Hartford Courant (Sunday)

‘You are still taking from me’

- By Michael Rietmulder The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Anita White’s life has been a little different since being thrust into a public controvers­y with some of Nashville’s biggest stars.

The unexpected spotlight found the Seattle-area woman — better known as powerhouse blues singer Lady A — when pop-country hitmakers Lady Antebellum decided earlier this year to shorten its name to a longtime fan nickname: also Lady A. In ditching “antebellum,” a word critics say romanticiz­es the slavery-era South, the country radio staples took on the name of a lesser known Black artist, making her less visible on social media and streaming services.

The irony certainly isn’t lost on Seattle’s Lady A.

“I’ve been working my butt off since before those kids were born,” says Lady A, 62, who has performed and released several albums under that stage name for years. “But your privilege is going to allow you to take something from me or decide that I have to share the name with you, knowing full well that you’re going to wipe me off social media, therefore you are still taking from me.”

Talks between the two acts broke down last month and the country band initiated a lawsuit asking the courts to affirm its right to the name “Lady A,” a trademark the band first registered for in 2010, according to the complaint. (Lady A says she and her attorneys are still waiting to be formally served.)

The newfound attention has had several consequenc­es for the once-reluctant frontwoman, who used to need a nerve-calming glass of wine before singing backup with the Sonny Byers Motown Revue.

With a new set of fans from beyond the Northwest, she has been mailing out more CDs from her home after working a day job that she plans to retire from soon. A full slate of interviews with publicatio­ns based everywhere from south Seattle to Paris has left little time for the 40-minute power naps that could keep her going until 1 a.m. On top of that, Lady A has maintained her gospel and blues shows with online radio station NWCZ.

“They don’t call me the hardest-working woman in blues, soul, funk and gospel for nothing,” Lady A says with a big, easy laugh.

As a senior administra­tor with the city of Seattle, Lady A serves as a member of one of the city’s “change teams” created as part of Seattle’s Race and Social Justice Initiative aimed at eliminatin­g institutio­nalized racism and inequities across the city.

As a singer, Lady A first stretched her cords in a youth gospel choir, becoming the director by age 16. One of her first tastes of the solo spotlight came when Byers, a local gospel/R&B vet, brought her to her first karaoke night in the ’80s.

One of Lady A’s earliest boosters was the late Louise Thompson, the proprietor where Lady A and her Baby Blues Funk Band played some of their first shows. The other was John Oliver III, also a member of Byers’ band, who encouraged Lady A to go solo after seeing how she worked a crowd and began pitching her songs.

“Now listen, when Lady A came onstage, she commanded attention from everybody whether they were eating or not, drinking or not, sitting down or standing up — she commanded their attention, and she made sure to get them involved,” Oliver says.

With Oliver — her drummer, producer and cowriter of 20-plus years now — Lady A released her debut solo album, 2010’s “Bluez in the Key of Me,” fusing the blues with funk, soul and gospel sounds. She’s since put out three more studio albums, also working closely with Mississipp­i artist Dexter Allen.

Pre-pandemic, Lady A held down a hybrid monthly gig that she describes as “Oprah on the back porch.” Part traditiona­l concert, part talk show Q&A, those “Lady A’s Back Porch Blues” shows served as a get-to-know-ya with the artists while allowing Lady A to dig deeper into the stories behind her songs.

Her latest single, “The Truth Is Loud,” released in conjunctio­n with the discussion series, is a sparse and somber soul-funk track that touches on a plethora of American injustices, including police violence and the detention of migrant children.

Part of the reason negotiatio­ns with the Nashville, Tennessee, band broke down is because Lady A felt like the country stars weren’t listening. Sharing the name, as the country group pushed for, didn’t seem plausible for Lady A, who suggested they could be “Lady A the Band” or that the stars’ management company could take her on as a client and rebrand her. After repeatedly asking the trio’s team what that coexistenc­e would look like and how they would ensure she wouldn’t get buried on digital platforms, Lady A says she never got a clear answer. A spokespers­on for the Nashville band declined to comment.

She also questions the sincerity behind the name change, since the public knows the “A” still stands for antebellum. “You can’t go from being the Ku Klux Klan to being the KKK and think that we don’t know that you’re still racist,” Lady A says.

Eventually, Lady A asked for a $10 million settlement — $5 million to help her rebrand and another $5 million for charities including Black Lives Matter, youth and senior organizati­ons in Seattle and legal aid for artists across the country. On July 8, the Nashville band announced it was filing the lawsuit, which does not seek monetary damages or aim to prevent Lady A from using the name. “Today we are sad to share that our sincere hope to join together with Anita White in unity and common purpose has ended,” the band said in a statement at the time. “She and her team have demanded a $10 million payment, so reluctantl­y we have come to the conclusion that we need to ask a court to affirm our right to continue to use the name Lady A, a trademark we have held for many years.”

For Lady A, the standoff with Lady A(ntebellum) is bigger than herself.

“This is about everybody else who has ever had something taken from them,” Lady A says. “But mostly for me, it’s about Black, Indigenous people of this land, people of color, who have had their lives, their experience­s, their work, culture, language, music, artistry and most importantl­y, their names taken from them.”

 ?? LADY A ?? Blues singer Lady A has been thrust into a bigger spotlight since pop-country band Lady Antebellum decided to shorten its name to a longtime fan nickname, which is also Lady A.
LADY A Blues singer Lady A has been thrust into a bigger spotlight since pop-country band Lady Antebellum decided to shorten its name to a longtime fan nickname, which is also Lady A.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States