today Show, and the Tonight Show. She also appeared on Country music's Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, becoming one of the youngest performers to ever appear there. She was awared by Billboard Most Promising Female Vocalist that year.

Elvis Presley and RCA records were so impressed with Janis' delivery of a song on stage, she was given the nickname The Female Elvis, which stuck with her the rest of her career. Presley in fact sent his wishes and a dozen red roses to Janis when she appeared in Miami, Florida, when she appeared at the RCA Records convention down there to be introduced to other RCA officials around the country and the world. She was chosen by her record company to tour as a member of the Jim Reeves show and tour with the Country singer exclusively.

Martin continued recording straight-up rock & roll, as well as Country material, that ended up being successful on both charts, like the songs "My Boy Elvis", "Let's Elope Baby", "Oooby Dooby", and "Love Me to Pieces", along with "Will You Willyum", which was a Top 40 Pop hit. Martin rose to fame at a very young age, and because of this, She was not really ever able to sustain a successful rock & roll career which many of her contemporaries were able to keep at the time. This was probably because of her young age, and gender. Her stage moves and delivery seemed very unseemly and strange (especially in the Country music scene, where few women took a stand and sung Country music at the time) to many people. Also, Martin was usually booked on Country shows, and most Country fans weren't overly thrilled by Martin's rock & roll stage moves, like most rock & roll performers at the time. She was often caught between whether to sing Country or rock & roll.

Soon though, RCA Records heard that Martin had been married since she was signed to RCA at age 15. That year, she was soon pregnant. This situation led to RCA dropping Martin in 1958. She was also dropped from the label due to falling record sales. Soon, Janis Martin was off the rock & roll and Country music scene. Martin however tried to keep her music career afloat until the end of the decade, after recording for King Records and Decca Records, and then she was signed to a Belgian label in 1960 called Palette.

Later career

Martin cut sides for Palette in 1960. By this time, Martin was on her second marriage (which wouldn't last for too long), and her new husband didn't take her career at all well. She soon dropped out of the music business, not even making public appearances anymore, except locally near her home in Virginia, which she retired to after dropping out of the music business. In the 1970s, she started performing again, with her newly-formed band called The Variations, and toured throughout Europe, where she gained a massive following. Martin's RCA recordings were soon forgotten by her record company. In the 1980s, the Bear Family label gathered Martin's complete record history, with the compilation album The Female Elvis, giving the public a chance to buy a collection of Martin's 50s hits. In 1995, Martin appeared on Rosa Flores's Rockabilly Filly album for HighTone Records.

Death

Martin died on September 3, 2007, having earlier been diagnosed with terminal cancer.


Links
Janis at the Rockabilly Hall of Fame
www.rockabillyhall.com/JanisMartin.html

Janis at The History of Rock and Roll
www.history-of-rock.com/janis_martin.htm

Janis at Rockabilly Europe
www.rockabillyeurope.com/artis...in.htm

Janis Myspace page
profile.myspace.com/index.cfm

Link to cd compilation of her songs from 56-60 at Amazon, can sample the music there.I have the CD and really enjoy it.
www.amazon.com/Female-Elv...625-8804632




Clips



1958 Bang Bang (to a photo montage)
www.youtube.com/watch


clip from Documentary on Janis with Songs, Interviews and concert clips
www.youtube.com/watch

Janis Martin - Alright Baby - Green Bay 05
www.youtube.com/watch


Janis Martin 'My Boy Elvis' Rave 2006
www.youtube.com/watch


Janis Martin at Screaming Festival 2006
www.youtube.com/watch

Janis talks about her inspiration Ruth Brown
www.youtube.com/watch
posted by:
SEAN
Chicago
Advertisement
Advertisement

Recent topics in "Honky Tonk Angels"