Last updated: 10 hours ago
Florence Glenda Ballard was born in Rosetta, MS, June 30, 1943, the ninth of 15 siblings. The family moved to Detroit before she turned ten to take advantage of the city's booming job market. Ballard took music classes, sang in her school's choir, and built a reputation as a talented singer in her neighborhood. At 14, she befriended the Primes (Paul Williams, <a href="spotify:artist:2Uuon75BhnuuxdKLYn4wHn">Eddie Kendricks</a>, and Kell Osborne) and performed a few gigs with the smooth, silky trio at Detroit venues. The Primes' manager, Milton Jenkins, encouraged Ballard to form a sister group to the Primes, so she chose <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Mary Wilson</a>, Betty McGlown, and <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Diane Earle</a> (<a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Diana Ross</a>). All sang lead, but McGlown left early and was replaced by Barbara Martin. <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Wilson</a> had the lowest voice; Ballard, the most demonstrative; and <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Earle</a>, the highest with a razor edge.
<a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">The Primettes</a> played hops, talent shows, and house parties for fun and experience. They tried to get a deal with <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry Gordy</a>'s <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> before they graduated from high school, only to be told to try again after they finished; they cut a one-off record for the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Lupine+%22">Lupine </a>label, did backing sessions for <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Lupine%22">Lupine</a>-affiliated labels, and were present during occasional sessions for <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a>. Their single, "Tears of Sorrow" b/w "Pretty Baby," didn't leave make much of an impression but displayed compelling harmonies and fascinating leads. Around the time of its release, Ballard was sexually assaulted by future professional basketball star Reggie Harding. This greatly altered the singer's outlook and behavior.
<a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a> signed <a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">the Primettes</a> the second time around in 1961. After a renaming to <a href="spotify:artist:57bUPid8xztkieZfS7OlEV">the Supremes</a> (<a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a> didn't like <a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">the Primettes</a>), they cut their first single on <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Tamla%22">Tamla</a>; parental pressures forced Martin to quit shortly thereafter and "I Want a Guy" flopped. Soon, the producers zeroed in on <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Earle</a> and rarely wrote anything for <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Wilson</a> or Ballard. After a series of flops, number one smashes became automatic. The pace was frantic and <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> muddied the water by pushing <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Wilson</a> and Ballard out of the limelight to spotlight <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Ross</a>.
Ballard didn't take the snub well. The breaker came when she tired of the relentless pace and started missing gigs. By 1967, Cindy Birdsong (formerly with <a href="spotify:artist:6jC3we42hI3esAWszUkf6r">Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles</a>) had replaced her as a member of <a href="spotify:artist:57bUPid8xztkieZfS7OlEV">the Supremes</a>. Lawsuits ensued. The money Ballard thought was sitting in a bank turned out to be a pittance. She married Thomas Chapman, a former <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> chauffeur, in 1968, and through various connections inked a deal with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC-Paramount%22">ABC-Paramount</a>.
<a href="spotify:artist:4E8q8KOAvuzuVSFKnfYAAk">George Kerr</a> produced her first single, "It Doesn't Matter How I Say It" (1968), but radio play was almost nonexistent. She completed an album, ...You Don't Have To, that <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC%22">ABC</a> left for dead. Despite gigs opening for <a href="spotify:artist:0N5PyKJzS3M1XNlaCL7bbE">Wilson Pickett</a>, some television appearances, performing with <a href="spotify:artist:4JeqRr8Upw5uxLEu6jgIRm">Bill Cosby</a>, and singing at <a href="spotify:artist:7KI1T9XOYVy58azadqHuZw">President Nixon</a>'s inauguration party, Ballard experienced no commercial success. <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC%22">ABC</a> released "Love Ain't Love" in the fall of 1968 but let it languish. The label had soured on Ballard, some say because of Chapman's constant demands, and didn't extend her contract. She never got another record deal.
Within a few years, Ballard's personal and financial conditions went from bad to abject. She moved into public housing, and Chapman -- with whom she had three children -- left the family. After receiving an insurance settlement in 1975, she cleaned up her situation and made another go at recapturing stardom. An appearance at Detroit's Ford Auditorium gave her a needed boost. She reconciled with Chapman, purchased a new house, and did television. But the melancholy years, fueled by chemicals and alcohol, weakened her system and caused a fatal cardiac arrest on February 22, 1976. She was 32 years old.
In 2001, the U.K.-based <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Spectrum%22">Spectrum</a> label released The Supreme Florence Ballard, a compilation featuring her released and previously unreleased solo recordings. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi
<a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">The Primettes</a> played hops, talent shows, and house parties for fun and experience. They tried to get a deal with <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Berry Gordy</a>'s <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> before they graduated from high school, only to be told to try again after they finished; they cut a one-off record for the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Lupine+%22">Lupine </a>label, did backing sessions for <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Lupine%22">Lupine</a>-affiliated labels, and were present during occasional sessions for <a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a>. Their single, "Tears of Sorrow" b/w "Pretty Baby," didn't leave make much of an impression but displayed compelling harmonies and fascinating leads. Around the time of its release, Ballard was sexually assaulted by future professional basketball star Reggie Harding. This greatly altered the singer's outlook and behavior.
<a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a> signed <a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">the Primettes</a> the second time around in 1961. After a renaming to <a href="spotify:artist:57bUPid8xztkieZfS7OlEV">the Supremes</a> (<a href="spotify:artist:4xRLKAf96K6YdGDWjY6ra8">Gordy</a> didn't like <a href="spotify:artist:3IMn1K32JunlYBqi5URp9v">the Primettes</a>), they cut their first single on <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Tamla%22">Tamla</a>; parental pressures forced Martin to quit shortly thereafter and "I Want a Guy" flopped. Soon, the producers zeroed in on <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Earle</a> and rarely wrote anything for <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Wilson</a> or Ballard. After a series of flops, number one smashes became automatic. The pace was frantic and <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> muddied the water by pushing <a href="spotify:artist:0sVBrfbxArs1HzXhay1gem">Wilson</a> and Ballard out of the limelight to spotlight <a href="spotify:artist:3MdG05syQeRYPPcClLaUGl">Ross</a>.
Ballard didn't take the snub well. The breaker came when she tired of the relentless pace and started missing gigs. By 1967, Cindy Birdsong (formerly with <a href="spotify:artist:6jC3we42hI3esAWszUkf6r">Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles</a>) had replaced her as a member of <a href="spotify:artist:57bUPid8xztkieZfS7OlEV">the Supremes</a>. Lawsuits ensued. The money Ballard thought was sitting in a bank turned out to be a pittance. She married Thomas Chapman, a former <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Motown%22">Motown</a> chauffeur, in 1968, and through various connections inked a deal with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC-Paramount%22">ABC-Paramount</a>.
<a href="spotify:artist:4E8q8KOAvuzuVSFKnfYAAk">George Kerr</a> produced her first single, "It Doesn't Matter How I Say It" (1968), but radio play was almost nonexistent. She completed an album, ...You Don't Have To, that <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC%22">ABC</a> left for dead. Despite gigs opening for <a href="spotify:artist:0N5PyKJzS3M1XNlaCL7bbE">Wilson Pickett</a>, some television appearances, performing with <a href="spotify:artist:4JeqRr8Upw5uxLEu6jgIRm">Bill Cosby</a>, and singing at <a href="spotify:artist:7KI1T9XOYVy58azadqHuZw">President Nixon</a>'s inauguration party, Ballard experienced no commercial success. <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22ABC%22">ABC</a> released "Love Ain't Love" in the fall of 1968 but let it languish. The label had soured on Ballard, some say because of Chapman's constant demands, and didn't extend her contract. She never got another record deal.
Within a few years, Ballard's personal and financial conditions went from bad to abject. She moved into public housing, and Chapman -- with whom she had three children -- left the family. After receiving an insurance settlement in 1975, she cleaned up her situation and made another go at recapturing stardom. An appearance at Detroit's Ford Auditorium gave her a needed boost. She reconciled with Chapman, purchased a new house, and did television. But the melancholy years, fueled by chemicals and alcohol, weakened her system and caused a fatal cardiac arrest on February 22, 1976. She was 32 years old.
In 2001, the U.K.-based <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Spectrum%22">Spectrum</a> label released The Supreme Florence Ballard, a compilation featuring her released and previously unreleased solo recordings. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi
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