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  1. Judy Clay. American Soul and Gospel singer. Sister of Sylvia Shemwell . Born: September 12, 1938 in St. Pauls, North Carolina. Died: July 19, 2001 in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Clay started her career in the 1950s with gospel group The Drinkard Singers. She recorded several albums and singles from 1960 on but did not reach commercial success ...

  2. 28. Juni 2022 · In May of 1968, just a few weeks after Martin Luther King Jr's assassination, singing duo Billy Vera and Judy Clay entered the Apollo Theater in Harlem, then an all-black neighbourhood of New York.

  3. 1. Mai 2010 · Before she scored some serious hits duetting with Billy Vera and William Bell, Judy Clay had sung gospel and soul for a number of years. This ballad was reco...

    • 3 Min.
    • 55,6K
    • bluesoulsound
  4. Private Number (Judy Clay and William Bell song) " Private Number " is a song recorded by American soul singers Judy Clay and William Bell (1968). In the US, it was released as a single, where it peaked at number 17 on the Best Selling Rhythm and Blues chart and number 75 on the Billboard Hot 100. [1] Outside the US, "Private Number" went to ...

  5. judy clay - you busted my mind (rare video footage 1966) from the swingin' time show 9/3/1966. (scepter 12157 year 1966) says she was their sister but judy (...

    • 3 Min.
    • 73,6K
    • ILMJXXX
  6. Even as "Up Tight" is separate from Blaxploitation, so is its soundtrack from other MG's work. There is significantly more piano on this record than you might hear otherwise from the MG's. Booker also sings, and well at that, on the opening and closing tracks of side one, and there is a guest vocal from Judy Clay on "Children, Don't Get Weary".

  7. 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 1960s, 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.