The Mirettes Explained

The Mirettes
Origin:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Genre:Soul, R&B
Occupation:girl group
Years Active:1966–1971
Associated Acts:The Ikettes
Past Members:Robbie Montgomery
Venetta Fields
Jessie Smith
Pat Powdrill

The Mirettes were a female vocal trio composed of former members of the Ikettes in the Ike & Tina Turner Revue.[1]

History

Robbie Montgomery, Venetta Fields and Jessie Smith were the first official incarnation of the Ikettes, a backing trio for Ike & Tina Turner. In 1965, the Ikettes had a top 40 pop hit with "Peaches 'N' Cream" and a top 20 R&B hit with "I'm So Thankful" on Modern Records.[2] As their popularity grew, Ike Turner sent a different set of Ikettes on the road with "The Dick Clark Caravan of Stars" and kept Montgomery, Smith, and Fields on tour with his revue which caused much annoyance to the trio. They also were not receiving the extra money from their hits, so they left the revue in late 1965.

After trying unsuccessfully to continue using the name the Ikettes under management of Tina Turner's sister, Alline Bullock, they signed to Mirwood Records and changed their name to the Mirettes in 1966.[3] After their two singles on the label did not chart, they signed to Revue Records where they had some success. Their first single, "In the Midnight Hour" reached No. 45 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 18 on the R&B chart.[4] [5] Their next two singles made little impression, as did a single on Minit Records in 1968 entitled "Help Wanted." In June 1968, they performed at the Soul-In show held by the Chicago chapter of the National Association of Television and Radio Announcers (NATRA).[6]

A transfer to Uni Records in 1969 was more fruitful for them, but the songs were not big hits.[7] That same year they sang on The Lost Man soundtrack produced by Quincy Jones.[8] In 1970, they signed to the independent label, Zea Records, and released "Ain't My Stuff Good Enough".[9] [10] Venetta Fields left the group and was replaced by former Ikette Pat Powdrill before they broke up in 1971.[11]

Discography

Studio albums

TitleDetails
In The Midnight HourReleased: 1968Label: Revue Records

Catalog Number: RS – 7205

WhirlpoolReleased: 1969Label: Uni Records

Catalog Number: 73062

Vocal credits

Other appearances

Singles

Single (A-side, B-side)Release dateLabel & Cat #Peak chart
position
Album
US Hot
100

US
R&B
"He's All Right With Me"b/w "Your Kind Ain't No Good"Apr 1966Mirwood – 5514Non-album tracks
"Now That I Found You, Baby"b/w "He's All Right With Me"Mar 1967[12] Mirwood – 5531
"In The Midnight Hour"b/w "To Love Somebody"Nov 1967Revue – 110044518In The Midnight Hour
"Help Wanted" b/w "John's Big Chance" by Huggy's OrkMay 1968[13] Minit – 32045Non-album track
"The Real Thing"b/w "Take Me For A Little While"May 1968[14] Revue – 11017In The Midnight Hour
"I'm A Whole New Thing"b/w "First Love"Nov 1968[15] Revue – 11029
"Stand By Your Man"b/w "If Everybody'd Help Somebody"Feb 1969Uni – 55110Whirlpool
"Heart Full Of Gladness"b/w "Ain't You Trying To Cross Over"Apr 1969Uni – 55126
"Whirlpool"b/w "Ain't You Trying To Cross Over"Jul 1969Uni – 55147
"Sweet Soul Sister" b/w "Rap, Run It Down"Sep 1969Uni – 55161The Lost Man
"Ain't My Stuff Good Enough"b/w "The Time And The Season"1970Zea – ZEA 50002Non-album tracks
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A Conversation With Robbie Montgomery. Jeannette. Cooperman. February 26, 2010. St. Louis Mag.
  2. Web site: The Mirettes Songs ••• Top Songs / Chart Singles Discography. Music VF, US & UK hits charts.
  3. April 16, 1966. From Music Capitals of the World: Los Angeles. Billboard. 34.
  4. March 16, 1968. Billboard Best Selling R&B Singles. Billboard. 38.
  5. March 23, 1968. Billboard Hot 100. Billboard. 74.
  6. July 13, 1968. From Music Capitals of the World: Chicago. Billboard. 73.
  7. August 16, 1969. Uni, Revue Roster Sparkles. Record World. 104.
  8. Book: Spencer, Kristopher. Film and Television Scores, 1950-1979: A Critical Survey by Genre. 2014-01-10. McFarland. 978-0-7864-5228-6. 22. en.
  9. June 27, 1970. Roulette, Wilson Indie Label. Billboard. 4.
  10. Ochs. Ed. November 7, 1970. Soul Sauce. Billboard. 31.
  11. Web site: Looking for Pat Powdrill. Nevill. Brain. Spectropop.
  12. March 4, 1967. Spotlight Singles. Billboard. 14.
  13. June 1, 1968. Record Reviews. Cash Box. 22.
  14. June 8, 1968. Top 60 Pop Spotlight. Billboard. 78.
  15. November 16, 1968. Special Merit Spotlight. Billboard. 74.