Jessica Cleaves

Jessica Marguerite Cleaves (December 10, 1948 – May 2, 2014) was an American singer and songwriter. Cleaves was a lead singer of The Friends of Distinction; Earth, Wind & Fire; Parliament Funkadelic; and Raw Silk.[1][2]

Jessica Cleaves
Born(1948-12-10)December 10, 1948
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedMay 2, 2014(2014-05-02) (aged 65)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
GenresR&B, pop, soul, funk
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
Associated actsThe Friends of Distinction; Earth, Wind & Fire; George Clinton; Parliament-Funkadelic; Raw Silk
Websitejessicacleaves.com

Early life

Jessica Cleaves was born to Mary Gladys Cleaves (née Wilkerson), a librarian, and Lane C. Cleaves II, a US Postal employee. Cleaves' paternal grandfather, Lane C. Cleaves Sr., was Presiding Bishop over Phillips Temple, CME.[3] Cleaves went on to attend The University of California, Los Angeles. One of her classmates was the famed songwriter Skip Scarborough.[4]

Career

The Friends of Distinction was founded by Harry Elston and Floyd Butler, and beside Cleaves, it included Barbara Jean Love (plus Charlene Gibson, who replaced Love during her pregnancy).

During 1971, Cleaves became a member of the band Earth, Wind & Fire. She went on to appear on EWF's 1972 LP Last Days and Time and 1973 album Head to the Sky. Cleaves later moved to Detroit where she joined forces with George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic. Cleaves went on to appear on Funkadelic's 1976 album Tales of Kidd Funkadelic and 1979 LP Uncle Jam Wants You. She also sang on Parliament's 1979 album Gloryhallastoopid, 1980 LP Trombipulation and Funkadelic's 1981 album The Electric Spanking of War Babies.[5][6] Cleaves later appeared on George Clinton's 1983 album Computer Games, his 1986 LP R&B Skeletons in the Closet and the P Funk All Stars' 1995 album Dope Dogs.[7]

Personal life

Cleaves died in Los Angeles, California, aged 65, following complications from a stroke.[7] Her godson, director Armand Araujo, began filming Jessica Cleaves, My Friends of Distinction at the time of her passing.[7]

gollark: Often you can replace any explicit pattern matching with the combinators for Option/Result.
gollark: It's annoying that so few languages seem to be aware of ADTs despite them being in Haskell since 1998 and presumably others before then.
gollark: Never done macros.
gollark: I use `anyhow`, which allows me to magically store pretty much any error and add context to it and stuff, without having to have verbose conversion code.
gollark: This is because everything about it can fail at any time.

References

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