Jackie Shane | |
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Born | Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. | May 15, 1940
Died | February 21, 2019 78) Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. | (aged
Genres | R&B, soul |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
External videos | |
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Jackie Shane - Walking The Dog - 1965 R&B |
Jackie Shane (May 15, 1940 – February 21, 2019) was an American soul and rhythm and blues singer, who was most prominent in the local music scene of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in the 1960s. Considered to be a pioneer transgender performer,[1] she was a contributor to the Toronto Sound and is best known for the single "Any Other Way", which was a regional Top 10 hit in Toronto in 1963 and a modest national chart hit across Canada in 1967.[2]
Background
Originally from Nashville, Tennessee,[3] she was born on May 15, 1940. She began performing locally in the 1950s wearing long hair, make-up, and jewelry.
Initially a drummer as well as a vocalist, Shane would play drums standing up while singing. Shane's drumming talent led to studio session work as a drummer, including on Lillian Offitt's "Miss You So", a track which hit #66 pop and #8 R&B on Billboard's US charts in the summer of 1957.[4] Working in Nashville regularly as a stage performer during the late 1950s, Shane also worked in the studio as a drummer on tracks by Larry Williams, Big Maybelle, Gatemouth Brown, Little Willie John, Joe Tex, and numerous other R&B performers.[5]
Vowing to escape the "Jim Crow South",[6] in the late 1950s, Shane joined a traveling carnival and arrived in Cornwall, Ontario, in 1959, where she said she felt free for the first time.[7]
In 1960, Shane moved to Montreal, Quebec,[3] where saxophonist "King" Herbert Whitaker invited her along to watch the popular band Frank Motley and his Motley Crew at the Esquire Show Bar. Shane showed up and sat down near the front. When Motley said, "Get that kid up here and let's see what he can do," pianist Curley Bridges invited Shane, then still presenting as a man, onstage for the next set, where she performed songs by Ray Charles and Bobby "Blue" Bland.[6]
She was soon the band's lead vocalist, and relocated to Toronto with them in late 1961. She returned several times to the United States, on tour with the Motley Crew (to Boston, for example, where they recorded), to New York to record, to visit her family and old friends and perform on a TV show in Nashville, or to live and work in Los Angeles where she played drums in recording sessions.[3][7] A fan mythology linked her to Little Richard, including claims that she had been Richard's backing vocalist before moving to Canada or even that she was Richard's cousin, although no verification of either claim has ever been found and no evidence exists that Shane ever made either claim herself.[8] Music critic Carl Wilson has concluded that, while in reality Shane had deep and identifiable roots in the traditions of the Southern US Chitlin Circuit, the mythology emerged because that scene's traditions were not known to Torontonians in the 1960s, and thus Little Richard was the only antecedent for Shane's performing style that most of her local fan base could identify.[8]
Throughout her active musical career and for many years thereafter, Shane was written about by nearly all sources as a man who performed in ambiguous clothing that strongly suggested femininity, with some sources even directly labeling her as a drag queen.[9] The few sources that actually sought out her own words on the matter of her own gender identification were more ambiguous, however; she identified herself as male in two early quotes to the Toronto Star, but more often appeared to simply dodge questions about her gender altogether.[10] Her identity as a trans woman was not confirmed on the record by a media outlet until music journalist Elio Iannacci interviewed her for The Globe and Mail in 2017.[11]
Recording career
Shane recorded several tracks in 1960, including a cover of Barrett Strong's "Money (That's What I Want)" and a version of Lloyd Price's "I've Really Got the Blues". However, none of the tracks were issued at the time; they eventually came out in 1965. [12]
Shane's first issued recording was "Any Other Way" (b/w "Sticks and Stones"), recorded and issued in the fall of 1962; the song became her biggest chart hit, reaching #2 on Toronto's CHUM Chart in 1963.[10] It was also a hit in several US markets (including St. Louis, and Washington, D.C.), allowing it to place at #124 on Billboard's "Bubbling Under" charts in the U.S. A cover of a song previously recorded and released by William Bell in summer 1962, Shane's version of "Any Other Way" was noted for adding a different spin to the lyric "Tell her that I'm happy/tell her that I'm gay"; while the original lyric intended the word "gay" in its older meaning as a synonym of "happy", Shane played on the word's double meaning, which was not yet in mainstream usage.[3]
The follow-up single to "Any Other Way" was "In My Tenement" b/w "Comin' Down". It received some airplay in upstate New York, but did not chart elsewhere in the US or Canada, and Shane did not record again for several years.
In 1962, Shane was performing at Toronto's Saphire Tavern, specializing in covers of songs by Ray Charles and Bobby Bland.[13] In 1965, she made a television appearance in Nashville on WLAC-TV's Night Train, performing Rufus Thomas' "Walking the Dog".[10] Around the same time, she was offered an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, but refused as the booking was made conditional on her presenting as male.[14] Also in 1965, the tracks from Shane's 1960 recording session were issued -- without Shane's prior knowledge. Two tracks popped up on a 1965 compilation LP entitled The Original Blues Sound Of Charles Brown & Amos Milburn With Jackie Shane - Bob Marshall & The Crystals, while two others (billed to "Little Jackie Shane") were issued as a single. Neither the single nor the album (both issued on very small, obscure labels) received much attention.
In 1967, "Any Other Way" was reissued and became a modest hit across Canada, peaking at #68 on the national RPM chart in March.[8] Shane subsequently returned to recording later that year, issuing the studio single "Stand Up Straight and Tall" b/w "You Are My Sunshine" (which peaked at #87 on RPM), and the live album Jackie Shane Live.[15] Two singles were also pulled from the live album (covers of "Knock On Wood" and "Don't Play That Song"), but none of the live material charted. A final studio single ("Cruel Cruel World" b/w "New Way of Lovin'") was released in 1970, which also failed to chart.[3]
In addition to her own recordings, Shane also appeared on Motley's album Honkin' at Midnight, performing live versions of some of the singles she had released under her own name.[16]
Shane faded in prominence after 1970–71,[3] with even her own former bandmates losing touch with her; soon after returning to Los Angeles, she turned down an offer to be a part of George Clinton's band Funkadelic.[17] She began caring for her mother, Jessie Shane,[7] who lived in Los Angeles, before relocating to Nashville around 1996 after the death of her mother.[18]
For a time she was rumoured to have died by suicide or to have been stabbed to death in the 1990s,[8] but in fact she had retired from music, and moved home to Nashville from Los Angeles. She kept in touch with Frank Motley, who put a Toronto record collector in touch with her in the mid 1990s. This news was relayed to a small number of her old musician friends, a couple of whom contacted her. One, Steve Kennedy, discussed with Shane the possibility of organizing and staging a reunion concert, but this never materialized — the next time Kennedy called the same phone number, it had been reassigned to somebody else who had never heard of Shane.[3]
Post-career attention
CBC Radio's Inside the Music aired a documentary feature, "I Got Mine: The Story of Jackie Shane", in 2010.[3] At the time, nobody involved in the documentary, the executive producer of which was Steve Kennedy's wife, had been able to determine whether Shane was still alive;[3] but she was subsequently found, still living in Nashville.[16]
Footage of Shane in performance also appeared in Bruce McDonald's 2011 documentary television series Yonge Street: Toronto Rock & Roll Stories.[19]
Jackie Shane Live was reissued as a bootleg in 2011 on Vintage Music as Live at the Saphire Tavern, although the reissue was inaccurately labelled as being from 1963. Several of the original songs covered in the set list were release much later in the 1960s.[20][15] A compilation bootleg of the studio singles and rarities, Soul Singles Classics, was released the same year.[15] OPM subsequently reissued the album under its original title.
In 2015, the Polaris Music Prize committee shortlisted Jackie Shane Live as one of the nominees for the 1960s–1970s component of its inaugural Heritage Award to honour classic Canadian albums.[21] It did not win, but has been renominated in subsequent years.
In 2017, a group of Toronto writers published the essay anthology Any Other Way: How Toronto Got Queer, a history of LGBT culture in Toronto; in addition to taking its title from Shane's 1962 single, the book includes an essay devoted specifically to Shane.[11]
In the summer of 2017, the reissue label Numero Group announced that they would be releasing a double-LP/CD compilation of Shane's music, Any Other Way, on October 20, 2017.[22] The album marked the first time since her final single in 1969 that Shane was directly involved in the production and release of a reissue of her music.[11] The album was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Historical Album category.[23] In a revealing interview with Elio Iannacci of The Globe and Mail,[24] Shane stated she was planning to return to Toronto to perform live for the first time in nearly five decades.[25]
In 2019, Shane granted a broadcast interview to CBC Radio One's Q. The interview was conducted by Elaine Banks, who had been the producer and host of "I Got Mine", and was Shane's first broadcast interview since the end of her performing career.[18] In the interview, she confirmed that she returned home to the United States to take care of her ailing mother, but stated that she regretted not having chosen to bring her mother to Toronto instead.[18]
Death
Shane died in her sleep, at her home in Nashville, on February 21, 2019.[1][26] Her death was reported to media the following day.[27]
In 2022, Shane was the subject of a Heritage Minute segment, in which she was portrayed by transgender activist Ravyn Wngz.[28] Michael Mabbott and Lucah Rosenberg-Lee also entered production on Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story, a biographical documentary film about Shane.[29]
In 2023, a fundraising campaign was launched on JustGiving to fund a commemorative Heritage Toronto plaque honoring Shane, at a location to be determined in downtown Toronto.[30] She had been previously featured in their 2021 Sounds Like Toronto digital exhibit.[31] A plaque was unveiled on June 23, 2023, the start of Pride weekend in the city, at the Victoria and Richmond location of the former Saphire Tavern.[32]
Discography
Singles
- "Any Other Way" b/w "Sticks and Stones" (1962)
- "In My Tenement" b/w "Comin' Down" (1963)
- "Money (That's What I Want)" b/w "I've Really Got the Blues" (1965)
- "Stand Up Straight and Tall" b/w "You Are My Sunshine" (1967)
- "Knock On Wood" b/w "You're The One" (1967)
- "Don't Play That Song" b/w "Barefootin'" (1968)
- "Cruel Cruel World" b/w "New Way of Lovin'" (1970)
Albums
- Jackie Shane Live (Caravan Records, 1967)
- Honkin' at Midnight (2000, bootleg, with Frank Motley and his Motley Crew)
- Live at the Saphire Tavern (2011, bootleg)
- Soul Singles Classics (2011, bootleg)
- Jackie Shane Live (2015, reissue)
Compilations
- "Slave for You Baby" and "Chickadee" on The Original Blues Sound of Charles Brown & Amos Milburn with Jackie Shane-Bob Marshall & The Crystals (Grand Prix/Pickwick, 1965)
- Any Other Way (Numero Group, 2017)
References
- 1 2 "Jackie Shane, pioneering transgender soul singer, dies at 78". CBC News, February 22, 2019.
- ↑ "A brief history of queer music in Toronto". BlogTO, November 29, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "I Got Mine: The Story of Jackie Shane". CBC Radio, February 28, 2010.
- ↑ Bowman 2017, p. 15.
- ↑ Bowman 2017, p. 17.
- 1 2 "Jackie Shane, A Force Of Nature Who Disappeared, Has A Story All Her Own". NPR. October 25, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
- 1 2 3 "Toronto soul musician Jackie Shane returns to spotlight with Grammy nomination". rabble.ca. January 3, 2019. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
- 1 2 3 4 Carl Wilson, "I Bet Your Mama Was a Tent Show Queen". Hazlitt, April 22, 2013.
- ↑ "Toronto Historical Jukebox Plays the Sounds of Our Past". Torontoist, January 29, 2014.
- 1 2 3 Steven Maynard, "A New Way of Lovin': Queer Toronto Gets Schooled by Jackie Shane". Any Other Way: How Toronto Got Queer. Coach House Books, 2017. ISBN 9781552453483. pp. 11–20.
- 1 2 3 "Searching for Jackie Shane, R&B’s lost transgender superstar". The Globe and Mail, May 19, 2017.
- ↑ Bowman 2017, p. 34.
- ↑ Martin Aston (October 13, 2016). Breaking Down the Walls of Heartache: How Music Came Out. Little, Brown Book Group. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-4721-2245-2.
- ↑ "Jackie Shane: remembering the groundbreaking trans soul singer". The Guardian, February 25, 2019.
- 1 2 3 Jackie Shane Archived 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine at CanadianBands.com.
- 1 2 Jackie Shane at Queer Music Heritage.
- ↑ Mertens, Max (August 13, 2017). "Jackie Shane "Any Other Way" Review". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on August 17, 2017.
- 1 2 3 "Jackie Shane in her own words: A rare interview with a living legend". Q, February 8, 2019.
- ↑ "The Strip's musical heyday; Documentary 'Yonge Street – Toronto Rock &Roll Stories' uncovers an era when 'truth was stranger than the publicity'". The Telegraph-Journal, March 21, 2011.
- ↑ discogs.com
- ↑ "Polaris Music Prize Announces Heritage Prize Nominees". Exclaim!, September 18, 2015.
- ↑ "Jackie Shane, Soul Singer and Trans Rights Pioneer, Announces Numero Group Compilation". Pitchfork. August 2, 2017. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
- ↑ "Drake, Shawn Mendes, Diana Krall among Canadians up for Grammys". CBC News, December 7, 2018.
- ↑ Iannacci, Elio (October 27, 2017). "Jackie Shane's Coming Home". The Globe and Mail.
- ↑ "Jackie Shane's coming home". Retrieved 2020-02-07.
- ↑ "Jackie Shane, Soul Singer and Transgender Pioneer, Dead at 78". Pitchfork. February 22, 2019.
- ↑ Liam Stack, "Jackie Shane, Transgender Pioneer of 1960s Soul Music, Dies at 78". The New York Times, February 22, 2019.
- ↑ David Friend, "Transgender soul pioneer Jackie Shane subject of Heritage Minute". Toronto Star, November 2, 2022.
- ↑ Andrew Jeffrey, "Telefilm names 22 features for $3.8M theatrical doc fund". Playback, August 22, 2022.
- ↑ Megan LaPierre, "Fundraising Campaign Launched to Honour Jackie Shane with Historic Plaque in Downtown Toronto". Exclaim!, January 23, 2023.
- ↑ "Jackie Shane". Sounds Like Toronto. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
- ↑ Phil Tsekouras, "Toronto marks Pride weekend start with plaque honouring transgender soul singer Jackie Shane". CP24, June 23, 2023.
Sources
- Bowman, Rob (2017). Jackie Shane: Any Other Way. Numero Group.