'Merrilee Rush' is probably best known as the singer of "
Angel of the Morning", a top-10 charting song which earned her a
Grammy nomination for Female Vocalist Of The Year.
Rush was born on January 26th and grew up in the north end of
Seattle,
Washington. As a child, she studied classical piano for 10 years.
In 1960, she auditioned for a band (directed by her first husband) that played
sock hops. Next, she was part of "Merrilee and Her Men", doing covers of male pop hits. Then she joined a Seattle rhythm and blues group called "Tiny Tony and the Statics".
"Merrilee and the Turnabouts" was formed in
1965. One of the group's roadies worked for
Paul Revere and the Raiders, who were doing a tour in the South in
1967 and invited Merrilee to be their opening act.
Merrilee's rendition of "Angel of the Morning" was recorded in
Memphis in early
1968 and was produced by
Chips Moman and the late
Tommy Cogbill. Released by
Bell Records, it climbed to #7 in the US charts that year, and reportedly reached No. 1 in seven countries. The song garnered Rush a
Grammy Nomination for Female Vocalist of the Year. She was nominated alongside Grammy royalty in
Barbra Streisand (
Funny Girl),
Dionne Warwick (
Do You Know the Way to San Jose),
Aretha Franklin (
I_Say_a_Little_Prayer), and
Mary Hopkin (
Those Were the Days).
She appeared on numerous television shows in the 60s and 70s, including
American Bandstand,
The Joey Bishop Show,
Happening,
The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour,
The Everly Brothers Show,
Something Else hosted by John Byner, and many more.
"Angel of the Morning" was written by
Chip Taylor (born James Wesley Voight, younger brother of actor
Jon Voight), who also wrote "Wild Thing" (a hit for
The Troggs in 1966) and "I Can't Let Go", a hit for
The Hollies in the
UK. Interesting bit of trivia: Chip Taylor is the uncle to actress
Angelina Jolie (Jon Voight is her father). Merrilee Rush's recording of Chip's "Angel of the Morning" was featured prominently in the film
"Girl, Interrupted" for which Angelina won the Academy Award. "Angel of the Morning" has also been featured in the major motion pictures "
Jerry_Maguire" and "
Fingers" starring
Harvey Keitel.
In 1971, Merrilee signed with
Scepter Records and released one single, a cover of
Carole King song "Child Of Mine". While that was Merrilee's lone release on Scepter, she cut several tracks for the label including a femme version of the
Billy Joel classic "She's Got A Way" (He's Got A Way). In 1976, Merrilee would sign with
United Artists Records. While at U/A she released three singles, "Could It Be Love I Found Tonight", "Save Me", and "Rainstorm". Her self-titled album for the label was released in 1977.
Merrilee now lives in the countryside near Seattle, in a century-old farm house built by her grandfather. She continues to perform with her own band and in Rock and Roll nostalgia shows across the country. She is married to singer-songwriter and entertainer
Billy Mac and together they have a successful Old English Sheepdog-breeding business.
In
1989 the
Northwest Area Musicians' Association honored Rush with induction into the NAMA Hall of Fame.
In
2003 she appeared as herself in the PBS special "At the Drive-In" along with
Jan Berry and
Dean Torrence (of
Jan and Dean),
Fabian,
Bobby Vee,
Chris Montez,
Matthew Nelson and
Gunnar Nelson (sons of
Rick Nelson),
Dodie Stevens and others.
Merrilee Rush's "Angel Of The Morning" album has been reissued on compact disc via the
Collector's Choice Music label. The reissue includes the entire original 1968 LP, featuring the Top Ten title track and the follow-up single
That Kind Of Woman as well as nine non-LP singles and B-sides as bonus tracks. The bonus tracks include a psychedelic version of the Four Tops'
Reach Out and a cover of
Burt Bacharach's classic
What The World Needs Now, which was produced by
Quincy Jones for the soundtrack album to the film
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice.
The "Angel Of The Morning" sessions were recorded at Chips Moman's American Studio in Memphis and featured the same musicians who played on Elvis Presley's famous Memphis recordings.
External links
★ http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00069I74Q/
★
Merrilee Rush official site
★
Billy Mac official site
★
Gary James interview
★
IMDB's "At the Drive-In" entry