Lorraine Ellison


Lorraine Ellison was an American soul singer known for her recording of the song "Stay with Me" in 1966.

Life and career

Born Marybelle Luraine Ellison, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Ellison originally sang gospel music, working in the groups the Ellison Singers and the Golden Chords in the early 1960s. She switched to the R&B genre in 1964 and her first release was a chart entry, "I Dig You Baby" in 1965 on Mercury Records, which reached No. 22 on the US Billboard R&B chart.
After another unsuccessful single with Mercury, she signed with Warner Bros. Records, and in 1966 recorded "Stay with Me" at a last-minute booking, following a studio cancellation by Frank Sinatra. "Stay with Me" reached number 11 in the U.S. Billboard R&B chart and number 64 in the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. The song was produced and written by Jerry Ragovoy. Some of her later single releases were on Warner's subsidiary soul music record label, Loma Records. "Stay with Me" would become her signature song. Her follow-up single was "Heart Be Still" a minor hit in 1967. Ellison also recorded "Try ", a song later covered to more success by Janis Joplin.
Ellison composed some of her own songs. She had her own compositions recorded by several other artists, including Jerry Butler, Garnet Mimms, Howard Tate and Dee Dee Warwick. After leaving Warner, she recorded at least two unissued tracks for the then fast-growing Philadelphia International label in her hometown.
Twice-married and using the surname Gonzalez-Keys, Lorraine Ellison gave up the music business to take care of her mother, but continued to sing in church. Ellison died in January 1983 from ovarian cancer at the age of 51.

Discography

Studio albums

Compilation albums

Singles