Irma Thomas

 

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Listen1. Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)Straight From The Soul 3:00£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen2. Two Winters LongStraight From The Soul 2:37£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen3. He's My GuyTake A Look 2:39£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen4. Ruler Of My HeartHome Of The Blues Vol 1 And 2 2:39£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen5. Back Water BluesOur New Orleans 3:29£0.69  Buy MP3 
Listen6. Time Is On My SideStraight From The Soul 2:54£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen7. Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)Take A Look 2:56£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen8. BreakawayStraight From The Soul 2:44£0.89  Buy MP3 
Listen9. I Gave You EverythingThe New Rules 2:53£0.69  Buy MP3 
Listen10. Somewhere CryingChess Tear Jerkers 2:42£0.69  Buy MP3 
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Image of Irma Thomas
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At a Glance

Birthname: Irma Lee
Nationality: American
Born: Feb 18 1941


Biography

It is difficult to believe that 2009 marks the 50th anniversary of Irma Thomas’s first recording session. She remains one of America’s most distinctive and classic singers, a treasure from the golden age of soul music who remains as compelling and powerful as ever. As Don McLeese wrote in his review of her Grammy®-winning 2006 album, After the Rain, “Most singers who have been recording as long as Thomas resort to tricks, mannerisms, and show-off displays, but she remains the anti-diva, a stylist of exquisite understatement whose every note rings true and hits home.”
Irma first achieved ... Read more

It is difficult to believe that 2009 marks the 50th anniversary of Irma Thomas’s first recording session. She remains one of America’s most distinctive and classic singers, a treasure from the golden age of soul music who remains as compelling and powerful as ever. As Don McLeese wrote in his review of her Grammy®-winning 2006 album, After the Rain, “Most singers who have been recording as long as Thomas resort to tricks, mannerisms, and show-off displays, but she remains the anti-diva, a stylist of exquisite understatement whose every note rings true and hits home.”
Irma first achieved prominence with a string of 1960s hits such as “Time Is On My Side,” (later covered by the Rolling Stones), “It’s Raining” and “Wish Someone Would Care.” She toured extensively across the South with her band, The Toronados. Yet, her life has not been without its share of hardship and challenge. Pregnant at age 15, she was forced by her father into what she calls a “shotgun marriage.” After the devastating effects of Hurricane Camille in 1969, when she was a single mother with four children to support, she moved her family to Los Angeles and worked for a time at a Montgomery Ward store, recording and performing only intermittently.
Upon returning to Louisiana in the 1970s, she slowly rebuilt her reputation as The Soul Queen of New Orleans, signing with Rounder in 1986. In 2005, while she was working in Austin, Texas, Hurricane Katrina flooded her home and destroyed all her possessions, along with her nightclub, The Lion’s Den.
Now, she and her husband, Emile Jackson, have rebuilt their home (she may have been one of the few who had flood insurance!). In the wake of the tragedy and loss that Katrina brought, her career has enjoyed an unprecedented upswing.
After The Rain, recorded in rural Maurice, Louisiana only weeks after Katrina, won Irma her first Grammy® (as well as a Blues Music Award for Soul-Blues Album of the Year and many other accolades). Last year’s Simply Grand won a Grammy® nomination, as well as another Soul-Blues Album of the year award. Irma had previously garnered Grammy® nominations for her live album, Simply the Best!, and her collaboration with Marcia Ball and Tracy Nelson, Sing It!, both on Rounder. Many career highlights have followed her Grammy® triumph, including her appearance with Stevie Wonder at the 2008 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and her recent appearance on ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. In 2009, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
There are many other bright sides to Irma’s story. After she graduated from Delgado College in 2001 at the age of 61, the school initiated the Irma Thomas Wise Women Center. “We provide counseling to young women, and the occasional young man, who may be unsure of the possibilities of furthering their educations,” she explained. “We provide encouragement, and I share my own struggles.”
Rounder Records celebrates this remarkable milestone in Irma Thomas’s career with the release of The Soul Queen of New Orleans: 50th Anniversary Celebration, which features 3 new songs, 9 highlights from her Rounder catalog, and 3 tracks recorded as a guest for special projects on other labels.

This biography was provided by the artist or their representative.

It is difficult to believe that 2009 marks the 50th anniversary of Irma Thomas’s first recording session. She remains one of America’s most distinctive and classic singers, a treasure from the golden age of soul music who remains as compelling and powerful as ever. As Don McLeese wrote in his review of her Grammy®-winning 2006 album, After the Rain, “Most singers who have been recording as long as Thomas resort to tricks, mannerisms, and show-off displays, but she remains the anti-diva, a stylist of exquisite understatement whose every note rings true and hits home.”
Irma first achieved prominence with a string of 1960s hits such as “Time Is On My Side,” (later covered by the Rolling Stones), “It’s Raining” and “Wish Someone Would Care.” She toured extensively across the South with her band, The Toronados. Yet, her life has not been without its share of hardship and challenge. Pregnant at age 15, she was forced by her father into what she calls a “shotgun marriage.” After the devastating effects of Hurricane Camille in 1969, when she was a single mother with four children to support, she moved her family to Los Angeles and worked for a time at a Montgomery Ward store, recording and performing only intermittently.
Upon returning to Louisiana in the 1970s, she slowly rebuilt her reputation as The Soul Queen of New Orleans, signing with Rounder in 1986. In 2005, while she was working in Austin, Texas, Hurricane Katrina flooded her home and destroyed all her possessions, along with her nightclub, The Lion’s Den.
Now, she and her husband, Emile Jackson, have rebuilt their home (she may have been one of the few who had flood insurance!). In the wake of the tragedy and loss that Katrina brought, her career has enjoyed an unprecedented upswing.
After The Rain, recorded in rural Maurice, Louisiana only weeks after Katrina, won Irma her first Grammy® (as well as a Blues Music Award for Soul-Blues Album of the Year and many other accolades). Last year’s Simply Grand won a Grammy® nomination, as well as another Soul-Blues Album of the year award. Irma had previously garnered Grammy® nominations for her live album, Simply the Best!, and her collaboration with Marcia Ball and Tracy Nelson, Sing It!, both on Rounder. Many career highlights have followed her Grammy® triumph, including her appearance with Stevie Wonder at the 2008 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and her recent appearance on ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. In 2009, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
There are many other bright sides to Irma’s story. After she graduated from Delgado College in 2001 at the age of 61, the school initiated the Irma Thomas Wise Women Center. “We provide counseling to young women, and the occasional young man, who may be unsure of the possibilities of furthering their educations,” she explained. “We provide encouragement, and I share my own struggles.”
Rounder Records celebrates this remarkable milestone in Irma Thomas’s career with the release of The Soul Queen of New Orleans: 50th Anniversary Celebration, which features 3 new songs, 9 highlights from her Rounder catalog, and 3 tracks recorded as a guest for special projects on other labels.

This biography was provided by the artist or their representative.

It is difficult to believe that 2009 marks the 50th anniversary of Irma Thomas’s first recording session. She remains one of America’s most distinctive and classic singers, a treasure from the golden age of soul music who remains as compelling and powerful as ever. As Don McLeese wrote in his review of her Grammy®-winning 2006 album, After the Rain, “Most singers who have been recording as long as Thomas resort to tricks, mannerisms, and show-off displays, but she remains the anti-diva, a stylist of exquisite understatement whose every note rings true and hits home.”
Irma first achieved prominence with a string of 1960s hits such as “Time Is On My Side,” (later covered by the Rolling Stones), “It’s Raining” and “Wish Someone Would Care.” She toured extensively across the South with her band, The Toronados. Yet, her life has not been without its share of hardship and challenge. Pregnant at age 15, she was forced by her father into what she calls a “shotgun marriage.” After the devastating effects of Hurricane Camille in 1969, when she was a single mother with four children to support, she moved her family to Los Angeles and worked for a time at a Montgomery Ward store, recording and performing only intermittently.
Upon returning to Louisiana in the 1970s, she slowly rebuilt her reputation as The Soul Queen of New Orleans, signing with Rounder in 1986. In 2005, while she was working in Austin, Texas, Hurricane Katrina flooded her home and destroyed all her possessions, along with her nightclub, The Lion’s Den.
Now, she and her husband, Emile Jackson, have rebuilt their home (she may have been one of the few who had flood insurance!). In the wake of the tragedy and loss that Katrina brought, her career has enjoyed an unprecedented upswing.
After The Rain, recorded in rural Maurice, Louisiana only weeks after Katrina, won Irma her first Grammy® (as well as a Blues Music Award for Soul-Blues Album of the Year and many other accolades). Last year’s Simply Grand won a Grammy® nomination, as well as another Soul-Blues Album of the year award. Irma had previously garnered Grammy® nominations for her live album, Simply the Best!, and her collaboration with Marcia Ball and Tracy Nelson, Sing It!, both on Rounder. Many career highlights have followed her Grammy® triumph, including her appearance with Stevie Wonder at the 2008 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and her recent appearance on ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. In 2009, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
There are many other bright sides to Irma’s story. After she graduated from Delgado College in 2001 at the age of 61, the school initiated the Irma Thomas Wise Women Center. “We provide counseling to young women, and the occasional young man, who may be unsure of the possibilities of furthering their educations,” she explained. “We provide encouragement, and I share my own struggles.”
Rounder Records celebrates this remarkable milestone in Irma Thomas’s career with the release of The Soul Queen of New Orleans: 50th Anniversary Celebration, which features 3 new songs, 9 highlights from her Rounder catalog, and 3 tracks recorded as a guest for special projects on other labels.

This biography was provided by the artist or their representative.

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