Maggie Bell (born 12 January 1945, in Glasgow, Scotland) is a blues singer who collaborated with many notable musicians including Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin, on her Suicide Sal album in 1975. Her soulful pipes earned her a reputation as the "British Janis Joplin" and she was a member of the hard rocking live blues rock bands Stone The Crows and Midnight Flyer. Early Career & Recent Update: From a musical family, she sang from her teens, leaving school at the age of fifteen, to work as a window...
Maggie Bell (born 12 January 1945, in Glasgow, Scotland) is a blues singer who collaborated with many notable musicians including Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin, on her Suicide Sal album in 1975. Her soulful pipes earned her a reputation as the "British Janis Joplin" and she was a member of the hard rocking live blues rock bands Stone The Crows and Midnight Flyer.
Her first solo album Queen of the Night (1973) was recorded in New York with legendary Atlantic record producer, Jerry Wexler. She became the only female artist signed to Led Zeppelin's label Swan Song in the 1970's and was known for her hard rocking road band who played across the US & Europe supporting a diverse who's who of 70's acts including Humble Pie,The Who,Roxy Music, David Bowie, Earth Wind & Fire,and Marc Bolan. She later assembled the UK all-star band Midnight Flyer who opened up AC/DC's 1981 world tour and played Live At Montreux in July 1981 where they jammed with Taj Mahal and Albert Collins.
While she never broke big on the charts solo, she had a hit duet in the UK in 1981 with B.A. Robertson on "Hold Me", reaching number 11 in the UK Singles Chart. Her song "No Mean City", written by Mike Moran, is the theme music to the 21st century TV crime drama Taggart. In 2008 shejoined the British Blues Qunitet with Zoot Money and told the Scottish Herald newspaper "I'm my own boss now and the bonus for me is that I'm still alive and singing." . Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.