Pru
The innovative, jazzy singer known as Pru
(born Pru Renfro) was raised as the youngest of four children by
her mother, Patsy, in Houston's South Park section. Her mother was a free spirit
who encouraged Pru's
creativity and occasionally brought her to work with her at the nightclub where
she tended bar, allowing Pru
to perform in between acts. Attending a performing arts high school helped
nurture her creative talents and
by the time she headed off to college at Texas Southern University, she was well
on her way to developing
her singing style. She traveled to L.A. hoping to emulate some of the great
singers whom she had been
recently exposed to, like Cassandra Wilson and Dianne Reeves. She worked in bars
and nightclubs
frequented by industry mavens in the hope of networking with the powers that be
in the music industry.
Her songwriting earned her the first bits of attention and provided a crucial
break for her when she was
signed by Warner/Chappell Music Publishing and was brought to the attention of
Roy Lott at Capitol
Records. He was impressed not only with her songwriting skills, but also with
her versatile voice, which had
developed a unique style that traveled in some of the same directions as the
more creative interpreters of
R&B, like Lauryn Hill, Macy Gray, and Erykah Badu. Pru polished her singing
style while working on tour
with the Family Stand and members of Sade's band, and Capitol released her
self-titled solo debut in
November, 2000. Pru showed off her songwriting skills by penning 12 of the 13
tracks on the album,
including the debut single, "Candle," which borrowed lyrical and
musical inspiration from Smokey
Robinson's "Tracks of My Tears."
Year of release | Album title |
2000 | Pru |