An underappreciated soul vocalist with a gritty, church-reared voice,
P.P. Arnold has been at the fore and in the background of pop hits spanning several decades. She emerged in the '60s as a back-up singer for
Ike & Tina Turner and soon found solo success in England with a string of singles, starting with the Top 20 hit "The First Cut Is the Deepest" (1967). After concurrent and subsequent background work with the likes of
Small Faces and
Nick Drake, and a stint as an actor, she experienced a revival in the mid-'80s and into the early half of the next decade, supporting hits by
Peter Gabriel and the KLF, and fronting another Top 20 U.K. hit with the
Beatmasters collaboration "Burn It Up" (1988). A couple years after previously unreleased solo material hit the market as
The Turning Tide,
Arnold returned with a new album, The New Adventures of P.P. Arnold (2019).
Born Patricia Ann Cole,
P.P. Arnold grew up in a family of gospel performers and began singing at the age of four. The Los Angeles native got her professional start supporting
Bobby Day before being invited to join
the Ikettes, backing
Ike & Tina Turner.
Arnold toured with the Turners, including a stint with
the Rolling Stones.
Mick Jagger persuaded her to remain in London, and she later signed with the Immediate label, then run by
the Stones' manager,
Andrew Loog Oldham. In 1967, the same year she recorded with label mates
Small Faces, she released her debut album,
The First Lady of Immediate, produced by
Loog Oldham,
Jagger, and
Mike Hurst. The LP included the number 18 U.K. hit "The First Cut Is the Deepest," written by
Cat Stevens (whose own version followed months later). Another album, Kafunta, arrived the next year and, in addition to
Arnold's own compositions, featured covers of tracks by
the Beatles,
Beach Boys,
Bee Gees, and
Rolling Stones. Most popular was
Chip Taylor's "Angel of the Morning," which
Arnold took to number 29 on the U.K. chart.
Additionally in the late '60s,
Arnold started a second career as an actor, cast for the musical Catch My Soul. She acted into well into the '80s with appearances on television shows such as Fame and Knots Landing, and performed in another musical,
Andrew Lloyd Webber's Starlight Express. Although background session work had continued all the while -- she recorded with
Nick Drake,
Graham Nash, and
Stephen Stills, among many others -- her profile started to rise again in 1984, when she performed the title song for the film Electric Dreams. In 1985, she released "A Little Pain," produced by
Dexter Wansel with involvement from members of
Loose Ends, and was heard the following year on Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer" and "Big Time." She closed out that decade with the number 14 U.K. hit "Burn It Up," produced by
the Beatmasters, and then teamed with
Pressure Point for multiple 12" releases. Extensive performing and recording work continued into the next couple decades, highlighted by the hook on the KLF's "3 A.M. Eternal," a global hit that topped the U.K. chart and in the U.S. reached number five.
Arnold's Immediate output was reissued in 2001 on The First Cut: The Immediate Anthology. The singer continued to tour and record throughout the decade, most prominently with Roger Waters. In 2017, a shelved LP completed in 1971 was released as
The Turning Tide. The fabled set featured production and writing by
Barry Gibb and
Eric Clapton, as well as input from
the Delaney & Bonnie Band and
Rita Coolidge.
Arnold continued to tour into 2019, over 50 years into her career. That year, she released her fourth official album, The New Adventures of P.P. Arnold. The LP was produced by
Steve Cradock, who previously worked with
Arnold as a member of
Ocean Colour Scene and as part of
Paul Weller's band. ~ Neil Z. Yeung & Andy Kellman