Alben von Lou Rawls
ALBUMLou Rawls ChristmasLou Rawls
ALBUMI'm BlessedLou Rawls
ALBUMChristmas Is the TimeLou Rawls
ALBUMAmen! A Gospel CelebrationErich Kunzel, Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, Jennifer Holliday, Maureen McGovern, Lou Rawls, Azusa Pacific University Choir, Central State University Chorus & Cincinnati Pops Chorale
ALBUMPortrait Of The BluesLou Rawls
ALBUMIt's Supposed to Be FunLou Rawls
ALBUMAt LastLou Rawls
ALBUMClose CompanyLou Rawls
ALBUMNow Is the TimeLou Rawls
ALBUMShades of BlueLou Rawls
Beliebte Musikvideos von Lou Rawls
You'll Never Find Another Love Like Mine
Lou Rawls
Lady Love
Lou Rawls
Let Me Be Good To You
Lou Rawls
Tomorrow (From "Annie")
Lou Rawls
Medley: Sir Duke / Unforgettable / Take The "A" Train / Sophisticated Lady / Mack The Knife / Hello Dolly
Lou Rawls
Dead End Street / Tobacco Road / Love Is a Hurtin' Thing / Natural Man
Lou Rawls
Yesterday (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 12, 1967)
Lou Rawls
Love Is A Hurtin' Thing (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, November 6, 1966)
Lou Rawls
It's Been a Long Time
Lou Rawls
These Are The Songs I Sing
Lou Rawls
Künstler-Playlists
Lou Rawls Essentials
You'll never find a smoother surveyor of love in all its forms.
Lou Rawls: Deep Cuts
The soul soother extends his slow-burn finesse to jazz and blues.
Künstler-Biographie
Legendary jazz and R&B singer and actor Lou Rawls recorded more than 60 albums and sold more than 40 million records.
∙ Born in 1933, Rawls started singing in Chicago gospel groups at age seven alongside fellow future soul stars Sam Cooke and Curtis Mayfield.
∙ After signing to Capitol Records and singing backup for Sam Cooke, he released his debut album, Stormy Monday, in 1962.
∙ Rawls topped the US R&B chart for the first time with “Love Is a Hurtin’ Thing,” the lead single from his 1967 album, Soulin’.
∙ In 1976, “You’ll Never Find Another Love Like Mine” hit No. 2 hit on Billboard’s Hot 100 and sent his All Things In Time LP to the top of the Soul chart.
∙ He won the Grammy Award for Best Male Vocal R&B Performance three times—in 1968, 1972, and 1978.
∙ As founder and host of the annual Lou Rawls Parade Of Stars Telethon, he raised more than $250 million for Black college students.
∙ His final public performance was singing the National Anthem during the 2005 World Series in his hometown of Chicago.
Heimatort
Chicago, IL, United States
Genre
R&B/Soul