Carla Thomas lyrics
Artist · 489 293 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Hidden Gems
1992 · album
Love Means
1971 · album
Memphis Queen
1971 · album
Tramp (Korky Buchek Remix)
2021 · single
American Portraits: Carla and Rufus Thomas
2020 · album
The Puppet: Northern Soul Sides
2020 · EP
I Can't Take It
2019 · single
The Albums 1961-1967
2019 · compilation
B-A-B-Y
2017 · compilation
Stax Classics
2017 · compilation
Tramp
2016 · compilation
Live: 1989 Memphis Music & Heritage Festival
2014 · album
Live in Europe
2009 · album
Live at The Bohemian Caverns
2007 · album
Stax Profiles: Carla Thomas
2006 · compilation
Stop Look What You Are Doing
2005 · single
Walkin' The Dog
2005 · album
Live in Memphis
2002 · album
King & Queen
1967 · album
The Queen Alone
1969 · album
The Queen Alone [Expanded Reissue]
1969 · album
Comfort Me
1966 · album
Let Me Be Good to You / Another Night Without My Man
1966 · single
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Biography
In the glorious decade and a half of sound that was Stax in the '60s and early '70s, Carla Thomas was the Queen of Memphis Soul. She was born in Memphis in 1942, and 18 years later she recorded a duet with her father Rufus Thomas, giving the fledgling Satellite label its first taste of success with the regional hit "Cause I Love You." As her 18th birthday drew nigh, she cut her first solo single, the teen ballad "Gee Whiz (Look at His Eyes)." Written a few years earlier and rejected by Vee-Jay in Chicago, it gave Satellite its first national hit, breaking the Top Ten mark on both the R&B and pop charts. Shortly thereafter Satellite became Stax, and Carla proceeded to claw her way onto the national charts another 22 times with such immortal slices of soul as her answer song to Sam Cooke, "I'll Bring It on Home to You," as well as "Let Me Be Good to You," "B-A-B-Y," "Tramp" (with Otis Redding), and "I Like What You're Doing to Me." Carla released six solo albums and, with Redding, one duet album on Stax between 1961 and 1971. In 2007 a live album she recorded for Stax at Washington's famed Bohemian Caverns back in 1967 was released in its entirety, including an impromtu cameo set from her father, Rufus Thomas. ~ Rob Bowman, Rovi