Artist's albums
You're Welcome to Ride
2000 · album
Turnin' Up The Mood
1996 · album
Straighten It Out: The Best Of Latimore
1995 · compilation
Catchin Up
1993 · album
The Only Way Is Up
1991 · album
Slow Down
1988 · album
Every Way But Wrong
1986 · album
Good Time Man
1985 · album
I'll Do Anything For You
1983 · album
Singing In The Key of Love
1982 · album
Let's Straighten It Out (1895 Jazz Remix)
2022 · single
Latimore - Soul Blues
2019 · album
A Taste of Me: Great American Songs
2017 · album
Latimore III
2013 · album
More, More, More
2013 · album
It Ain't Where You Been
2013 · album
Latimore Remembers Ray Charles
2013 · album
Hit the Road Jack
2013 · single
Dig a Little Deeper
2013 · album
Ladies Choice
2011 · album
Latimore Live In Vienna
2010 · album
All About the Rhythm and the Blues
2009 · album
Back 'Atcha
2007 · album
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Biography
Deep-voiced Latimore's sultry mid-'70s output for Miami's Glades label was a steamy marriage of soul and blues. Initially billed as Benny Latimore, the Tennessean began recording for Miami mogul Henry Stone in 1965, and his late-'60s Dade singles are solid deep soul. Dropping his first name on Glades, Latimore finally found stardom in 1973 with a jazzy reading of T-Bone Walker's "Stormy Monday." He topped the soul lists in 1974 with the anguished "Let's Straighten It Out," a simmering soul/blues hybrid, and encored with the incendiary "Keep the Home Fires Burnin'" the next year. Most of Latimore's Glades sides were produced in Miami by Steve "Every Day I Have to Cry" Alaimo, and when he wasn't cutting his own hits, Latimore acted as a house pianist for parent TK Records. Latimore moved to Malaco during the '80s, his appeal undiminished. Malaco remained Latimore's home until 2000; You're Welcome to Ride is the last record he released for the label. In 2007, Latimore established the Latstone imprint, releasing the Back 'Atcha album that year. He continued to record for the label and perform regularly into the late 2010s. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi