Ruth Copeland

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Gimme Shelter 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
The Music Box 00:00 Tools
I Got A Thing For You Daddy 00:00 Tools
Play With Fire 00:00 Tools
Your Love Been So Good To Me 00:00 Tools
Suburban Family Lament 00:00 Tools
The Medal 00:00 Tools
Your Love Has Been So Good To Me 00:00 Tools
Hare Krishna 00:00 Tools
Thanks for the Birthday Card 00:00 Tools
Crying Has Made Me Stronger 00:00 Tools
The Silent Boatman 00:00 Tools
No Commitment 00:00 Tools
To William in the Night 00:00 Tools
Don't You Wish You Had (What You Had When You Had It) 00:00 Tools
A Gift of Me 00:00 Tools
Prologue: Child of the North 00:00 Tools
Heaven 00:00 Tools
don't you wish you had 00:00 Tools
I gotta thing for you daddy 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter (Ashley Beedle Re-Edit) 00:00 Tools
Haré Krishna 00:00 Tools
Win Or Lose 00:00 Tools
Don't YOu Wish You Had (What You Had When You Had It?) 00:00 Tools
Milky Way Man 00:00 Tools
Prologue- Child Of The North 00:00 Tools
Un Bel Di (One Fine Day) 00:00 Tools
Cliches 00:00 Tools
Take Me To Baltimore 00:00 Tools
Un Bel Di 00:00 Tools
A Gift Of Me (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Here You Come Again 00:00 Tools
No Commitment (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Oh Baby 00:00 Tools
Senses 00:00 Tools
Some Hearts Need To Sing The Blues 00:00 Tools
Gimmie Shelter 00:00 Tools
Hare Krishna (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter (Rolling Stones cover) 00:00 Tools
If You Dont Want My Love 00:00 Tools
The Music Box (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
The Music Box (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Don't You Wish You Had (What You Had When You Had 00:00 Tools
Un Bel Di (from Madame Butterfly) 00:00 Tools
Hare Krishna [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
[Break 4] 00:00 Tools
Un Bei Di 00:00 Tools
If You Don't Want My Love 00:00 Tools
Music Box 00:00 Tools
Prologue - Child of the North 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
No Commitment (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Gimmie Shelter (1972) 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter - Ruth Copeland 00:00 Tools
child of the north 00:00 Tools
Don’t You Wish You Had (What You Had When You Had It) 00:00 Tools
Your love been so good 00:00 Tools
A Gift Of Me (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
The Music Box (Single Version) 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
ruth copeland(feat. parliament)-14-play with fire 07:32 Tools
Hare Krishna [Single Version] 00:00 Tools
Gimme Shelter (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
ruth copeland(feat. parliament)-08-i got a thing for your daddy 02:58 Tools
ruth copeland(feat. parliament)-06-to william in the night 00:00 Tools
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A blues folk singer born in Durham, England, Ruth Copeland first came to attention after marrying Jeffrey Bowen, a staff producer at Motown. When Bowen followed songwriters Holland-Dozier-Holland over to their own Invictus label in 1970, Copeland was one of his first signings as she joined the fledgling vocal group New Play to become the label's first white performer. Collaborating with Edith Wayne and future P-Funk producer Ron Dunbar, Copeland wrote The Music Box, New Play's debut single, and the second ever Invictus release. However, the group broke up soon after it's release and Copeland began planning for a solo career. She struck up an unlikely partnership with George Clinton and became a massively influential force on Parliament's debut album, 1971's Osmium. Not only did she co-produce the sessions, she also wrote what remain two of the most bizarre (and decidedly unfunky) songs in that band's entire repertoire, the haunting Little Old Country Boy and The Silent Boatman. Two further songs, Come In Out of the Rain (co-written with Clinton) and Breakdown (with Clinton and Clyde Wilson) appeared as Parliament singles in 1971 and 1972. Copeland's partnership with Clinton naturally flowed into her solo career. Viewed today as a virtual twin of Osmium, her Self Portrait debut featured contributions from Eddie Hazel, Lucius Ross, Bernie Worrell, Billy "Bass" Nelson, Tiki Fulwood, and Clinton himself, while the co-writes included a new version of the epic The Silent Boatman. Late 1971 brought the release of Copeland's second album, I Am What I Am, recorded with many of the same musicians as its predecessor, only now they were her own band. In an odd twist, Hazell, Worrell, Fulwood, and Nelson had all quit Parliament/Funkadelic, but remained together to back Copeland, first in the studio and then on tour as she promoted the album. The tour was a success; the shows were solid and the audiences receptive. Unfortunately, Copeland quickly found herself in an uncomfortable position. Touring as support to Sly Stone, she took to introducing her band as Funkadelic - much to the headliner's annoyance. The last straw came when she allowed the band to take one of her encores. Stone insisted she either leave the tour or lose the band. She lost the band. Following her solo success in 1971 and 1972, Copeland faded from the spotlight. She would re-emerge briefly in 1976 with her third album, Take Me to Baltimore, but it did little and she once more retreated into shadow. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.