The Best Doo Wop Club On The Net The Doo Wop Cafe is dedicated to preserving the best music there ever was ... vocal group harmony of the 1950s. We also love "Oldies" of all kinds and R&B. But, most of all, we believe in having fun along the way ! Come and join us. |
Judy Clay a.k.a.Judy Guions (Judith Grace Gatewood) b. 12th September 1938 d. 19th July 2001 By Billy Vera, Friday 27th July, 2001 Judy Clay, who has died aged 62, was a hell of a singer. But, apart from two duets with me, 'Storybook Children' (1967) and 'Country Girl-City Man' in 1968, and two records later that year with William Bell, 'Private Number' and 'My Baby Specialises', she had no chart success. This must have been no small source of frustration. You can't have a voice as good as hers and not know how good you are; she was, arguably, one of the best in her adopted family, which also included Dionne and Dee Dee Warwick, and Cissy and Whitney Houston, as well as her own sister, Sylvia Shemwell. As an act, Judy
and I - Billy Vera and Judy Clay - were notable for being the United States'
first racially integrated duo, a fact which, even in the 1960's, prevented
us from being seen on national television. Other than an appearance on
Hy Lit's show on WKBS in Philadelphia, and one on Robin Seymour's Swingin'
Time in Detroit, our little revolution was never televised.
To add to the indignity,we
went on to see our songs performed on network TV by Sammy Davis Jr and
Tina Turner, and by Peter Lawford and Minnie Pearl. We were never taken
up as a cause by the limousine liberals of the day. This may have had something
to do with the fact that our audience was mostly everyday blacks and working-class
whites. Our music was just plain old soul, so the hippie culture found
nothing in us to connect with. We didn't wear leather fringe vests and
bell-bottom jeans. Judy went on in floor-length gowns and my outfits were
mohair continental suits. We played the Apollo Theatre
Our first Apollo
appearance was during those riots, and stage manager Honi Coles, fearing
that we might not be well received, put us second on the bill, the spot
usually reserved for the weakest acts. After the first house, he came to
our dressing room and said, "I'm moving you to right before the star's
spot; ain't nobody gonna follow you two." Given today's unfortunate state
of race relations in the US, it is hard to imagine what an act like ours
meant to an older generation
Judy was born Judy
Guions in St Paul, North Carolina, and soon moved to Fayetteville, where
she was raised by her grandmother. She started singing in church as a small
child. Moving to Brookyn in the early 1950's, she continued her church
singing, indeed her choir featured on Sunday night radio.By her early teens,
she had been adopted by Lee Drinkard, of the
In 1961, Judy recorded
'More Than You Know I'd Thought I'd Gotten Over You' as a solo artist.
More singles followed, on Ember, Lavette, Scepter and Stax. Then, on Atlantic
in 1968, came our 'Story Book Children/ Really Together'.
After she had made two singles with William Bell, and a couple more solo singles, Judy and I cut one more duet, Reaching For The Moon,recorded for Atlantic at the Muscle Shoals studio. One solo single she recorded there, 'Greatest Love', made the r & b charts.Subsequently, she worked as a back-up singer, underwent brain surgery at the end of the 1970's, and released 'Stayin' Alive',recorded live in Newark. In later years,
Judy and I would speak by phone once or twice a year. She was back in North
Carolina, singing occassionally with Cissy Houston's baptist choir in Newark,
and very proud that the baby she was carrying when we first met had grown
up to become a West Point graduate. And no one was prouder than she when
I finally managed to get a big hit of my own, 'At This Moment', some 20
years after our moment. She used to tell me, 'Duets are coming back. We
ought to make
With Judy's passing, we have lost a great singer who never got her due. She is survived by two sons, Todd and Leo, a brother, Raymond, and her sister, Sylvia Shemwell, of the Sweet Inspirations. Billy Vera |