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Official Website: Cece
Winans
CeCe Winans, originally named Priscilla, was born on October
8, 1964, by David and Dolores Winans who had long awaited
a daughter after seven boys --David, Ronald, Marvin, Carvin,
Daniel, Michael, and Benjamin (BeBe). A few years later, Winans
was joined by two more female Winans, sisters Angelique and
Debbie. According to Winans' 1999 memoirs, On a Positive Note,
no one remembers for certain how Priscilla Winans came to
be called CeCe, but the nickname is most likely traced to
Winans' beloved paternal grandmother, Laura Howze, who called
her "Sister" since her birth. Referring to Grandmother Howze
her childhood "best friend," Winans recalled her grandmother's
good advice in her memoir: "God's got His hands on you, CeCe.
Just keep your hands in His hands, and you'll be all right."
Winans' parents were truly dedicated to God and family. The
ten children were fed and housed with the income David Winans
earned as a barber and taxi driver combined with what Dolores
earned in her employment at Metropolitan Hospital. Always
musical and involved in the church, Winans' parents had met
in 1950 as members of Detroit's Lemon Gospel Chorus. Their
love for music and God became central to their lifestyle and
to their parenting. A quiet, shy girl, Winans began singing
God's words publicly as a small child of seven, when she performed
"Fill My Cup" for her congregation. But this boldness should
not have surprised worshippers acquainted with the Winans
family, for whom singing was as natural as walking, even breathing.
Winans grew up singing daily among her family of 12 in their
three-bedroom Westside Detroit house on Woodingham Street.
"Our house was always filled with music," Winans wrote. "It
was nothing for Mom to strike up a song while standing in
the kitchen cooking dinner, or for Dad to line a song as he
stood in the mirror on Sunday morning, shaving and reading
to himself for Sunday school. Singing was the way we communicated,
the way we entertained ourselves, and the way we made sense
of the world."
Rose to Fame With BeBe
At age 17, Winans joined BeBe as a singer on the television
program Praise the Lord (PTL). The duo recorded their platinum-certified
album Lord Lift Us Up which they performed on PTL, allowing
them to break into the national Christian market. The rest
of the family continued on in the fields of music and religion
as well. Winans four oldest brothers--David, Ronald, Marvin
and Carvin-- would become the award-winning Gospel quartet
The Winans. Her brother Daniel would perform and record as
a solo artist as well. And from a small group of believers,
Marvin would also found the 3,000-member Perfecting Church
in Detroit and lead it as pastor.
In June of 1984, at age 19, Winans married Alvin Love, 16
years her senior. A friend of Ronald Winans, Love had met
his future wife when he joined the family for an evening of
bowling. Later, Love traveled with Ronald to North Carolina
for a visit to BeBe and CeCe, where they were working for
PTL. About a year later Love and Winans were married, and
Winans moved back to Detroit, leaving BeBe behind.
While settling into marriage, Winans completed beauty school
training and continued singing with BeBe a bit on the road.
She and Alvin, who was employed at Xerox, opened a beauty
salon, where her father worked as a barber. Alvin and her
father ran the salon for Winans while she continued performing
with BeBe.
In the spring of 1985, Winans gave birth to her first child,
Alvin III. By then the demand for her to record and perform
with BeBe had increased. Fortunately, Love was able to arrange
for a job transfer with Xerox to Nashville, the heart of the
Gospel- and Christian Contemporary music-recording industry
and where BeBe had already made his home. The couple together
developed Winans musical career as partners. In an article
in Marriage Partnership, Love and Winans explained that they
were able to grow closer in their marriage despite a hectic
newlywed period because they have always been true companions.
"The friendship made our marriage easier," Love declared.
Growing in marriage "boils down to whether you love God more
than you love yourself," Winans remarked.
In 1987 Winans and Love's daughter, Ashley Rose, was born.
Winans told the Family website that being a wife and mother
is her "favorite job." She learned from her parents that the
key to raising a family well is by putting God first and to
"make sure you're in church and your kids are in church."
Winans told the Women in Faith website, "When you put God
first, he gives you wisdom to balance the rest of your life."
Even while caring for a young family, Winans enjoyed increased
success with BeBe. The duo recorded their self-titled album
in 1987 and Heaven in 1988, which earned them heightened popularity
in the Gospel and Christian Contemporary sectors. Their 1991
work, Different Lifestyles, was embraced enthusiastically
by Christian audiences and was sought after in the secular
market as well -- particularly due to the chart-climbing tracks
"Addictive Love" and "I'll Take You There." Different Lifestyles
earned BeBe and CeCe a Grammy and Soul Train Award for best
Gospel album, as well as Dove Awards for Best Song ("Addictive
Love") and Group of the Year.
Went Solo, Founded Record Company
In 1995 Winans launched her solo career with the debut release,
Alone in his Presence. Showcasing covers of traditional hymns,
such as "Great Is Thy Faithfulness," "Blessed Assurance,"
and "I Surrender All," the album won Winans a Grammy for best
Gospel album. However, the downside of her solo success was
missing working with BeBe. "My favorite spot is singing next
to BeBe," Winans admitted to Essence in 1999, "...but I have
to say this: By our splitting, I've grown a whole lot, as
an artist, as a person, and I didn't realize I needed that."
She acknowledged that her earlier recording and performing
with BeBe had prepared her to handle music-industry business
matters well as a solo artist. However, Love came to assist
her in that arena when he left Xerox to become her business
manager. The young family of four then went on the road together
until travel became problematic. Though Winans and Love home-schooled
the children on the road -- and continued to do so even after
rooting themselves firmly at a home base--the children's extra-circular
activities, such as scouts and sports, made travel too difficult.
Later, Love gave up managing his wife's career so that the
couple's time together would not be dominated by business
talk. In 1999 Winans and Love founded their own label, Wellspring
Gospel, a subsidiary of their company, CW Wellspring Entertainment.
Winans told the Crosswalk website that founding the label
was something that she felt the industry needed. "We just
need more God-fearing companies to put out music," she said.
The same year, the new label released Winans' fourth solo
work, Alabaster Box, a gold-certified album of praise songs.
Selected: Five Grammy Awards, including Best Pop Contemporary
Gospel Album, Andrae Crouch (various artists), 1996, and Best
Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album, CeCe Winans, 2001; 18 Dove
Awards, including Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song, "Take
Me Back," Female Vocalist of the Year, Special Event Album,
Tribute: The Songs of Andrae Crouch (various artists), 1997,
Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song, "Up Where We Belong," Special
Event Album, God With Us: A Celebration of Christmas Carols
(various Artists), 1998, and Contemporary Gospel Album, CeCe
Winans, Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song, "Anybody Wanna
Pray?" 2002; three Soul Train awards including a Soul Train
Lady of Soul Award, Best Gospel Album, His Gift, 1999.
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CeCe Winans
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