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Ella Ruth
Piggee
2001 INDUCTEE
Ella Ruth Piggee was a beautiful girl with a strange name, but it was
her smoky, belting Blues that made her a favorite lounge act. She was a song
temptress, an entertainer through and through, and she was just beginning to
hit it big when she passed away in 1988 from colon cancer. At the time, she
was living in San Diego, California, where she had just begun work with Fattburger.
Her golden throat, which she proudly modeled after Aretha Franklin,
was captured one last time on the band's 1987 release, Good News.
These are a few of the things Ella Ruth's brother, James Piggee, remembers.
Fellow classmate and eventual musical collaborator, George
Davis (IBHOF, 1999) also has quite a few memories. "She was part of
Success Records," Davis says, explaining that, back in the early 1960s,
a couple of KIOA disc jockeys formed a record label and agency for local
acts. "One of the first groups she sang with was The Martinels,"
Davis says. "She sang with Gail Ashby, the mother of one of the
girls in TLC. She did a lot more of the Bluesy stuff, kinda
raspy-voiced," Davis recalls. "One of my favorites was ‘Baby
Think It Over’."
Davis missed the years his longtime friend had participated
in The Blyn Tones and The Extensions. "I was drafted for
Vietnam," he says. "But when I got back, we sat down and had this
conversation. I'd asked her how long she thought she would stay in the
business? She said, 'Until I'm 45 or so.' We figured if we hadn't made it by
that time, it was probably time to look into something else." That was
about the time Ella Ruth died.
More inclined to play lounge acts solo or with another
pianist, Ella Ruth had long been singing before her older brother started
paying attention. "I was probably 21, 22, the first time I saw my baby
sister sing," James says. "I had to get up, go to the bathroom. I
had tears comin' outta my eyes. It was so beautiful."
Although Ella Ruth had always been involved in church and
school choirs, when she matured she became a prominent figure on Center
Street. "She liked playing the smaller clubs," Davis says, adding
that she favored the more refined side of Blues. "One song she really
liked to play and sing was an old song by Ray Charles, 'Drown in My
Tears'."
"Boy, she had IT," James adds.
Ella Ruth is survived by her brother James, mother Doris and
sister Arvene. Older brother Claude passed away three months ago.
- Sarah Hankel
As published in the Des Moines CityView · 1/16/2002
www.dmcityview.com
reprinted with permission
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