Brenda Holloway
Brenda Holloway (born June 21, 1946 in Atascadero, California, United States) is an American singer and songwriter, a recording artist for the Motown label during the 1960s. Her best-known recordings are the soul hits, "Every Little Bit Hurts" and "You've Made Me So Very Happy." The latter was later widely popularized when it became a Top Ten hit for Blood, Sweat & Tears.
Born in Atascadero, California, the eldest of three children to Wade and Johnnie Mae (Fossett) Holloway. In 1948, she and her infant brother, Wade, Jr., moved with their parents to the Watts section of Los Angeles where Brenda took up violin and sang in her church choir. Her sister, Patrice, was born there three years later. At 14, she and sister Patrice began working on demonstration records and singing backup for Los Angeles-based R&B acts. In 1962, Holloway made her recording debut with the single,  "Hey Fool". Two years later, she recorded the song that she would later  be known for in the coming decades, "Every Little Bit Hurts".
After being overheard singing Mary Wells' "My Guy", Motown CEO Berry Gordy  signed her to the label's Tamla imprint. For her first single, she was  required to re-record "Every Little Bit Hurts," much to the budding  singer-songwriter's chagrin. Released in May 1964, "Every Little Bit  Hurts" became a hit for Holloway, reaching #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 and helping to win the singer a concert spot on Dick Clark's  "Caravan of Stars" tour. Holloway followed "Every Little Bit Hurts"  with the more modest "I Will Always Love You", before hitting the Top 40  again with the #25 pop hit, "When I'm Gone" (written and produced by Smokey Robinson) and released shortly after Mary Wells' Motown contract expired; Wells had recorded "When I'm Gone" before Holloway.
After the success of "When I'm Gone," Motown provided Holloway with  other songs that were originally recorded by Wells, including "Operator" and "I'll Be Available". Holloway became a fixture on several 1960s television programs including Shindig!, and was later asked by The Beatles to open for them on their US tour in 1965. Holloway performed in the first rock stadium concert at Shea Stadium  for the Beatles as their opening act. Holloway was only one of three  female acts who opened for the Beatles; the other two were Mary Wells  and Jackie DeShannon.  Despite her modest success, Holloway felt out of place at Motown. Being  the first West Coast-based artist on the label, she also was one of the  few female artists in Motown to write her own songs, and had a much  grittier approach to songs than her contemporaries at the label. Between  1966 and early 1968, Holloway recorded a string of singles that were to  be put on her second album, Hurtin' & Cryin', which was never officially released. Its first single was "Just Look What You've Done", which hit the Top 30 on the R&B chart. Its follow-up was "You've Made Me So Very Happy",  was one of the few singles written by Holloway allowed to be released.  The single peaked at number 39 on the pop chart and number 40 on the  R&B chart. Holloway left Motown in 1968. A year later, Holloway  received royalties for "You've Made Me So Very Happy" when Blood, Sweat & Tears took it to number 2 on the US pop chart and the Top 40 in the UK Singles chart. One year later, Holloway retired from performing.
Holloway married a pastor and left the music industry  to become a housewife. During this period, she occasionally sang with  her sister Patrice. In 1980, Holloway briefly emerged from retirement to  record a gospel album. After Holloway and her husband were divorced,  she returned to performing secular music in 1988, recording for the UK  label Motorcity Records, which often released material of former Motown artists. In 1990 Holloway issued the album All It Takes.  After the 1992 death of her friend Mary Wells, Holloway again emerged  from retirement and resumed performing and recording. Her most recent  album, My Love is Your Love, was released in 2003.
Here's the first two parts........Brenda solo and duets:
Here are the pieces of my broken heart/(I'm) on the outside-2 Motown demos-piano
A favor for a girl (with a love sick heart)
All I do is think about you
All your love
Can I
Candy-demo 
Constant love
Crying time
Don't judge me
Echo 
Embraceable you
Every little bit hurts (Backing Vocals By Patrice Holloway And Gloria Jones)
Everybody knows-
Gonna make you mine- Brenda Holloway and Jess Harris
He's gone-(Demo) 
He's my kind of fellow
Hey fool 
How can I-unreleased
How can you call it love when the feeling's gone
How many times did you mean it
Hurt a little bit everyday
I can't make it without him-BRENDETTA DAVIS 1968 (rumored to be Brenda)
I don't want nobody's gonna make me cry- unreleased
I get a feeling- Bonnie and Clyde/The Soul Mates (Brenda and Robert Jackson (Bro. of Gloria Jones))
I'll be alright-
I never knew you looked so good until I quit you- Brenda Holloway and Jess Harris
I prayed for a boy like you- 
I see a rainbow-
I want a boyfriend (girlfriend)- Bonnie and Clyde/The Soul Mates (Brenda and Robert Jackson (Bro. of Gloria Jones))
I'll always love you
I'll always meet you halfway
I'll be available
I'll find myself a guy
I'll give my life 
I'm on the right track
I've been good to you
I've got to find it
It's you- Hal and Brenda  (Hal Davis And Brenda Holloway)
the game of love-
(You can) depend on me
A world without you
Just look what you've done
Land of a Thousand boys (Backing Vocals By Patrice Holloway And Gloria Jones)
Lonely boy
Love woke me up this morning
Make him come to you
My baby moves me
My world is crumbling
Operator
Play it cool, stay in school- 1966 (One Sided Promo          Issue -- Recorded In Co-Operation With The Women's Ad Club Of Detroit.
Reconsider-
Sad song-
Shake- (on 'Shindig' w/ The Blossoms on backup)
Starting the hurt all over
Suddenly
Suddenly vers 2
Summertime
Tell me your story
Till Johnny comes
Together til the end of time
Too proud to cry-
Trapped in a love affair
Unchained melody
Unless I have you- Hal and Brenda  (Hal Davis And Brenda Holloway)
We'll keep on rolling
When I'm gone
Where were you
Who could ever doubt my love
Who you gonna run to
Who's loving you
You are very much a part of me-
You can cry on my shoulder
You need me
You're walking out with my heart
You've changed me
You've made me so very happy
Patrice Holloway 
Patrice Holloway
Patrice Yvonne Holloway was born on March 23, 1951 in Los Angeles, California, the youngest of three children born to Wade Holloway, Sr. (August 13, 1920–June 24, 2001) and his wife, the former Johnnie Mae Fossett. Patrice is the younger sister of Motown artist Brenda Holloway.  Holloway also had a contract with Motown, recording songs such as "The  Touch of Venus" and "For the Love of Mike", none of which were released.  She recorded a few minor singles for the Capitol Records label during the mid-1960s, notably "Love And Desire", "Ecstasy" and "Stolen Hours", which became popular on the Northern Soul scene in the 1970s. She sang background vocals with her sister on many records for other artists, including Joe Cocker and the Grease Band's 1968 cover version of The Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Friends", later the theme song to the 1980s television series The Wonder Years.
Holloway is most noted for her work as the singing voice of Valerie in Hanna-Barbera's 1970 Josie and the Pussycats television series and on the concurrent Josie and the Pussycats album. Valerie was the first female African-American cartoon character to star as a television series regular, and was nearly cut from the show by Hanna-Barbera. Record producer Danny Janssen demanded that Holloway—and therefore Valerie—remain in the show, as he felt her voice was necessary to produce the Jackson 5-esque bubblegum pop that H-B had requested he produce.
After the first season of Josie, Holloway recorded a few solo singles, produced by Janssen, for Capitol Records. Neither she, nor Pussycats bandmates Cheryl Ladd and Cathy Dougher, performed the songs for the second season episodes, which were titled Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space.
Holloway died of a heart attack at the age of 55 on October 1, 2006.
Remembering Patrice Holloway-by Stuffed Animal
"Patrice and I worked together for many years.          Her personality was always so cheerful. She, her sister Brenda and I were          the Belles for Mirwood Records, and we did a lot of background singing          in the '60s and '70s for Motown, Barry White, etc. etc. etc. She had one          of the best voices I ever had the pleasure to sing with." Sherlie          Matthews
Patrice Yvonne Holloway was born into a musically-gifted          family of mixed Black and Hispanic heritage. Both her father and maternal          grandfather were professional musicians, and her older sister is Brenda          Holloway, the celebrated Motown recording star. She was a singer, songwriter,          vocal arranger, nightclub entertainer, session musician and recording          artist. She entered the world on March 23, 1951 (some sources say 1948)          in Los Angeles, California, shortly after her family moved there from          Atascadero, California. She and her siblings, Brenda and Wade, grew up          in the Watts section of the city. Both Patrice and Brenda Holloway were          musical child prodigies, blessed with singing and songwriting talent and          proficient on several musical instruments at an early age. By the time          she was a teenager, Patrice could perform competently on drums, guitar,          cello, autoharp and violin. Years of singing in the choir of her church          sharpened her natural vocal skills. 
       While still in her early teens, she and Brenda began penning songs together.          Brenda Holloway would go on to wax several of these tunes, including 'Echo',          'I Never Knew You Looked So Good', 'Land Of 1000 Boys' and the sisters'          best-known collaboration, 'You've Made Me So Very Happy'. The latter number          was one of several compositions they co-wrote with producer Frank Wilson          and Motown president Berry Gordy Jr; when it was covered by Blood, Sweat          and Tears in 1969, it would sell over a million copies, win a BMI songwriting          award and be nominated for a Grammy. Without Wilson and Gordy, the Holloway          girls penned 'Bah-Bah-Bah', a track that appeared on Diana Ross and the          Supremes' 1968 album 'Reflections'. Over the years, Patrice would also          compose material with Arthur Freeman, Sherlie Matthews, Jesse Kirkland,          Chester and Gary Pipkin, and Leon and LaVerne Ware. 
A 1970 Hanna-Barbera press bio states that Patrice Holloway began working          professionally in the music business at the tender age of nine. When she          was 12, in 1963, Patrice cut her first solo single for the small Taste          label. Produced by Hal Davis, a musician friend from church, both sides          of the disc played a self-penned dance number called 'Do The Dell-Viking'.          Davis and Brenda Holloway provided background voices for this catchy record,          which reportedly charted on radio station surveys in Los Angeles. 
Long before graduating from Los Angeles High School in the mid-1960s,          Patrice Holloway was earning money by singing background vocals at Hollywood          recording sessions. One producer she worked with early on was Sam Cooke,          who hired her to back some of his SAR Records artists. She also worked          for Johnny Rivers and Ike Turner. In addition, she recorded as a member          of girl group ensembles, usually with her sister Brenda and cousin Patty          Hunt: her high harmonies can be heard on early '60s platters credited          to the Watesians ('I'll Find Myself A Guy'), the Four J's ('Will You Be          My Love?'), the Ikettes ('What'cha Gonna Do [When I Leave You]') and the          Belles ('Don't Pretend'); the Belles' recordings reportedly feature Patrice          on lead vocals. 
Shortly after Brenda Holloway landed her recording contract with Motown,          she and Hal Davis got Patrice signed to the Detroit-based company as well.          She worked with singer/songwriter Smokey Robinson on several sides. An          extremely rare Patrice Holloway tribute single to Steve Wonder - 'Stevie'          b/w 'He Is The Boy Of My Dreams' - was issued on Motown's VIP subsidiary          in 1964. Several unreleased Motown tracks are known to exist, including          a cover of a rare Diana Ross and the Supremes master called 'Those DJ          Shows', the Ed Cobb composition 'The Touch Of Venus', Smokey Robinson's          'For The Love Of Mike', a track of unknown authorship titled 'Keep On          Rolling', and a duet with sister Brenda on a Mickey Stevenson/Brian Holland          song called 'Come Into My Palace'. 
       Motown under-promoted Brenda Holloway's product, but the company did,          at least, make an effort. Very little effort seems to have been expended          on Patrice's part; evidently, they didn't know how to market her. The          aforementioned VIP disc was the only thing Motown released on her, and          by 1965, she'd been dropped from their roster. The following year, R&B          writer/producers Billy and Gene Page managed to get Patrice a singles          deal at Capitol Records. At the time, the pair were best known for the          1964 Jazz and Pop smash 'The In Crowd'. 
The Page brothers specialized in a danceable Soul sound, and it proved          to be a perfect fit for Patrice's girlish yet rapidly maturing voice.          Her first Capitol single, 1966's 'Stolen Hours' b/w 'Lucky, My Boy' generated          a lot of local interest, but failed to break the national charts. The          same fate befell her second outing with the Page Brothers, 1967's 'Love          And Desire' b/w 'Ecstasy'. Capitol then assigned her to work with Lou          Rawls's producer David Axelrod. Two powerful sides resulted from the Axelrod          sessions: 'Stay With Your Own Kind', a provocative interracial love ballad          penned by Kay and Helen Lewis, and 'That's All You Got To Do', a sizzling          mid-tempo Soul number from the songbook of future Motown hitmaker Willie          Hutch. In the end, none of Patrice's excellent Capitol sides garnered          enough airplay to chart, but they were popular enough to land her bookings          at Hollywood nightclubs and on local television variety shows. 
       Most, if not all of her Capitol solo recordings became cult favourites          among American Soul aficionados, but they would find their most receptive          audience in Europe. By the early 1970s, Patrice Holloway singles counted          among the biggest hits played by Northern Soul club deejays in the United          Kingdom. The Northern Soul scene was a working class dance club circuit          located in and around Manchester, England; people flocked to clubs like          Blackpool Mecca and the Wigan Casino in order to hear vintage Soul records          from the States. 'Stolen Hours' in particular was a huge favourite, and          is undoubtedly the waxing most responsible for winning Patrice the celebrity          status she enjoys among British Soul fans. 
However, Northern Soul's popularity was just starting to build in 1968-9;          even if Patrice had known about the scene, it was too soon for her to          think about entertaining fans abroad. With nothing happening for her at          Capitol, she took session gigs and wound up singing backup on Joe Cocker's          1968 single, a cover of the Beatles' 'With A Little Help From My Friends'.          The following year, producer Lou Adler contracted to work with her at          his custom label, Ode Records. He placed her in an all-star gospel ensemble          called Brothers and Sisters of Los Angeles. This group included many of          Hollywood's finest Black session singers, among them Billy Storm, Merry          Clayton, Sherlie Matthews, Clydie King, Edna Wright, Jesse Kirkland and          members of R&B acts the Alley Cats and Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans.          Adler tracked the group on an album's worth of sides from the Bob Dylan          songbook, but despite winning critical acclaim (some of it from Dylan          himself), two 1969 singles released from the sessions ('Mighty Quinn'          and 'The Times, They Are A-Changin'') withered on the vine. So did the          Brothers and Sisters album, 'Dylan's Gospel', although it eventually came          to be regarded as a collector's item. 
A twist of fate found Patrice returning to Capitol Records to work on          a much more high-profile project. Josie and the Pussycats was a popular          comic book whose characters Hanna-Barbera Studios licensed in late 1969.          The intention was to create a cartoon series with a rock 'n' roll soundtrack          similar to the successful Monkees and Archie TV series. Studio heads William          Hanna and Joseph Barbera decided that, like The Monkees, the new show          would be promoted by a group of singers going out on tour and singing          the soundtrack music live. Patrice auditioned for the group at the famous          Capitol Tower on Hollywood and Vine, and although she had to compete against          60 other hopefuls, she quickly became a finalist. 
       The soundtrack producers, Danny Janssen and Bobby Young, adored her singing          and felt it blended perfectly with that of the other two finalists, Kathleen          Dougherty and Cheryl Stoppelmoor (later to become famous as actress Cheryl          Ladd). However, Hanna-Barbera balked at the idea of making its all-White          cartoon trio interracial. Janssen held firm, demanding that Patrice be          included; ultimately, one of the cartoon Pussycats (Valerie Smith) was          modified to resemble her in appearance. There were no African-American          cartoon leads at the time, so this development made history in the field          of animation. Hanna-Barbera Studios had its own record label, but since          Janssen and Young's production company had inked an album deal with Capitol          Records, the studio opted to release the trio's music on that imprint.          For better or worse, this ensured that the balance of Patrice Holloway's          recorded work would be done for Capitol. 
Patrice led Josie and the Pussycats on both sides of the two singles          Capitol released on the group in 1970: 'Every Beat Of My Heart' b/w 'It's          All Right With Me' and 'You've Come A Long Way, Baby' b/w 'Stop, Look          And Listen'. Patrice also sang lead on the TV series' unforgettably funky          theme song, 'Josie', and ironically, this would be the number she'd become          most famous for. The 'Josie and the Pussycats' soundtrack album featured          her vocals on the aforementioned songs as well as on 'Clappin' Your Hands          (The Handclapping Song)' and 'Roadrunner'. A quartet of promotional singles          was issued on the Capitol Creative Products label, including Patrice's          performances of 'Voodoo', alternate takes of 'Every Beat Of My Heart'          and 'Josie', a featured background part on 'If That Isn't Love' and a          William Hanna-Joseph Barbera penned Gospel number called 'It's Gotta Be          Him'. The latter song was a mediocre trifle, but she redeemed it with          an absolutely incandescent reading. At least one Patrice Holloway track          was never released commercially: 'Clock On The Wall', a splendid performance          that unfortunately can only be heard on the voice track of the TV series. 
Most of her Pussycat numbers were penned by Danny Janssen in collaboration          with Sue Sheridan (known as Sue Steward at the time), Bobby Hart, Jesse          Kirkland or Austin Roberts. Sue Sheridan supervised the trio's vocal arrangements,          but from the sound of them, it's likely that Patrice had more than a little          influence. She definitely influenced the choice of session musicians.          Several LA studio cats who'd worked with Patrice over the years participated          in the recording sessions; they included keyboardist Clarence McDonald,          flautist Wilton Felder and ace drummer Hal Blaine. Danny Janssen has confirmed          that these men played at reduced session rates in order to support Patrice          in her new endeavour. Clearly, this is an indication of how much she was          loved and respected by Hollywood's musician community. 
The music of Josie and the Pussycats was, and still is, heard all over          the world, thanks to the success of the TV series and its subsequent syndication.          Unfortunately, their music was never played anywhere but on television.          A combination of improper marketing and programmer bias against cartoon          groups amounted to a radio boycott. With no hit records forthcoming, the          proposed national tour never came together. The trio broke up after just          a few months. However, Danny Janssen was still smitten with Patrice's          voice, and he pulled strings to get her a new solo contract with Capitol.          With Clarence McDonald as his co-producer, he continued working with her          through 1971. 
       The first recording to emerge under this new arrangement was a George          Jackson/Ray Moore song called 'Evidence'. On its January 1st, 1972 telecast,          Patrice was featured on Soul Train performing this tough blues rocker,          along with its flipside, Eddie Singleton's effervescent 'That's The Chance          You Gotta Take'. Despite this unquestionably serious effort at promotion,          her "Capitol curse" manifested itself again, and the record          failed to click with the public. Its follow-up single, 'Black Mother Goose',          probably never advanced past the promo copy stage, yet numerous DJ-only          copies exist of this wonderful children's song by Sid Jacobson and Lou          Stallman that holds forth with a whimsical Black history theme. Patrice          sang it with as much gusto as she'd put into any of her adult-oriented          sides. To date, this rare 1972 single is the last solo record known to          bear her name. 
At this point, she seems to have given up on the idea of having a solo          career. Patrice concentrated on session work, and went on to sing background          for several of the biggest stars of the 1970s, including Joe Cocker, Thelma          Houston, Ike and Tina Turner, Delaney and Bonnie, Billy Preston, Bobby          Womack, Buffy Sainte-Marie and Neil Young. (Cocker's remake of 'With A          Little Help From My Friends', featuring Patrice's vocal support, would          later be chosen as the theme song to the 1980s TV series The Wonder Years.)          Electronic music pioneers Paul Beaver and Bernie Krause collaborated with          her on their groundbreaking 1971 album 'Gandharva'. She worked with the          Canadian rock ensemble Skylark, harmonizing on their 1972 debut album          and (possibly) their Top Ten hit 'Wildflower' from the following year.          As a composer, Patrice earned substantial royalties from two songs included          on the Top Twenty soundtrack album for Diana Ross's 1975 film Mahogany:          'She's The Ideal Girl' and 'Let's Go Back To Day One'. Her first hit composition,          'You've Made Me So Very Happy', was remade by Mel Tormé, Gloria          Estéfan, Lou Rawls, Bobbie Gentry and dozens of other artists,          and in 2001, it was heard in the Australian comedy flick The Dish.
In addition to her musical skills, Patrice Holloway possessed a wonderful          sense of comic timing; had she chosen to do so, she might have become          a very successful comedienne. This supremely talented woman suffered from          ill health for much of her professional life. When interviewed in 2003          for an article on Josie and the Pussycats, producer Danny Janssen spoke          of how she struggled during the sessions with a mysterious disease that          "came and went." Sadly, by 2005, she was bedridden most of the          time. Whatever her affliction was, Patrice Holloway never let it affect          the sterling quality of her performances, which now are part of her legacy. 
       Contacted for comment, her longtime friend and colleague Clarence McDonald          had this to say in remembrance: "Patrice was a very talented and          loving person. Quietly, she went about her work and exhibited her talents.          She was the first Black female American to be in a cartoon series as a          character and performer! She will be dearly missed by all that knew her."          Patrice Holloway passed away in the city of her birth following a heart          attack on October 1, 2006. Funeral Services were held at the Inglewood          Chapel on Monday, October 16, 2006. The capacity crowd of mourners included          actors Connie Stevens and Paul Petersen, R&B singers Edna Wright and          Sandra "Blinky" Williams, Gospel stars Andrae Crouch and Tata          Vega (both of whom performed), producer-turned-minister Frank Wilson (who          delivered the graveside eulogy), Motown songwriter Janie Bradford, and          Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. Patrice is survived by one son, her sister          Brenda, and numerous extended family members, friends and fans all over          the world. Condolences should be sent to Brenda Holloway in care of Santel          Entertainment Group, Inc, 16041 G. Johnston Road, Suite #113, Charlotte,          NC 28277. 
(He is) the boy of my dreams-1964 unreleased acetate (about Stevie Wonder)
Black Mother Goose-1972
Come into my palace-Patrice and Brenda-unreleased duet 1964
Cupid's got a hold on me-The Belles (Sherlie Matthews, Brenda Holloway and Patrice Holloway) 1966-Patrice on lead
Do the Del Viking Pt 1 -(backing vocals-Brenda Holloway)
Don't pretend-The Belles (Sherlie Matthews, Brenda Holloway and Patrice Holloway) 1966
Ecstasy-1967
Every beat of my heart-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher) as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as Valerie.)
Evidence-1971
For the love of Mike-1964
Going to a Go-Go-Brenda Holloway with The Supremes 1966?
Hand clapping song-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher) as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as Valerie.)
I ain't gonna take you back-Brenda Holloway and the Carrolls
I'll be there-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher) as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as Valerie.)
I told you baby-The Watesians (Brenda          Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Pat Hunt And Priscilla Kennedy) 1962
I'll be satisfied-1965 The Sequins (Brenda, Patrice, and Patty Hunt)
It don't matter to me-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher) as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as Valerie.)
It's gotta be him-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher)  as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as  Valerie.)
Let's go back to day one-w/ Gloria Jones 1975
Lie, lie, lie (aternate mix)-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher)  as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as  Valerie.)
Love and desire-1967
Stevie-1964 unreleased acetate (about Stevie Wonder)
Stolen hours- 1966
Stop, look and listen-1970 Josie and The Pussycats (Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher)  as Josie, Cherie Moor (actress Cheryl Ladd) as Melody, and Patrice as  Valerie.)
That's all you got to do-1967
The nursery- The 4J's (Brenda Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Pat Hunt And Priscilla Kennedy)1963
The touch of Venus-unreleased
Those DJ shows-1964 unreleased acetate
What 'cha gonna do-The Ikettes 1966 (members    on this rumoured to be Pat Arnold, Brenda, and Patrice)
Will you be my love- The 4J's (Brenda Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Pat Hunt And Priscilla Kennedy)1963
Words can't explain-The Belles (Sherlie Matthews, Brenda Holloway and Patrice Holloway) 1966
You're my only love-Brenda Holloway and the Carrolls 1964
 









Are U Kidding Me? this is just the most wonderful lady. thanx so much for these & her sister..wow!!!
ReplyDeleteI had fun putting this list together...glad you like it :)
ReplyDeleteBarberella you have floored me.....this is fantastic!
ReplyDeleteYour fan
Aww, Thanks! :)
ReplyDeleteFigured this was the most appropriate spot to post this....this being a Motown post and all but...have you seen this one? Marvin & Tammi live on Carson! No lip-synching, no autotune, not exactly the best band for this kind of music and still...just beautiful....
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmUFDVv4sZQ
Very cool, Thanks! That was just what I needed with my Sunday morning coffee a few moments ago. :)
ReplyDeleteWould you be so kind as to re-upload these posts please? These are simply the finest compilations I have ever seen of the Holloway sisters. If possible, highly appreciated thank you. Greetings Chris (Belgium).
ReplyDelete