Джеймс Ингрэм (James Ingram; родился 16 февраля 1952 года в Акроне, штат Огайо, США (Akron, Ohio, USA) — американский соул певец, мультиинструменталист, продюсер и автор песен.
Он начал свою карьеру в 70-е годы как участник группы Revelation Funk вместе с Бернардом Лоусоном (Bernard Lawson, Sr.), также родом из Акрона. В то время Ингрэм в Лос-Анджелесе был известен как сессионный вокалист, и обратил на себя внимание бывшего автора и продюсера звукозаписывающей компании Мотаун Рекордз (Motown Records) Ламонта Дозье (Lamont Dozier). Дозье пригласил Ингрэма в качестве вокалиста для работы над некоторым материалом; одна из тех песен «Love's Calling» вышла в радио-эфир. Напоминание об этом материале появилось в 1980 году на альбоме Zingara.
В 1981 году Ингрэм записал песни «Just Once» и «One Hundred Ways» для альбома Куинси Джонса (Quincy Jones) «The Dude». Он выиграл премию «Грэмми» (Grammy) как лучший R&B исполнитель за его работу над этим альбомом. Дебютный альбом Джеймса Ингрэма «It's Your Night» вышел в 1983 году и включил балладу «There's No Easy Way». Ингрэм также работал с другими известными R&B исполнителями, такими, как Рэй Чарльз (Ray Charles), Анита Бейкер (Anita Baker), Виктор Лазло (Viktor Lazlo), Нэнси Уилсон (Nancy Wilson), Натали Коул (Natalie Cole) и Кенни Роджерс (Kenny Rogers). В октябре 1990-го его любовная баллада «I Don't Have The Heart» с альбома «It's Real» заняла первую строчку в чарте Billboard Hot 100.
Но более всего Ингрэм стал известен своей совместной работой с другими исполнителями. В феврале 1983 года его песня в дуэте с Пэтти Остин (Patti Austin) «Baby, Come To Me» заняла первое место в чарте Billboard Hot 100; также песня сделала популярной телевизионную мыльную оперу «Главный госпиталь» (General Hospital). Вторая их песня «How Do You Keep The Music Playing?» прозвучала в фильме «Лучшие друзья» (Best Friends) и принесла номинацию на «Оскар». В 1985 году песня Джеймса Ингрэма в дуэте с Майклом Макдональдом (Michael McDonald) «Yah Mo B There», выиграла премию «Грэмми». А композиция «What About Me?», записанная Ингрэмом вместе с Кенни Роджерсом (Kenny Rogers) и Ким Карнес (Kim Carnes), вошла в Top 40 в 1984 году. В 1985 году Джеймс принял участие в записи благотворительного сингла «We Are The World».
Песня Джеймса и американской певицы Линды Ронстадт (Linda Ronstadt) «Somewhere Out There» стала номером 2 в US Billboard Hot 100 в марте 1987 года; эта композиция также является саундтреком к мультфильму «Американская история» (An American Tail). Песня собрала номинации на премии «Грэмми» и «Оскар», а также получила золотой статус (было продано свыше 500.000 копий в Америке), присвоенный Американской ассоциацией звукозаписывающих компаний RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America).
В 1985-ом году, кроме участия в благотворительном клипе Майкла Джексона (Michael Jackson) «We Are The World», Ингрэм стал соавтором песни «P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)», которая была исполнена Джексоном в его блокбастере Thriller.
В 90-х он вновь сотрудничал с Куинси Джонсом (Quincy Jones), записав песню «The Secret Garden». В записи также участвовали Бэрри Уайт (Barry White), Эль Дебардж (El Debarge) и Эл Би Шур (Al B. Sure!).
В 90-е песни Ингрэма становятся популярными саундтреками. Его песня «One More Time» стала саундтреком к фильму «Сарафина!» (Sarafina!), а «Where Did My Heart Go?» появилась в фильме «Городские пижоны» (City Slickers). Композиция «The Day I Fall in Love», которую он спел в дуэте с Долли Партон (Dolly Parton), стала темой к фильму «Бетховен 2» (Beethoven's 2nd) и была номинирована на премию «Оскар» как лучшая песня к фильму.
Летом 2004-го Ингрэм принимает участие в американском телевизионном шоу «Звездные дуэты » (Celebrity Duets). В этом шоу профессиональные исполнители различных жанров выступают в паре с эстрадными артистами на еженедельных соревнованиях, по результатам которых одна пара исключается. В 2006 году он с нео-соул певицей Энджи Стоун (Angie Stone) записал песню «My People».
Дискография
Студийные альбомы
1983 — It's Your Night (Qwest/Warner Bros.)
1986 — Never Felt So Good (Qwest/Warner Bros.)
1989 — It's Real (Qwest/Warner Bros.)
1993 — Always You (Qwest/Warner Bros.)
2008 — Stand (In the Light) (Intering)
Сборники
1991 — Greatest Hits: The Power of Great Music (Qwest/Warner Bros.)
1999 — Forever More (Love Songs, Hits & Duets) (Private Music)
Синглы
1981 — Just Once (with Quincy Jones)
1981 — One Hundred Ways (with Quincy Jones)
1982 — Baby, Come To Me (with Patti Austin)
1982 — Baby, Come To Me (with Patti Austin) (re-release)
1983 — How Do You Keep The Music Playing (with Patti Austin)
1983 — Party Animal
1983 — Yah Mo B There (with Michael McDonald)
1984 — There's No Easy Way
1984 — She Loves Me (The Best That I Can)
1984 — What About Me? (with Kenny Rogers & Kim Carnes)
1985 — It's Your Night
1986 — Always
1986 — I Just Can't Let Go (with David Pack & Michael McDonald)
1986 — Never Felt So Good
1986 — Somewhere Out There (with Linda Ronstadt)
1987 — Better Way
1989 — It's Real
1989 — I Wanna Come Back
1989 — (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Man
1990 — The Secret Garden (with Quincy Jones feat. Al B. Sure!, El DeBarge and Barry White)
1990 — I Don't Have The Heart
1990 — When Was The Last Time the Music Made You Cry
1991 — Where Did My Heart Go
1991 — Get Ready
1993 — Someone Like You
1994 — The Day I Fall in Love (with Dolly Parton)
1994 — I Don't Want To Be Alone For Christmas (Unless I'm Alone with You)
1995 — When You Love Someone (with Anita Baker)
1998 — Give Me Forever (I Do) (with John Tesh)
1999 — Forever More (I'll Be the One) (with John Tesh)
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James Ingram (born February 16, 1952 in Akron, Ohio) is a Music icon, Multi Grammy award-winner and back-to-back Oscar nominee who inspires and touches the hearts of millions of listeners worldwide through his abundant gifts as a singer, performer, songwriter, composer, arranger and producer.
In early 2009 Ingram returns to his roots with the release of his first complete inspirational CD, the much-anticipated Stand (in the Light). Inspired by the plight of the Hurricane Katrina victims, Stand features new works and “Yah Mo Be There” — his legendary, Grammy award-winning 1983 collaboration with Michael McDonald — and is the natural advancement in a career grounded in faith; blessed with the influence and mentorship of some of the seminal forces in American music history including Ray Charles, Marvin Gaye, Donny Hathaway and Stevie Wonder; and shaped and molded by Quincy Jones.
From funk to soul to R&B to pop to adult contemporary to inspirational, James Ingram’s multi-faceted talents have dazzled the American music scene since the early ’80s. The Akron, Ohio, native went from playing local bars with Revelation Funk to Los Angeles, where he landed the types of gigs that most aspiring musicians only dream about: singing background vocals and playing piano for Ray Charles’ recording studio sessions; recording studio sessions and playing keyboards behind the Coasters for Dick Clark; and recording background vocals for his mentor, Marvin Gaye.
Then fate brought Ingram together with Quincy Jones and to a pivotal breakthrough in his career. Up to this point, Ingram had not yet surfaced as a solo artist, but after a chance listen to Ingram’s demo of “Just Once” — which had been recorded for the sum of $50 — Jones immediately recognized the man, the voice and the music as the musical triumvirate that would both captivate listeners and command the music industry’s attention.
Jones quickly chose Ingram to perform both “Just Once” and “One Hundred Ways” on Jones’ upcoming album, The Dude. Released in 1980, The Dude was a multi-platinum international success and resulted in three Grammy nominations for Ingram: Best New Artist, Best Pop Male Vocal, and Best R&B Vocal for “One Hundred Ways,” for which he won his first Grammy. Ingram also made Grammy history when — in his first live performance ever as a singer — he performed “Just Once” as the telecast’s opening act and became the first artist to open a Grammy ceremony with a ballad and the only artist to win a Grammy without having his own album in release. The Dude remains the most Grammy-nominated album in history and marked the first of 15 nominations Ingram has received to date (see attached award list and discography for complete information).
After this stunning debut, Ingram’s much-anticipated 1983 solo album, It’s Your Night, surpassed industry expectations. The album was the debut for the Michael McDonald collaboration “Yah Mo Be There,” (Ingram’s 2nd Grammy) which was honored with the Grammy for Best R&B Performance for a Group or Duo, and “There’s No Easy Way” was considered one of the year’s stand-out ballads. It’s Your Night sold nearly one million copies; secured an unprecedented achievement by appearing simultaneously on both The Top 20 Pop and The Top 5 R&B Charts. Ultimately, “Yah Mo Be There” became the most-played song of the year.
Ingram’s talents as a songwriter and performer were tapped by some of the most celebrated artists of the era, most prominent was his “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” for Michael Jackson’s Thriller (1982), which sold more than 50 million units,. He performed “Baby Come To Me,” with Patti Austin (1984) on her debut album, which went on to become a No. 1 Pop record. Other chart-topping, Top 10 collaborations include “The Secret Garden,” the No.1 hit with Barry White, Al B. Sure and El Debarge on Quincy Jones’ multi-platinum Back on the Block album, (1990). James, as a song writer is timeless he received Grammy recognition for his participation on the song entitled “Good Life”, in the “Best Rap Song” category, performed by Kanye West (featuring T-Pain) in 2007.
Hollywood soon called for Ingram’s wide-ranging songwriting and vocal abilities and several hit singles for blockbuster motion and animated pictures followed. “How Do You Keep The Music Playing” — a songwriting collaboration between Michel Legrand and Marilyn and Alan Bergman, performed by Ingram and Patti Austin — was featured in Best Friends (1982) and received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group as well as an Academy Award nomination in the Original Song category.
Other important contributions to feature films include “Don’t Make Me No Never Mind,” co-written with Quincy Jones and Roy Gaines for Steven Spielberg’s The Color Purple (1985), and Ingram’s duet with Anita Baker, “When You Love Someone,” by Bryan Adams, for Forget Paris (1995). “Somewhere Out There,” performed by Ingram and Linda Ronstadt for Steven Spielberg’s animated American Tail (1986) also received a Grammy for Song of the Year. Then 1993 and 1994 brought Ingram back-to-back Academy Award nominations. His duets with Dolly Parton, “The Day I Fall in Love,” featured in Beethoven 2 (1993), and Anita Baker, “Look What Love Has Done,” the theme song from Junior (1994), were songwriting collaborations with Carole Bayer Sager and recognized in Oscar’s Original Song category.
The '90s were a fruitful decade for Ingram, who began it by co-producing “I Don’t Have the Heart” with Thom Bell — the first and only time Bell has co-produced on any project — and taking it to No. 1 in 1990. In 1999, Ingram released Forever More: The Best of James Ingram, which included some of his biggest hits as well as new material
Worldwide acclaim has led to concert tours in the U.S. and abroad, where he continues to play before sold-out stadiums in The Philippines, Japan, Singapore, Dubai, Brunei, Indonesia and Hong Kong. Fans at home have been able to see Ingram perform live everywhere from Compton to The White House.
The blessings of success also have allowed Ingram to pursue two of his personal passions: humanitarian work and composition for live theater. In 1987, Ingram was hand-picked by Quincy Jones to perform in “We are the World,” the universal gift and legendary singing and fund-raising effort from the recording industry, which raised more than $100 million in aid for those suffering from famine in Africa. Ingram also continues to work with long-time collaborator, choreographer/producer Debbie Allen on a number of musical projects. Most recently, they partnered on Stand (In the Light) and several musical theater works including "Brothers of the Night, “The Legend” and “Alex in Wonderland."
Faith and family are Ingram’s main sources of inspiration, driving his industry achievements; legendary collaborations with revered mentors and peers; humanitarian work; and celebrated performances at some of the most-high-profile events of our time, including The Oscars, The Grammy Awards and The Super Bowl. The son of a Deacon, Ingram is one of six children and a self-taught musician, adept at piano, guitar, bass, drums and synthesizer. Today, he makes his home in Los Angeles with Debbie, his wife of 36 years, and their six children.
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