(The Root) -- Marva Whitney, a funk singer with a powerful, passionate
voice who toured and collaborated with James Brown, died on Saturday
at age 68 from complications stemming from pneumonia, her manager told
The Root. Brown had nicknamed her Soul Sister No. 1.

A message on a Facebook page dedicated to Whitney reads, "She left us
with a legacy that will shine forever." DJ Pari of Virginia-based
SoulPower Inc. -- which, according to its Facebook page, is an
"internationally operating artist management and concert booking
agency" -- wrote in an email that Whitney's surviving relatives
include her mother, several siblings, two children and grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are pending, Pari added. From Billboard:

Whitney is best known for her version of "It's My Thing," which
cracked the Hot 100 in 1969, and for the widely sampled track "Unwind
Yourself," which can be heard on songs by The 45 Kings, DJ Kool and
Mac Miller, among others.

Born Marva Ann Manning, the singer began her career singing gospel
music in Kansas City but found fame when she reluctantly joined the
James Brown Revue in 1967 after turning down singing jobs with Bobby
Bland and Little Richard.

"There was nothing here in Kansas City, so I had to make a decision at
that age," she said in a 2006 interview on We Funk Radio. "I knew this
wasn't what I wanted, because I was still playing for the church. But
I made the decision and went to Cincinnati and signed with King
Records."

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