Lavelle White

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
I've Never Found A Man To Love 03:49 Tools
Why Young Men Go Wild 03:31 Tools
Voodoo Man 04:31 Tools
Tin Pan Alley 06:03 Tools
A Little Bit Of This, A Little Bit Of That 04:27 Tools
Mississippi , My Home 04:15 Tools
Wootie Boogie 02:55 Tools
You're Gonna Make Me Cry 04:44 Tools
Movin' 04:28 Tools
Those Lonely Lonely Nights 02:29 Tools
Stop These Teardrops 03:14 Tools
Yes, I've been Crying 03:54 Tools
Into the Mystic 04:34 Tools
Soul Deep 03:06 Tools
Don't Let My Baby Ride 04:03 Tools
Go to the Mirror 05:10 Tools
Wrappin' Up Our Love 03:24 Tools
If (I Could Be With You) 02:41 Tools
It Haven't Been Easy 04:51 Tools
Lead Me On 03:18 Tools
Love In Return 01:59 Tools
Black Widow Spider 03:56 Tools
Computer Blues 04:14 Tools
For You, My Love 04:23 Tools
About the Facts of Life 04:15 Tools
Watch What You Do To Me 03:59 Tools
Today I Started Loving You 05:15 Tools
Can't Take It (I Don't Give A Damn) 03:59 Tools
Oh What A Feeling 03:18 Tools
Livin' For The City 03:59 Tools
For You My Love 04:23 Tools
I've Never Found a Man 03:35 Tools
Automatic Love 03:47 Tools
I've Never Found A Man (Live) 00:00 Tools
It's a Miracle 03:22 Tools
Oh Happy Day 03:57 Tools
You Gonna Make Me Cry 00:30 Tools
Mississippi, My Home 05:08 Tools
At Last 04:38 Tools
Lord I Want To Thank You 04:01 Tools
Lay Down Beside Me 04:15 Tools
Lay Down Besides Me 04:34 Tools
Stop These Tear Drops 03:13 Tools
If I Could Be With You 03:52 Tools
It's A Miricle 03:22 Tools
just look at you fool 03:22 Tools
Today I Started Loving You Again 00:00 Tools
Living for the City 00:00 Tools
Wrapping Up Our Love 03:22 Tools
Wrappin' up Your Love 03:23 Tools
Wrappin up Our Love 03:58 Tools
I Want to Know 03:58 Tools
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Biographyby Richard Skelly Texas-based vocalist and songwriter "Miss" Lavelle White has a significant discography of singles, most dating back to the 1950s and '60s, but she only released her first full length album, Miss Lavelle, on the Austin, TX-based Antone's label in 1994. To say the album has been a long time coming would be the understatement of the year, for White's talents as a songwriter and singer were well-known in 1950s Houston, where she recorded several singles for the Duke/Peacock labels. In the late '50s, her labelmates included Bobby "Blue" Bland, B.B. King, and Junior Parker. Miss Lavelle was White's first recording of any kind, in fact, in 30 years. The fact that it's a gorgeous album helped White play some large blues festivals across the U.S., Canada, and Europe, but for a number of years when she had no record deal, White continued to entertain club crowds with her singing in Chicago, Texas, Louisiana, and Florida. White's first big break as a vocalist came about with something she wrote for herself, "If I Could Be with You," and a procession of other singles followed for the Duke/Peacock label, including "Just Look at You Fool," "Stop These Teardrops," and "The Tide of Love." Unlike many other blues singers, White didn't get started recording until she was 25, thanks to fellow Houstonian Johnny "Clyde" Copeland, who brought White to Duke/Peacock owner Don Robey's attention. White began writing poems and songs when she was 12, she said in a 1994 interview. "Hardships in life made me start to write," she explained, "and the first record I cut was with a gospel group,'Precious Lord, Lead Me On.'" When she was 16, White moved to Houston and fell into the city's burgeoning blues club scene with Clarence Hollimon, who now records with his wife Carol Fran for the Rounder label. Today, long after she got her humble start in the blues clubs in Houston, White sings as well as she ever did, and though she's had time off from the road over the years, she's never stopped singing or writing songs. She released her first album, Miss Lavelle, in 1994. It was followed three years later by It Haven't Been Easy. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.