From Deseret News archives:

Blues singer Magness focuses on the good

Published: Friday, June 20, 2008 12:04 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Blues singer Janiva Magness has a life full of profound moments. Some were horrifying. Some were inspiring. And all were important.

"When I was in my teens, I lost both my parents to suicide," said Magness during a phone call from her home in Los Angeles. "I had it rough growing up and was in 12 foster homes in two years. When I was 14, I saw Otis Rush in concert. And it changed something inside, but I wasn't sure what it was. But I did end up auditioning for singing gigs and getting them later on."

But becoming a musician didn't happen until Magness was in her 20s, she said. "I was working in an office with a wonderful woman who was 50. And she told me to not do what she did.

"I said, 'What?' and she said, 'Don't do what I did. I wanted to be doctor, but I was too scared to try. And here I am 50 years old and working in an office, not knowing if I could have been a doctor. Don't do that. If you want to do something, you need to at least try.'

"That stayed with me, and I decided to give music a shot," said Magness, who is now 51. "Winston Churchill said, 'If you're in hell, keep moving." And that what I did."

Story continues below
After deciding to try music, Magness found work in a music studio and found jobs singing backup. She then hooked up with mentor Bob Tate, the late Sam Cooke's music director.

In 1997, Magness released her first album, "It Takes One to Know One." A few albums and two record labels later, Magness found herself at Alligator Records. Her new album, "What Love Will Do," is her Alligator Records debut.

The album title sums up her life's philosophy.

"There is so much that is good in the world," she said. "It takes someone to take time to listen and to do something. When I was going through the hard parts of my life, at the time, I couldn't tell you why. But now I can."

Magness is the national spokeswoman for Casey Family Programs, promoting national foster care (www.fostercaremonth.org).

"I've been through the foster-care system and it worked for me," said Magness. "I do shows for kids in foster care and I can stand before them and tell them that they can do wonderful things. What they are going through will help them in the future. They might not know it now, but they will later."

If you go ...

What: Janiva Magness
Where:
Utah Arts Festival, Amphitheater Stage
When:
Thursday, 8:15 p.m.
How much:
free with Utah Arts Festival admission
Web:
www.uaf.org or www.janivamagness.com


E-mail: scott@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Dixie will beat Springville. Mark my words. The northern fans once again...

No depth at quarterback for BYU? Your post shows just how out of touch...

Don't matter none, Bennett will win since has the LDS backing. If ya'll want...

3A football: Wasatch outslugs Bears

That makes sense. So your offense caused PC to put that many points on the...

Poor PG fans can't handle the truth, now that they are done. Thanks for...

You might learn how to read before commenting on things. I provided a simple...

that an appeal is finally in favor of the player. We had an incident happen...

i hear that the number 8 kid is the best on the team

12 high schools ready for 'The Turf'

If you like those stadiums, move to Texas. And don't try to minimize the...

Semper Fi: now we have a Marine in charge, now we can get something done.

Advertisements
Advertisement