Early life and career Ruby Winters was born in
Louisville, Kentucky to Charles Forehand Jr. and Lucille Inez Forehand. From the age of five, subsequent to her mother's death, Winters was raised in
Cincinnati, Ohio by maternal grandmother Jeanetta Bradshaw, who encouraged Winters' penchant for singing, first expressed in church at age four. At age sixteen Winters - by then a wife and mother - began singing professionally, eventually expanding her performing focus beyond Louisville-area functions. By 1966 Winters was singing in the
Charlie Daniels band, she and Daniels both being managed by Bill Sizemore: Sizemore also managed singer
Ronnie Dove and was able to interest Dove's label:
Diamond Records, in recording Winters whose resultant debut single: "In the Middle of a Heartache" (a Charlie Daniels composition), was recorded at Sambo Studios in Louisville for July 1966 release, reaching the top 30 on the hit parade for
WAKY 790-Louisville. The regional interest in Winters' debut single led Diamond Records
a&r head Phil Kahl to himself oversee Winters' next recording session which took place in Nashville early in 1967. Before Kahl left New York City with the intent of producing distinct Nashville sessions for Winters and another Diamond Records act:
Johnny Thunder, label president Joe Kolsky had suggested that Kahl record Winters and Thunder as a duo, Kolsky having noted the recent chart success of the
Peaches and Herb remake of the
traditional pop standard "
Let's Fall in Love" and also the current
Marvin Gaye/
Kim Weston hit duet "
It Takes Two". Kahl resultantly recorded Winters and Thunder as a duet remaking the 1950s pop hits "
Teach Me Tonight" and "
Make Love to Me": with "Make Love to Me" as the
A-side the single was released in February 1967 and reached number 13 on the
Billboard R&B charts in April 1967 and peaked at number 96 on the
Billboard Hot 100. After Winters reached the national R&B chart with her third solo release: "I Want Action", in the autumn of 1967, Diamond Records brought her to New York City to work with
George Kerr who had recently produced R&B hits for
the O'Jays and
Linda Jones. With his regular collaborator: arranger
Richard Tee, Kerr reteamed Winters with Johnny Thunder for "We Have Only One Life", released in February 1968 to become a chart shortfall. Kerr also had Winters record "Last Minute Miracle" which he had in 1967 recorded with
the Shirelles for a regional hit single release and also (as "A Last Minute Miracle") with Linda Jones (with all three versions apparently sharing a common backing track); however Winters' version remains unreleased, "We Have Only One Life" remaining her only release for the year 1968. Winters nonetheless made a strong comeback in 1969 with four R&B hits beginning with her highest ranking U.S. solo hit, Winters' remake of the 1961
Chuck Jackson hit "I Don't Want to Cry", Winters reached number 15 on the R&B charts in February 1969 and number 99 on the Hot 100: two of Winters' next three singles were also remakes, specifically of "
Just a Dream" and "Guess Who" (the respective originals being by
Jimmy Clanton and
Jesse Belvin). In 1970 Winters' recording schedule again slowed with no releases until January 1971 when her recording of the hymn "
Great Speckled Bird" was issued by Certron, who had purchased Diamond Records in early 1970. Following Certron's own closure in early 1971, their tapes were sold to Cutlass Records, Winters was announced as being on the roster of the Cutlass R&B subsidiary label Hotline, but Winters had no releases before Cutlass folded by 1973.
I Will and subsequent career Winters had her first single release in almost three years in October 1973 when
Polydor Records issued Winters' version of "
I Will" a
Dick Glasser composition which had charted in the 1960s for both
Vic Dana and
Dean Martin: while proving to be Winters' most significant recording, her version of "I Will" in original release only just reached the R&B top 40. while not registering on the
Billboard Hot 100 "Love Me Now" was ranked on the singles charts of both
Cash Box and
Record World with respective peak positions of number 95 and 91. Winters' two Polydor single releases were both recorded in Nashville with Stan Shulman and
Dean Mathis producing, as was Winters' one-off Playboy Records single release: a version of the number 1 1972
Nilsson hit "
Without You" which reached number 95 on the R&B charts in December 1975.
Death Ruby Winters Jenkins, a resident of
Missouri City, Texas, died on August 7, 2016, at age 74. She was preceded in death by her husbands, George Yates and William Jenkins. She was survived by her five children. ==Discography==