Bonnie's Pride and Joy

Fansite with ALL the news about Bonnie !

20th Annual Rhythm & Blues Foundation’s Pioneer Awards Show

on September 12, 2008 No comments
430043_r-n-b_logo

An Unforgettable Night of Great Performances, Long Awaited Reunions and Special Honors for Music Legends Bill Withers, Kool & The Gang, Donny Hathaway, Sugar Pie DeSanto and More; the Queen of Soul Surprises Pioneer Awards Honoree Chaka Khan.

PHILADELPHIA, PA–(Marketwire – September 12, 2008) – It is indeed a rare occasion when an event exceeds expectations. The cream of the R&B crop recently congregated at Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center Verizon Hall to honor not only legends, but more importantly, those overlooked throughout the genre’s rich history. The occasion was the Rhythm & Blues Foundation‘s 20th anniversary, as well as its 15th Pioneer Awards Show Gala.

Co-hosted by former Pioneer Award honorees Dionne Warwick, Bonnie Raitt, and Jerry Butler, along with Emmy winner Wayne Brady, the evening’s festivities kicked off with a musical montage, culminating in Pioneer Awards handed to Bill Withers, Teena Marie, R&B/blues singer Sugar Pie DeSanto, Kool & The Gang , the Whispers, and Motown session superstars the Funk Brothers. Chaka Khan received the Foundation’s “Lifetime Achievement Award”; former Stax and Motown Records executive Al Bell received the Ahmet Ertegun Leadership Award, newly named for the late Atlantic Records founder; and the Legacy Award was given to the family of soul legend Donny Hathaway.

RELATED
The Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry Inducts ‘Nick of Time’ in 2022

Rhythm & Blues Foundation

Stax Records Musical Tribute at R&B Foundation

Al Bell Acceptance Speech.avi

Kool & the Gang Honored At the R&B Foundation

Bill Withers honored at the R&B Foundation

The Funk Brothers Honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 2 of 2

The Funk Brothers Honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 1 of 2

Donny Hathaway honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 2 of 2

Chaka Khan honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 2 of 2

Donny Hathaway honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 1 of 2

Chaka Khan Honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 1 of 2

Teena Marie Honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 2 of 2

Teena Marie Honored at the R&B Foundation Pt 1of 2

2008 Pioneer Awards – Show Opening Pt 2 of 3

2008 Pioneer Awards – Show Opening, Pt 1 of 3

2008 Pioneer Awards – Show Opening, Pt 3 of 3

The Whispers Honored at the R&B Foundation Pioneer Awards

Sugar Pie DeSanto at the 2008 Pioneer Awards – The R&B Foundation

2008 Pioneer Awards Excerpts

The evening kicked off with a seven-minute overture, conducted by Musical Director Bill Jolly and his orchestra musically telling the story of Rhythm and Blues development through — the drum, cotton field chants, gospel, jazz, blues, R&B, doo-wop, rock, soul, funk, hip-hop, rap, and neo-soul. Visual montages included Clara Ward, the Dixie Hummingbirds, B.B. King and others. During the big band segment, Raitt broke ranks with pop and the blues to sing the jazzy “In the Mood,” as Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway and Count Basie’s images weaved in and out. Butler and Warwick sang their signature songs, “For Your Precious Love” and “Walk On By,” respectively. And Brady flashed his versatility with electrifying renditions of James Brown’s “It’s a Man’s World” and “Sex Machine.”

R&B Foundation’s Chairman Kendall Minter and Executive Director Patty Wilson Aden welcomed the Pioneer Awards audience and highlighted the Foundation’s 20 year mission.

Former Spinner G.C. Cameron sang his “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday” (later made popular by Boyz II Men), to an accompanying video of Isaac Hayes, Ertegun, Brown, and others who passed away over the past two years; Public Enemy’s Chuck D covered rap and hip-hop, and included PE anthem “Fight the Power”; Kenny Lattimore and Brady sang a Donny Hathaway segment that included a raucous turn with “The Ghetto”; The Funk Brothers were accompanied by Kindred the Family Soul on a Motown medley: Neo-soul superstar Anthony Hamilton performed “I Can’t Let Go,” with an ensemble of Gary “U.S.” Bonds, Mabel John, Maxine Brown, Chuck Jackson,, Kindred the Family Soul, Vivian Green, Jaguar Wright, Stax session guitarist Steve Cropper, Steve Jordan, Jean Wright, Betty Wright, Bunny Sigler, Warwick, Butler, Brady, Raitt and many others. And that was just the first 20 minutes!

Chaka Khan at The 20th Annual Rhythm & Blues Foundation's Pioneer Awards Show.
Chaka Khan at The 20th Annual Rhythm & Blues Foundation’s Pioneer Awards Show.

This special evening featured performances by honorees Bill Withers, DeSanto, the Whispers, Khan, Marie, the Funk Brothers and 76-year-old DeSanto, who stole the show when she performed “I Wanna Know” and threw in an amazingly limber forward flip that won her a standing ovation. The surprise of the evening was a rare appearance by the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, who presented a “Lifetime Achievement Award” to a tearful and grateful Chaka Khan. The finale, “I’ll Take You There” turned into a once in a lifetime reunion music fest that included the aforementioned performers as well as the Dixie Cups, Martha Reeves & the Vandellas, Kim Weston and John Oats.

The 2008 Pioneer Awards Honorees are:

Lifetime Achievement – CHAKA KHAN

Individual Artist Award – TEENA MARIE

Individual Artist Award – BILL WITHERS

Individual Artist Award – SUGAR PIE DESANTO

Group Award – KOOL & THE GANG

Group Award – THE WHISPERS

Sidemen Award – THE FUNK BROTHERS

Legacy Award – DONNY HATHAWAY

Leadership Award – AL BELL of STAX RECORDS

The evening’s hosts included:

DIONNE WARWICK

BONNIE RAITT

JERRY BUTLER

WAYNE BRADY

In addtion to performances by this year’s honorees and hosts, the 2008 Pioneer Awards featured appearances by:

WILLIAM BELL

JERRY BLAVAT

GARY US BONDS

MAXINE BROWN

G C CAMERON

STEVE CROPPER

CHUCK D

VIVIAN GREEN

ANTHONY HAMILTON

MABEL JOHN

KINDRED THE FAMILY SOUL

KENNY LATTIMORE

THE HONORABLE MICHAEL NUTTER, MAYOR OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

JOHN OATES

BUNNY SIGLER

JUSTINE “BABY” WASHINGTON

CODY RYAN WISE

JAGUAR WRIGHT

BETTY WRIGHT

The Rhythm & Blues Foundation was founded in 1988 with the intention of preserving the genre’s historical and cultural importance, as well as providing a helping hand to those in need. Respect was the over-riding sentiment, as tears and hugs flowed freely from the stage.


Source: © Copyright Marketwired

Related Posts

Take a look at these posts
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Also enjoy listening to Bonnie in these posts!

Popular Posts

Recommended Reading