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Syreeta - Syreeta 8-track tape
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Syreeta - Syreeta 8-track tape
Syreeta - Syreeta 8-track tape

Syreeta - Syreeta 8-track tape

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Syreeta Wright Muhammad (August 3, 1946 – July 6, 2004), who recorded professionally under the single name Syreeta, was a Grammy-nominated American singer-songwriter most notably known for her work with Stevie Wonder and Billy Preston.

Syreeta was born Syreeta Wright in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1946. She started singing at four. Her father died while serving at the Korean War and Wright and her two sisters, Yvonne (later a songwriter in her own right) and Kim, were raised by their mother Essie and grandmother. The Wrights moved back and forth from Detroit to South Carolina before finally settling in Detroit just as Wright entered high school. Monetary problems kept Wright from pursuing a career in ballet so Wright focused her attention on a music career joining several singing groups before landing a job as a receptionist for Motown in 1965. Within a year, she moved to become a secretary for Mickey Stevenson, just as Martha Reeves had done before her.

A year later, Edward Holland of the famous Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting team noticed Wright's singing vocals and decided to try her out for demos of Supremes songs. Motown CEO Berry Gordy shortened her birth name to "Rita" and Wright released her first solo single, "I Can't Give Back the Love I Feel for You", in early 1968. The song was initially written for The Supremes (then going by the revised moniker, "Diana Ross & The Supremes"). They later recorded the song in 1969 and Diana Ross re-recorded the song for her solo album, Surrender. Wright's version became a hit for Northern soul audiences in the United Kingdom, a country where Wright would enjoy success at.

Wright also applied demo vocals for the Supremes hit, "Love Child" and Ross' "Something's On My Mind", which Ross later recorded for her self-titled debut album. When Diana Ross left The Supremes in early 1970, Motown boss Berry Gordy considered replacing her with Syreeta, but offered the place in the group to Jean Terrell. According to several sources, Gordy then changed his mind and tried to replace Terrell with Syreeta, but this was vetoed by Supreme Mary Wilson.

Wright also sung background on records by the Supremes and by Martha and the Vandellas, notably singing the chorus to the group's modest hit single, "I Can't Dance to That Music You're Playing". Wright met fellow label-mate Stevie Wonder in 1968 and the two began dating the following year. On the advice of Wonder, Wright became a songwriter. Their first collaboration, "It's a Shame", was recorded by The Spinners, in 1969. Motown withheld its release within a year before its release in July 1970. The song reached number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100. Wright also began singing background for Wonder, most notably for Wonder's hit, "Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I'm Yours)", which Wright co-wrote with Wonder. In September of 1970, after a year-long courtship, Wright, twenty-four, and Wonder, twenty, married in Detroit. The couple then wrote and arranged songs from Wonder's Where I'm Coming From, which was released much to Berry Gordy's chagrin in the spring of 1971. The Wonder-Wright composition, "If You Really Love Me" (which also featured Wright promptly singing background vocals), reached number-eight in the US that year. In 1971, following Wonder's exit from Motown, the couple relocated to New York where Wonder worked on two independent albums.

Wonder returned to Motown in 1972 after being promised creative control for his recordings, allowing Wonder to set up a production titled Black Bull Productions. Wonder and Wright came with songs for Wonder's next album, Music of My Mind. Following a tour opening for The Rolling Stones in the summer of 1972, Wonder issued his follow-up, Talking Book, which turned out to be Wonder's breakthrough album. In between the albums, Wright decided to return to her own singing career. Motown reassigned the singer from Motown's Gordy imprint, where "I Can't Give Back the Love I Feel for You", was released, to Motown's L.A.-based MoWest subsidiary. Wonder and Wright had marriage troubles and divorced in the summer of 1972 ending their 18-month marriage. Following their divorce, Wonder oversaw the production of Wright's first solo album, Syreeta, which included Wright's take of Wonder's "I Love Every Little Thing About You" from Music of My Mind, the Smokey Robinson classic, "What Love Has Joined Together", and The Beatles' "She's Leaving Home", which featured both Wonder and Wright applying background vocals via the talk box. MoWest issued "I Love Every Little Thing About You" in the late winter of the year. It failed to chart. Material from Syreeta and Wonder's Talking Book were deemed autobiographical due to the rise and fall of the ex-couple's marriage. Remaining best friends, Wright would continue to provide background vocals and compositions with Wonder for the next two decades.

In 1974, Wright was again reassigned this time to the Motown subsidiary and issued her second release, the aptly-titled Stevie Wonder Presents: Syreeta that June. Following the success of Minnie Riperton's Perfect Angel, which Wonder also produced, Wonder wanted to present Wright in the same light as Riperton as a sensual vocalist. The covers also were very similar to each other. Riperton added background vocals to the album, promptly at the end of the album track, "Heavy Day". The album yielded the UK singles, "I'm Goin' Left" (covered by Eric Clapton and Jerry Butler, "Spinnin' and Spinnin'" and the reggae-flavored "Your Kiss is Sweet", which became a UK Top 40, reaching number 12 in 1975[2]. The album also featured one duet with G.C. Cameron, formerly of the Spinners. The duo would release the duet album, Rich Love Poor Love in 1977. Production on Wright's third album, One to One, went on for two years. The album featured the sole Wonder production, "Harmour Love", which found some success after being featured on the movie, Junebug, and was mainly produced by Leon Ware, who had also produced for Marvin Gaye and Riperton.

Wright's next effort came courtesy of a chance meeting with Billy Preston, who had signed with Motown in early 1979. Motown assigned the two to collaborate on a pop ballad for the movie Fast Break. Wright and Preston provided the soundtrack of the film and their first collaboration, "With You I'm Born Again", resulted in an international hit reaching number-two US and number-four UK in late 1979. The success of the song renewed Wright's contract with Motown, which was initially set to expired that year with neither sides looking to renegotiate. Wright and Preston would continue collaborations up until 1982. Wright still worked with Wonder during this period singing the lead vocals for their composition, "Come Back as a Flower" for Wonder's Journey through the Secret Life of Plants and also sung alongside Wonder on his 1980 song, "As If You Read My Mind" for Wonder's Hotter than July album. Wright continued to provide background vocals up until Wonder's 1995 album, Conversation Peace.

Wright continued to record for Motown into the eighties releasing her second self-titled album in 1980, and releasing the funk-oriented Set My Love in Motion, in late 1981. The album featured the minor R&B hit, "Quick Slick", which peaked at number forty-one R&B in early 1982. Wright then issued The Spell in 1983 and left Motown two years later after collaborating with Smokey Robinson for the soundtrack to Berry Gordy's The Last Dragon in 1985. Wright briefly recorded for Motorcity Records before retiring from show business for good in the mid-1990s settling in Los Angeles with her four children.

Syreeta was married three times during her life. Her first marriage, to longtime collaborator Stevie Wonder, lasted eighteen months between 1970 and 1972, while a marriage to bassist Curtis Robertson Jr[3] also proved to be short lived. Wright briefly lived in Ethiopia for a time in the mid-1970s where she worked as a "transcendental meditation" teacher. The stay in Ethiopia inspired her third album, One to One. Wright, a native of Pittsburgh and Detroit, briefly lived in South Carolina and then in New York while still married to Wonder. She eventually settled in Los Angeles where she'd live up until the end of her life. Born and raised a Baptist, she eventually converted to Islam following her third marriage.

Syreeta Wright died on July 6, 2004 of congestive heart failure, which she acquired as a side effect of chemotherapy and radiation treatments she was receiving for an ongoing bout with breast and bone cancers. She was 57 years old. She is survived by her four children Jamal, Hodari, Takiyah and Harmoni, and grandchildren.

Syreeta is the debut solo album by Motown singer Syreeta Wright, released in 1972 on Motown's MoWest subsidiary. Produced by Wright's ex-husband Stevie Wonder, it was released following the former couple's separation and subsequent divorce. The album featured compositions by both Wonder and Wright, and also featured Wright's takes on other artists' songs including a Wonder-produced funk-oriented version of his earlier recording, "I Love Every Little Thing About You", which was initially recorded by Wonder for his Music of My Mind project, released earlier that year. Wonder and Wright used the talk box prominently on Wright's cover of The Beatles' "She's Leaving Home" while Wright provided a smoother vocal take of Smokey Robinson's "What Love Has Joined Together". Wright wrote the ballad "Happiness" and she and Stevie co-wrote "Baby Don't You Let Me Lose This" and their featured duet "To Know You is to Love You" together. The album failed to generate success though Wright would go on to a productive solo career throughout the seventies and eighties. Wright and Wonder would continue working together for several decades.

Retrieved from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syreeta_Wright
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