Otago Daily Times

Bonnie and sisters funked it with soul

- BONNIE POINTER

BONNIE Pointer convinced three of her churchsing­ing siblings to form the Pointer Sisters, which would become one of the biggest acts of the 1970s and 1980s.

The Grammy winner died of cardiac arrest in Los Angeles on June 8. She was 69.

Bonnie Pointer often sang lead and was an essential member of the group through its early hits including Yes We Can Can and Fairytale. She would leave for a short and modest solo career in 1977 as her sisters went on to have several megahits without her.

Ruth, Anita, Bonnie and June, born the daughters of a minister who also had two older sons, grew up singing in his church in Oakland, California.

It was Bonnie, shortly after graduating high school, who first wanted to move away from singing gospel songs into clubs to pursue a profession­al singing career.

“The Pointer Sisters would never have happened had it not been for Bonnie,’’ Anita Pointer said.

She convinced younger sister June to join her, and the two began doing gigs together as a duo in 1969. Eventually, they’d enlist their two older sisters, who were already married with children, to join them.

The quartet brought unique fusion of funk, soul and 1940sstyle jazz, scat and pop to their act, often dressing in a retro style that resembled their forerunner­s the Andrews Sisters.

They worked as backup singers for Taj Mahal, Boz Scaggs, Elvin Bishop and others before releasing their selftitled debut album in 1973, and the song Yes We Can Can, a funky anthem calling for unity and tolerance, became their breakout hit.

They followed up with That’s A Plenty, which featured an eclectic mix of musical styles ranging from jazz to gospel to pop.

Singer

They even delved into country. Bonnie and Anita cowrote the song Fairytale about a crumbling relationsh­ip. The song earned them a groundbrea­king gig performing as a rare African American act at the Grand Ole Opry, and they would win their first Grammy, for best country vocal performanc­e by a group.

Bonnie Pointer left the group in 1977, signing a solo deal with Motown Records.

“We were devastated,” Anita Pointer told Associated Press in 1990.

“We did a show the night she left, but after that, we just stopped. We thought it wasn’t going to work without Bonnie.”

She would have only modest solo success. Her biggest hit was Heaven Must Have Sent You,

a 1979 disco cover of an earlier Motown hit by the

Elgins. It reached No 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1979.

After making three albums for Motown, she would retire from the studio, and only perform occasional­ly.

Her three sisters, who had nearly disbanded when she quit, instead regrouped, shed their retro image for a modern pop sound, and became one of the biggest acts of the 1980s with huge hits including He’s So Shy, Jump (For My Love) and Neutron Dance.

Bonnie married Motown producer Jeffrey Bowen in 1978. The two separated in 2004 and divorced in 2016.

She twice reunited with her sisters for public appearance­s — once in 1994, when they received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and again in 1996, at a show in Las Vegas.

June Pointer, the youngest of the sisters, died in 2006.

In addition to Ruth and Anita, Bonnie Pointer is survived by her two older brothers, Aaron and Fritz. — AP

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Pointing the way . . . Bonnie Pointer attends the Hollywood Chamber Of Commerce 98th Annual Board Installati­on And Lifetime Achievemen­t Awards Gala at Avalon Hollywood last year.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Pointing the way . . . Bonnie Pointer attends the Hollywood Chamber Of Commerce 98th Annual Board Installati­on And Lifetime Achievemen­t Awards Gala at Avalon Hollywood last year.

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