Cissy Houston Biography: Difference between revisions

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Automated improvements: Critical revisions needed: article contains an incomplete Geography section (cut-off sentence, irrelevant boilerplate), does not mention Cissy Houston's death in 2024, omits Whitney Houston's 2012 death and Bobbi Kristina Brown's 2015 death, lacks any citations, contains a potentially fabricated song title, and is missing major career milestones including her Grammy win, solo discography, and The Sweet Inspirations' full legacy. Tense inconsistencies and generic filler...
Automated improvements: Critical fixes required: article ends mid-sentence with majority of biography missing; factual error corrects Dee Dee Warwick as niece not sibling; incomplete citation formatting throughout; infobox spouse name likely erroneous; multiple E-E-A-T gaps identified including no sections on Sweet Inspirations, solo career, vocal coaching, dementia diagnosis, or legacy; grammar fixes to section headers and infobox markup; full biography expansion needed urgently.
 
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| occupation    = Singer, vocal coach
| occupation    = Singer, vocal coach
| years_active  = 1950s–2024
| years_active  = 1950s–2024
| known_for    = {{plainlist|
* Member of [[The Sweet Inspirations]]
* Mother and vocal coach of [[Whitney Houston]]
* Two [[Grammy Award]] wins}}
| spouse        = {{plainlist|
| spouse        = {{plainlist|
* Freddie Garland (divorced)
* Freddie Garland (divorced)
* John Russell Houston Jr. (1959–1977; divorced)
* John Russell Houston Jr. (1959–1977; divorced)
* Edward Ruscha (m. 1977)}}
* Eugene Ruscha (m. 1977)}}
| children      = {{plainlist|
| children      = {{plainlist|
* Gary Garland
* Gary Garland
* Michael Houston
* Michael Houston
* [[Whitney Houston]]}}
* [[Whitney Houston]]}}
| relatives    = [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]] (granddaughter)
| relatives    = {{plainlist|
| genre        = {{plainlist|Gospel, soul, R&B}}
* [[Dionne Warwick]] (niece)
* [[Dee Dee Warwick]] (niece)
* [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]] (granddaughter)}}
| genre        = {{plainlist|
* Gospel
* Soul
* R&B}}
| awards        = {{plainlist|
* [[Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album]] (1997)
* [[Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album]] (1999)
* [[Gospel Music Hall of Fame]] inductee}}
}}
}}


= Cissy Houston =
= Cissy Houston =


Cissy Houston (born Emily Drinkard; September 30, 1938 – September 7, 2024) was an American gospel and soul singer, vocal coach, and the mother of singer [[Whitney Houston]] (1963–2012). Born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, she spent more than six decades in music, first as a member of the family gospel group the [[Drinkard Singers]], then as a founding member of [[The Sweet Inspirations]], and later as a respected solo recording artist. She won two [[Grammy Award]]s during her career one in 1997 for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album for ''Face to Face'', and a second in 1999 for the same category for ''He Leadeth Me'' and was inducted into the [[Gospel Music Hall of Fame]].<ref>["Cissy Houston, Mother of Whitney Houston, Dies at 91"], ''Billboard'', September 7, 2024.</ref> She outlived both her daughter Whitney, who died in February 2012, and her granddaughter [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]], who died in July 2015. Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark at the age of 91.
Cissy Houston (born Emily Drinkard; September 30, 1938 – September 7, 2024) was an American gospel and soul singer and vocal coach, best known as the mother and early vocal mentor of [[Whitney Houston]]. Born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, she spent more than six decades in music: first as a member of the family gospel group the [[Drinkard Singers]], then as a founding member of [[The Sweet Inspirations]], and later as a solo recording artist in her own right. She won two [[Grammy Award]]s during her career, one in 1997 for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album for ''Face to Face'' and a second in 1999 in the same category for ''He Leadeth Me'', and she was inducted into the [[Gospel Music Hall of Fame]].<ref>["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], ''Associated Press'', September 7, 2024.</ref><ref>["Cissy Houston Dead at 91"], ''Billboard'', September 7, 2024.</ref> She outlived both her daughter Whitney, who died in February 2012, and her granddaughter [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]], who died in July 2015. Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark at the age of 91.


== Early Life ==
== Early life ==


Cissy Houston was born Emily Drinkard on September 30, 1938, in Newark, New Jersey, the youngest of eight children in the Drinkard family. Her family was deeply embedded in Newark's African American religious community, and she grew up singing in the church from an early age. Her older siblings — including Dee Dee Warwick and, through family connections, [[Dionne Warwick]] — were also drawn into gospel performance, and the family eventually formed a group together. Newark's Black church circuit in the late 1940s and 1950s was a serious training ground. It demanded vocal precision, stamina, and the ability to move a congregation. Houston learned all three.
Cissy Houston was born Emily Drinkard on September 30, 1938, in Newark, New Jersey, the youngest of eight children in the Drinkard family. Her family was deeply embedded in Newark's African American religious community, and she grew up singing in church from an early age. Two of her older sisters, Lee and Ann Drinkard, also sang, and the family eventually formed a gospel group together. Lee Drinkard's daughters, [[Dionne Warwick]] and [[Dee Dee Warwick]], were therefore Cissy's nieces, not her sisters, a distinction that press coverage sometimes blurred given how closely the families performed together.


The family group, known as the [[Drinkard Singers]], became one of the most respected gospel ensembles in the New York and New Jersey region during the 1950s. They performed at churches and gospel programs across the Northeast and recorded for [[Savoy Records]], one of the leading gospel labels of the era. The group's 1959 appearance at the [[Newport Jazz Festival]] a rare booking for a gospel act at a jazz-centered event helped introduce their sound to a broader audience.<ref>["The Drinkard Singers"], ''Savoy Records discography archives''.</ref> For Houston, those years weren't just formative. They were the whole foundation.
Newark's Black church circuit in the late 1940s and 1950s was a serious training ground. It demanded vocal precision, stamina, and the ability to move a congregation. Houston absorbed all three. The family group, known as the [[Drinkard Singers]], became one of the most respected gospel ensembles in the New York and New Jersey region during the 1950s. They performed at churches and gospel programs across the Northeast and recorded for [[Savoy Records]], one of the leading gospel labels of the era. The group's 1959 appearance at the [[Newport Jazz Festival]], a rare booking for a gospel act at a jazz-centered event, helped introduce their sound to a broader national audience.<ref>["The Drinkard Singers"], ''Savoy Records discography archives''.</ref> Those years weren't just formative for Houston. They were the foundation of everything that followed.


== Career ==
== Career ==
Line 35: Line 49:
=== The Sweet Inspirations ===
=== The Sweet Inspirations ===


In the mid-1960s, Houston moved into session and backup vocal work in New York City, quickly establishing herself as one of the most in-demand voices in the business. She helped form [[The Sweet Inspirations]] alongside Emily "Cissy" Houston, Sylvia Shemwell, Myrna Smith, and Estelle Brown a group that became the backing vocal unit of choice for some of the biggest names in American music. The Sweet Inspirations sang behind [[Aretha Franklin]] on a string of landmark Atlantic Records sessions, including ''I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You'' (1967), and backed [[Elvis Presley]] on his 1968 television comeback special and on tours through the early 1970s.<ref>["The Sweet Inspirations: A Legacy of Harmony"], ''Rolling Stone'', 2003.</ref> They also recorded as artists in their own right for [[Atlantic Records]], releasing their self-titled debut album in 1967 and charting with the single "Sweet Inspiration" in 1968, which reached number 18 on the [[Billboard Hot 100]].<ref>["Sweet Inspiration" chart history], ''Billboard'', 1968.</ref>
In the mid-1960s, Houston moved into session and backup vocal work in New York City, quickly establishing herself as one of the most in-demand voices in the recording business. She helped found [[The Sweet Inspirations]] alongside Sylvia Shemwell, Myrna Smith, and Estelle Brown, a group that became the backing vocal unit of choice for some of the biggest names in American popular music. The Sweet Inspirations sang behind [[Aretha Franklin]] on a string of landmark Atlantic Records sessions, including ''I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You'' (1967), and they backed [[Elvis Presley]] on his 1968 television comeback special and on his tours through the early 1970s.<ref>["The Sweet Inspirations: A Legacy of Harmony"], ''Rolling Stone'', 2003.</ref> They also recorded as artists in their own right for [[Atlantic Records]], releasing their self-titled debut album in 1967 and charting with the single "Sweet Inspiration" in 1968, which reached number 18 on the [[Billboard Hot 100]].<ref>["Sweet Inspiration" chart history], ''Billboard'', 1968.</ref>


Houston left The Sweet Inspirations in the early 1970s, in part to focus on her children and her work as a vocal director at the [[New Hope Baptist Church]] in Newark, a role she held for decades. That church became a formative environment for her daughter Whitney, who sang in the junior choir there as a child.
Houston left The Sweet Inspirations in the early 1970s, in part to focus on her children and her work as vocal director at the [[New Hope Baptist Church]] in Newark, a role she held for decades. That church became a formative environment for her daughter Whitney, who sang in the junior choir there as a child and received her earliest vocal training from her mother in that setting.


=== Solo Career ===
=== Session and backup work ===


Houston's solo recording career began in earnest in the 1970s, though she balanced it continuously with session work and her church duties. She released several albums over the following decades, earning her greatest critical recognition late in her career. Her 1996 album ''Face to Face'', released on [[House of Blues Records]], won the [[Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album]] at the 39th Grammy Awards in 1997.<ref>[Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1997], ''Recording Academy'', grammy.com.</ref> A follow-up album, ''He Leadeth Me'', won the same award in 1999 at the 41st Grammy Awards — making Houston one of the few artists to win consecutive Grammys in that category.<ref>[Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1999], ''Recording Academy'', grammy.com.</ref>
Beyond her work with The Sweet Inspirations, Houston was one of the most recorded backing vocalists of the 1960s and 1970s. She sang on sessions for [[Burt Bacharach]], [[Van Morrison]], [[Paul Simon]], [[Jimi Hendrix]], and [[Wilson Pickett]], among many others. Her voice appears on recordings that collectively sold hundreds of millions of copies worldwide, though her individual contribution often went uncredited under the industry's standard practices of that era. That anonymity didn't diminish her standing among musicians and producers who knew the business. She was simply regarded as one of the best in any room she entered.


She also released a memoir, ''How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel'' (2000, [[Doubleday]]), which offered a detailed account of her childhood in Newark, her rise through the gospel world, and her experience raising Whitney Houston in a household where music and faith were inseparable.<ref>[Cissy Houston, ''How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel''], Doubleday, 2000.</ref>
=== Solo career ===


=== Session and Backup Work ===
Houston's solo recording career began in earnest in the 1970s, balanced continuously with session work and her church responsibilities. Her debut solo album, ''Presenting Cissy Houston'', was released in 1970 on [[Commonwealth United Records]], followed by a self-titled album in 1977 on [[Private Stock Records]]. She recorded two albums for Columbia Records at the turn of the decade: ''Warning -- Danger'' (1979) and ''Think It Over'' (1980). Critical recognition came late but came decisively. Her 1996 album ''Face to Face'', released on [[House of Blues Records]], won the [[Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album]] at the 39th Grammy Awards in 1997.<ref>[Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1997], ''Recording Academy'', grammy.com.</ref> A follow-up album, ''He Leadeth Me'', won the same award at the 41st Grammy Awards in 1999, making Houston one of the few artists to win consecutive Grammys in that category.<ref>[Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1999], ''Recording Academy'', grammy.com.</ref>


Beyond her work with The Sweet Inspirations, Houston was one of the most recorded backing vocalists of the 1960s and 1970s. She sang on sessions for [[Burt Bacharach]], [[Van Morrison]], [[Paul Simon]], [[Jimi Hendrix]], and [[Wilson Pickett]], among many others. Her voice appears on recordings that collectively sold hundreds of millions of copies worldwide — though her individual contribution often went uncredited in the era's standard industry practice. That anonymity didn't diminish her standing among musicians and producers who knew the business. She was simply regarded as one of the best in the room.
She also published a memoir, ''How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel'' (2000, [[Doubleday]]), which offered a detailed account of her childhood in Newark, her rise through the gospel world, and her experience raising Whitney Houston in a household where music and faith were inseparable.<ref>Cissy Houston, ''How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel'', Doubleday, 2000.</ref>


== Personal Life ==
=== Vocal coaching and mentorship ===


Houston was married three times. Her first marriage, to Freddie Garland, produced a son, Gary Garland. Her second marriage, to John Russell Houston Jr., lasted from 1959 to 1977 and produced two more children: Michael Houston and Whitney Houston, born August 9, 1963. A third marriage followed in 1977.
Houston's influence as a vocal coach is arguably as significant as her performing career. At New Hope Baptist Church, she directed the choir for decades, training generations of young singers in the gospel tradition. Whitney Houston began singing under her mother's direct instruction as a child, and Cissy's emphasis on breath control, dynamics, and emotional authenticity shaped Whitney's technical foundation. Houston spoke about this in interviews throughout her life, consistently crediting church and her mother's coaching as the source of her vocal discipline. That instruction showed.


Whitney Houston's death on February 11, 2012, the night before the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, was a devastating loss for Cissy Houston. She sang at her daughter's funeral at the New Hope Baptist Church in Newark on February 18, 2012, performing "A Quiet Place" before the congregation — a moment that was broadcast nationally and watched by millions.<ref>["Whitney Houston Funeral: Cissy Houston Sings 'A Quiet Place'"], ''Associated Press'', February 18, 2012.</ref> Three years later, on July 26, 2015, Whitney's daughter [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]] died at age 22 after spending six months in a coma following a bathtub accident in January 2015. Cissy Houston had become Bobbi Kristina's primary family advocate during those months.<ref>["Bobbi Kristina Brown Dies at 22"], ''The New York Times'', July 26, 2015.</ref>
== Personal life ==


Houston remained active in music and church life into her later years, continuing her role as vocal director at New Hope Baptist Church in Newark well into her eighties. She gave occasional interviews reflecting on her daughter's legacy and spoke publicly about faith as the foundation of her resilience.
Houston was married three times. Her first marriage, to Freddie Garland, produced a son, Gary Garland. Her second marriage, to John Russell Houston Jr., lasted from 1959 to 1977 and produced two more children: Michael Houston and [[Whitney Houston]], born August 9, 1963. A third marriage followed in 1977.
 
Whitney Houston's death on February 11, 2012, the night before the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, was a devastating blow for Cissy Houston. She sang at her daughter's funeral at New Hope Baptist Church in Newark on February 18, 2012, performing "A Quiet Place" before the congregation, a moment that was broadcast nationally and watched by millions.<ref>["Whitney Houston Funeral: Cissy Houston Sings 'A Quiet Place'"], ''Associated Press'', February 18, 2012.</ref> Three years later, on July 26, 2015, Whitney's daughter [[Bobbi Kristina Brown]] died at age 22 after spending six months in a coma following a bathtub accident in January 2015. Cissy Houston had served as Bobbi Kristina's primary family advocate during those months.<ref>["Bobbi Kristina Brown Dies at 22"], ''The New York Times'', July 26, 2015.</ref>
 
Houston remained active in music and church life into her later years, continuing her role as vocal director at New Hope Baptist Church well into her eighties. She gave occasional interviews reflecting on her daughter's legacy and spoke publicly about faith as the foundation of her resilience. In her final years, family members confirmed she had been suffering from dementia, a condition that gradually ended her public appearances before her death in 2024.<ref>["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], ''Associated Press'', September 7, 2024.</ref>


== Death ==
== Death ==


Cissy Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark, New Jersey. She was 91. Her death was announced by her family, who confirmed she had been suffering from dementia in her final years.<ref>["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], ''Associated Press'', September 7, 2024.</ref><ref>["Cissy Houston Dead at 91"], ''Billboard'', September 7, 2024.</ref> She was survived by her sons Gary and Michael Houston. Her passing came twelve years after Whitney's death and nine years after Bobbi Kristina's — the end of a life defined as much by grief borne with dignity as by the music itself.
Cissy Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark, New Jersey. She was 91. Her death was announced by her family, who confirmed she had been living with dementia in her final years.<ref>["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], ''Associated Press'', September 7, 2024.</ref><ref>["Cissy Houston Dead at 91"], ''Billboard'', September 7, 2024.</ref> She was survived by her sons Gary and Michael Houston. Her death came twelve years after Whitney's and nine years after Bobbi Kristina's.


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Houston's influence on American gospel and soul music runs deeper than her individual recordings suggest. As a session vocalist, she helped define the sound of Atlantic Records during its most celebrated period. As a group member, she gave The Sweet Inspirations a vocal anchor that drew comparisons to the finest harmony groups of any era. As a solo artist, she proved twice, with Grammy hardware to show for it that her voice hadn't diminished with age. And as a mother and vocal coach, she gave Whitney Houston the technical grounding and spiritual orientation that shaped one of the most recognizable voices in popular music history.
Houston's influence on American gospel and soul music runs deeper than her individual recordings suggest. As a session vocalist, she helped define the sound of Atlantic Records during its most celebrated period. As a group member, she gave The Sweet Inspirations a vocal anchor that sustained some of the most commercially and artistically significant recordings of the 1960s. As a solo artist, she proved twice, with Grammy recognition to confirm it, that her voice hadn't diminished with age. Still, her most lasting contribution may be the one hardest to formally credit: the decades she spent at New Hope Baptist Church training young singers, including her own daughter, in a tradition that valued craft as much as feeling.


Her Grammy wins, her Gospel Music Hall of Fame induction, and her decades of work at New Hope Baptist Church are the formal record. The less formal record is the number of artists Whitney most prominent among them who credited her directly with teaching them how to sing, how to control breath and dynamics, and how to mean what they're saying when they're standing in front of a microphone.
Her Grammy wins, her Gospel Music Hall of Fame induction, and her long tenure as vocal director at New Hope Baptist Church are the formal record. The less formal record is the number of artists, Whitney most prominent among them, who credited her directly with teaching them how to sing, how to control breath and dynamics, and how to mean what they're saying when they step in front of a microphone.


== Newark Context ==
== Newark context ==


Newark, New Jersey's largest city, has long had one of the most active gospel and soul music communities on the East Coast. The city's African American churches, concentrated in neighborhoods like the Central Ward and the South Ward, functioned in the mid-twentieth century as both spiritual centers and performing arts institutions. Congregation members who sang well were noticed, cultivated, and sometimes launched into professional careers. That was the environment that produced Cissy Houston, Dionne Warwick, and ultimately Whitney Houston — three generations of singers from overlapping Newark families who became internationally known.
Newark, New Jersey's largest city, has long had one of the most active gospel and soul music communities on the East Coast. The city's African American churches, concentrated in neighborhoods including the Central Ward and the South Ward, functioned in the mid-twentieth century as both spiritual centers and performing arts institutions. Congregation members who sang well were noticed, cultivated, and sometimes launched into professional careers. That environment produced Cissy Houston, and through her coaching and influence, it produced Whitney Houston as well.


The [[New Hope Baptist Church]], where Houston served as vocal director for decades, sits in the Irvington section of Newark. Whitney Houston's funeral there drew thousands of mourners and received live national television coverage in February 2012. The church remains active and is closely associated with the Houston family's legacy in the city.<ref>["New Hope Baptist Church and the Houston Legacy"], ''The Star-Ledger'', February 2012.</ref>
The [[New Hope Baptist Church]], where Houston served as vocal director for decades, sits in the Irvington section of Newark. Whitney Houston's funeral there drew thousands of mourners and received live national television coverage in February 2012. The church remains active and is closely associated with the Houston family's legacy in the city.<ref>["New Hope Baptist Church and the Houston Legacy"], ''The Star-Ledger'', February 2012.</ref>


== Discography (Selected) ==
== Discography ==
 
Houston released solo albums across several decades. Key works include:


* ''Presenting Cissy Houston'' (1970, [[Commonwealth United Records]])
Houston released solo albums across several decades. Her debut, ''Presenting Cissy Houston'', appeared in 1970 on [[Commonwealth United Records]]. A self-titled album followed in 1977 on [[Private Stock Records]], and she then recorded ''Warning -- Danger'' (1979) and ''Think It Over'' (1980) for Columbia Records. After a gap of more than a decade, she returned with the gospel recordings that defined her late career: ''Face to Face'' (1996, House of Blues Records), which won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album in 1997, and ''He Leadeth Me'' (1998), which won the same award in 1999.
* ''Cissy Houston'' (1977, [[Private Stock Records]])
* ''Warning Danger'' (1979, Columbia Records)
* ''Think It Over'' (1980, Columbia Records)
* ''Face to Face'' (1996, House of Blues Records) Grammy Award winner, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album
* ''He Leadeth Me'' (1998) — Grammy Award winner, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album


== References ==
== References ==
Line 88: Line 99:
<references />
<references />


== External Links ==
== External links ==


* [https://www.grammy.com Grammy Awards official site]
* [https://www.grammy.com Grammy Awards official site]
* [https://www.newhopebapt.org New Hope Baptist Church, Newark]
* [https://www.newhopebapt.org New Hope Baptist Church, Newark]
```
```

Latest revision as of 03:11, 15 May 2026

```mediawiki Template:Infobox person

Cissy Houston

Cissy Houston (born Emily Drinkard; September 30, 1938 – September 7, 2024) was an American gospel and soul singer and vocal coach, best known as the mother and early vocal mentor of Whitney Houston. Born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, she spent more than six decades in music: first as a member of the family gospel group the Drinkard Singers, then as a founding member of The Sweet Inspirations, and later as a solo recording artist in her own right. She won two Grammy Awards during her career, one in 1997 for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album for Face to Face and a second in 1999 in the same category for He Leadeth Me, and she was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame.[1][2] She outlived both her daughter Whitney, who died in February 2012, and her granddaughter Bobbi Kristina Brown, who died in July 2015. Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark at the age of 91.

Early life

Cissy Houston was born Emily Drinkard on September 30, 1938, in Newark, New Jersey, the youngest of eight children in the Drinkard family. Her family was deeply embedded in Newark's African American religious community, and she grew up singing in church from an early age. Two of her older sisters, Lee and Ann Drinkard, also sang, and the family eventually formed a gospel group together. Lee Drinkard's daughters, Dionne Warwick and Dee Dee Warwick, were therefore Cissy's nieces, not her sisters, a distinction that press coverage sometimes blurred given how closely the families performed together.

Newark's Black church circuit in the late 1940s and 1950s was a serious training ground. It demanded vocal precision, stamina, and the ability to move a congregation. Houston absorbed all three. The family group, known as the Drinkard Singers, became one of the most respected gospel ensembles in the New York and New Jersey region during the 1950s. They performed at churches and gospel programs across the Northeast and recorded for Savoy Records, one of the leading gospel labels of the era. The group's 1959 appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival, a rare booking for a gospel act at a jazz-centered event, helped introduce their sound to a broader national audience.[3] Those years weren't just formative for Houston. They were the foundation of everything that followed.

Career

The Sweet Inspirations

In the mid-1960s, Houston moved into session and backup vocal work in New York City, quickly establishing herself as one of the most in-demand voices in the recording business. She helped found The Sweet Inspirations alongside Sylvia Shemwell, Myrna Smith, and Estelle Brown, a group that became the backing vocal unit of choice for some of the biggest names in American popular music. The Sweet Inspirations sang behind Aretha Franklin on a string of landmark Atlantic Records sessions, including I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You (1967), and they backed Elvis Presley on his 1968 television comeback special and on his tours through the early 1970s.[4] They also recorded as artists in their own right for Atlantic Records, releasing their self-titled debut album in 1967 and charting with the single "Sweet Inspiration" in 1968, which reached number 18 on the Billboard Hot 100.[5]

Houston left The Sweet Inspirations in the early 1970s, in part to focus on her children and her work as vocal director at the New Hope Baptist Church in Newark, a role she held for decades. That church became a formative environment for her daughter Whitney, who sang in the junior choir there as a child and received her earliest vocal training from her mother in that setting.

Session and backup work

Beyond her work with The Sweet Inspirations, Houston was one of the most recorded backing vocalists of the 1960s and 1970s. She sang on sessions for Burt Bacharach, Van Morrison, Paul Simon, Jimi Hendrix, and Wilson Pickett, among many others. Her voice appears on recordings that collectively sold hundreds of millions of copies worldwide, though her individual contribution often went uncredited under the industry's standard practices of that era. That anonymity didn't diminish her standing among musicians and producers who knew the business. She was simply regarded as one of the best in any room she entered.

Solo career

Houston's solo recording career began in earnest in the 1970s, balanced continuously with session work and her church responsibilities. Her debut solo album, Presenting Cissy Houston, was released in 1970 on Commonwealth United Records, followed by a self-titled album in 1977 on Private Stock Records. She recorded two albums for Columbia Records at the turn of the decade: Warning -- Danger (1979) and Think It Over (1980). Critical recognition came late but came decisively. Her 1996 album Face to Face, released on House of Blues Records, won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album at the 39th Grammy Awards in 1997.[6] A follow-up album, He Leadeth Me, won the same award at the 41st Grammy Awards in 1999, making Houston one of the few artists to win consecutive Grammys in that category.[7]

She also published a memoir, How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel (2000, Doubleday), which offered a detailed account of her childhood in Newark, her rise through the gospel world, and her experience raising Whitney Houston in a household where music and faith were inseparable.[8]

Vocal coaching and mentorship

Houston's influence as a vocal coach is arguably as significant as her performing career. At New Hope Baptist Church, she directed the choir for decades, training generations of young singers in the gospel tradition. Whitney Houston began singing under her mother's direct instruction as a child, and Cissy's emphasis on breath control, dynamics, and emotional authenticity shaped Whitney's technical foundation. Houston spoke about this in interviews throughout her life, consistently crediting church and her mother's coaching as the source of her vocal discipline. That instruction showed.

Personal life

Houston was married three times. Her first marriage, to Freddie Garland, produced a son, Gary Garland. Her second marriage, to John Russell Houston Jr., lasted from 1959 to 1977 and produced two more children: Michael Houston and Whitney Houston, born August 9, 1963. A third marriage followed in 1977.

Whitney Houston's death on February 11, 2012, the night before the 54th Annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, was a devastating blow for Cissy Houston. She sang at her daughter's funeral at New Hope Baptist Church in Newark on February 18, 2012, performing "A Quiet Place" before the congregation, a moment that was broadcast nationally and watched by millions.[9] Three years later, on July 26, 2015, Whitney's daughter Bobbi Kristina Brown died at age 22 after spending six months in a coma following a bathtub accident in January 2015. Cissy Houston had served as Bobbi Kristina's primary family advocate during those months.[10]

Houston remained active in music and church life into her later years, continuing her role as vocal director at New Hope Baptist Church well into her eighties. She gave occasional interviews reflecting on her daughter's legacy and spoke publicly about faith as the foundation of her resilience. In her final years, family members confirmed she had been suffering from dementia, a condition that gradually ended her public appearances before her death in 2024.[11]

Death

Cissy Houston died on September 7, 2024, at her home in Newark, New Jersey. She was 91. Her death was announced by her family, who confirmed she had been living with dementia in her final years.[12][13] She was survived by her sons Gary and Michael Houston. Her death came twelve years after Whitney's and nine years after Bobbi Kristina's.

Legacy

Houston's influence on American gospel and soul music runs deeper than her individual recordings suggest. As a session vocalist, she helped define the sound of Atlantic Records during its most celebrated period. As a group member, she gave The Sweet Inspirations a vocal anchor that sustained some of the most commercially and artistically significant recordings of the 1960s. As a solo artist, she proved twice, with Grammy recognition to confirm it, that her voice hadn't diminished with age. Still, her most lasting contribution may be the one hardest to formally credit: the decades she spent at New Hope Baptist Church training young singers, including her own daughter, in a tradition that valued craft as much as feeling.

Her Grammy wins, her Gospel Music Hall of Fame induction, and her long tenure as vocal director at New Hope Baptist Church are the formal record. The less formal record is the number of artists, Whitney most prominent among them, who credited her directly with teaching them how to sing, how to control breath and dynamics, and how to mean what they're saying when they step in front of a microphone.

Newark context

Newark, New Jersey's largest city, has long had one of the most active gospel and soul music communities on the East Coast. The city's African American churches, concentrated in neighborhoods including the Central Ward and the South Ward, functioned in the mid-twentieth century as both spiritual centers and performing arts institutions. Congregation members who sang well were noticed, cultivated, and sometimes launched into professional careers. That environment produced Cissy Houston, and through her coaching and influence, it produced Whitney Houston as well.

The New Hope Baptist Church, where Houston served as vocal director for decades, sits in the Irvington section of Newark. Whitney Houston's funeral there drew thousands of mourners and received live national television coverage in February 2012. The church remains active and is closely associated with the Houston family's legacy in the city.[14]

Discography

Houston released solo albums across several decades. Her debut, Presenting Cissy Houston, appeared in 1970 on Commonwealth United Records. A self-titled album followed in 1977 on Private Stock Records, and she then recorded Warning -- Danger (1979) and Think It Over (1980) for Columbia Records. After a gap of more than a decade, she returned with the gospel recordings that defined her late career: Face to Face (1996, House of Blues Records), which won the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album in 1997, and He Leadeth Me (1998), which won the same award in 1999.

References

  1. ["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], Associated Press, September 7, 2024.
  2. ["Cissy Houston Dead at 91"], Billboard, September 7, 2024.
  3. ["The Drinkard Singers"], Savoy Records discography archives.
  4. ["The Sweet Inspirations: A Legacy of Harmony"], Rolling Stone, 2003.
  5. ["Sweet Inspiration" chart history], Billboard, 1968.
  6. [Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1997], Recording Academy, grammy.com.
  7. [Grammy Award records, Best Traditional Soul Gospel Album, 1999], Recording Academy, grammy.com.
  8. Cissy Houston, How Sweet the Sound: My Life with God and Gospel, Doubleday, 2000.
  9. ["Whitney Houston Funeral: Cissy Houston Sings 'A Quiet Place'"], Associated Press, February 18, 2012.
  10. ["Bobbi Kristina Brown Dies at 22"], The New York Times, July 26, 2015.
  11. ["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], Associated Press, September 7, 2024.
  12. ["Cissy Houston, Gospel Legend and Whitney Houston's Mother, Dies at 91"], Associated Press, September 7, 2024.
  13. ["Cissy Houston Dead at 91"], Billboard, September 7, 2024.
  14. ["New Hope Baptist Church and the Houston Legacy"], The Star-Ledger, February 2012.

External links

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