Raelene Claire Claussen, known professionally as Sue Raney (born June 18, 1940, in McPherson, Kansas[1]) is an American jazz singer. Raney was signed by Capitol Records in 1957 at age 17. That same year, she recorded her debut album, When Your Lover Has Gone, produced by Nelson Riddle.[2][3]
Biography
Raney was born to Richard LeRoy Claussen (1913–1967) and Mildred Augusta Vonderfecht (maiden; 1915–2005). She began singing at age four, and, encouraged by her mother, began singing professionally before becoming a teenager. When she was nearly 14, she joined Jack Carson's radio show in Los Angeles in 1954 and later worked on television as the singer in Ray Anthony's band.[4] In 1960, Raney recorded, "Biology" – Bill Holman directing – which became Capitol's first single elevated to national promotion after introducing it in regional pre-testing that same year.[5] Raney was featured with the Stan Kenton orchestra in 1962 on the hour-long television special Music of 1960s.
Raney, on September 2, 1966, married Edward Yelin (né Edward Marsey Levey; 1928–2015), who, at one time, had been an A&R Vice President for Capitol Records. Yelin had been one of her managers. Yelin was a former jazz trumpeter. After divorcing Yelin in the 1980s, she remarried, to Carmen Fanzone, a trumpeter and former major league baseball player for the Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs. From her first marriage, she has two stepsons, Mark Raymond Yelin (born 1953) and Lee Philip Yelin (born 1956).
Ridin' High with Bob Florence (Discovery, 1984), musicians include her new husband, Carmen Fanzone (fluglehorn), Bob Magnusson (bass), and Nick Ceroli (drums)
Zhito, Lee (June 6, 1960). "Music as Written: Hollywood". Billboard (column). Vol. 72, no. 23. pp. 18 & 21. Retrieved December 4, 2020 – via Google Books. Single had passed the test in the Southeastern region, covering the Miami, Atlanta, Memphis and New Orleans markets. First single to jump from its regional testing grounds to national distribution was Sue Raney's 'Biology.'