Mary Jane Hooper
Wikimp3 information about the music of Mary Jane Hooper. On our website we have 5 albums and 11 collections of artist Mary Jane Hooper. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Mary Jane Hooper represents Hip Hop/R&B genres.
Biography
[Edit]New Orleans funk diva Mary Jane Hooper remains one of the most shadowy figures in Crescent City soul history. Famed for her collaboration with legendary producer Eddie Bo, many believe she is simply an alias employed by singer Inez Cheatham, although Bo himself disputes such assertions. Hooper is in fact the stage name of one Sena Fletcher, who began her career singing gospel before crossing over to secular R&B backing Lee Dorsey. Upon signing to Bo's Scram label in 1966, Hooper issued her debut single, "Don't Change Nothin'." She eventually moved to Bo's Power label, where in 1968 she cut her best-known single, "That's How Strong My Love Is," later licensed for national release by World Pacific. "I've Got Reasons" followed later that year on Bo's renamed Power Pac imprint, but after the release of the two-part "I've Got What You Need" (justly famed for drummer James Black's monster groove), Hooper effectively disappeared. Her vocal similarities to Cheatham (another Eddie Bo protégée) prompted many funk collectors to assume the two singers were one and the same, further muddying the waters of her history and recorded output.
Title: Psychedelphia (Rare and unreleased New Orleans funk 1968-1969)
Artist: Mary Jane Hooper
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul
Collections
Title: The Best of Scram
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Jazz
Title: I'M A Good Woman 2 (CD2)
Title: I'M A Good Woman 3
Title: Ghetto Funk Sessions
Genre: Funk
Title: The Sound Of Funk, Volume 2 (Remastered)
Genre: Funk
Title: Funk 45 Sessions (CD2)