Thursday, February 13, 2014

Dottie West ~ "Country Sunshine"






Dottie West (October 11, 1932 – September 4, 1991) was an American country music singer and songwriter.

Along with her friends and co-recording artists Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn, she is considered one of the genre's most influential and groundbreaking female artists.

Dottie West's career started in the early 1960s, with her Top 10 hit, "Here Comes My Baby Back Again," which won her the first Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance in 1965.

In the 1960s, West was one of the few female country singers working in what was then a male-dominated industry, influencing other female country singers like Lynn Anderson, Crystal Gayle, Barbara Mandrell, Dolly Parton, and Tammy Wynette.

 Throughout the 1960s, West had country hits within the Top 10 and 20.

In the early 1970s, West wrote a popular commercial for the Coca-Cola company, titled "Country Sunshine", which she nearly brought to the top of the charts in 1973.

In the late-70s, she teamed up with country-pop superstar, Kenny Rogers for a series of duets, which brought her career in directions it had never gone before, earning Platinum selling albums and No. 1 records for the very first time.

Her duet recordings with Rogers, like "Every Time Two Fools Collide," "All I Ever Need Is You," and "What Are We Doin' In Love," eventually became country-music standards.

In the mid-1970s, her image and music underwent a major metamorphosis, bringing her to the very peak of her popularity as a solo act, and reaching No. 1 for the very first time on her own in 1980 with "A Lesson in Leavin'".[citation needed]



Dottie West
Dottie West--1977 Cropped.jpg
Dottie West promotional photo from 1977.
Background information
Birth name Dorothy Marie Marsh
Born October 11, 1932
Origin McMinnville, Tennessee, U.S.
Died September 4, 1991 (aged 58)
Genres Country
Country pop
Occupations Singer-songwriter, actress
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1959–1991
Labels Starday, RCA Victor, United Artists/Liberty, Permian
Associated acts Jim Reeves, Don Gibson, Jimmy Dean, Kenny Rogers, Larry Gatlin, Steve Wariner, Shelly West

 

Early life

Childhood and teen years

Born Dorothy Marie Marsh outside McMinnville, Tennessee, she was the oldest of 10 children of Hollis and Pelina Marsh.[1]

The family soon moved to a bigger, better house, but like many rural families at the time, the family was still so poor they lacked electricity and indoor plumbing and had to make their own soap out of hog grease and lye.

To make ends meet, Pelina eventually opened up her own restaurant soon after, where Dottie often helped her.

Her childhood was marred by a dysfunctional relationship with her father, an alcoholic who abused her both physically and sexually.

The abuse continued until she was 17, when she finally reported him to the local sheriff.

She testified against her father in court, and he was sentenced to 40 years in prison.

After a brief stint living with the sheriff, she moved to McMinnville with her mother and siblings.

She also joined her high school band, "The Cookskins," where she sang and played guitar.

With the help of her mother's business and a local entrepreneur, she attained a music scholarship to attend college at Tennessee Technological University in Cookeville, Tennessee in 1951.

There she met her first husband, a steel guitarist named Bill West, with whom she had four children.[citation needed]

Career discovery

After graduation, Dottie West moved with her family to Cleveland, Ohio, where she began appearing on the television program Landmark Jamboree as one half of a country pop vocal duo called the "Kay-Dots" alongside partner Kathy Dee.

At the same time, West made numerous trips to Nashville in the hopes of landing a recording deal. In 1959, she and Bill auditioned for producer Don Pierce at Starday, and were immediately offered a contract.

The resulting singles West cut for the label proved unsuccessful, but she nonetheless moved to Nashville two years later.

There, she and her husband fell in with a group of aspiring songwriters, including Willie Nelson, Roger Miller, Hank Cochran, and Harlan Howard.

West often played hostess to these struggling songwriters, offering them a place to stay and eat. In return, they taught West about the structure of songwriting.

During this time, she also became a close friend of groundbreaking female country singer Patsy Cline and her husband Charlie Dick.[2]

West and Cline met backstage at the Grand Ole Opry and became friends; Cline would become one of West's biggest career inspirations.

As West related to Ellis Nassour in the 1980 book Patsy Cline, the greatest advice Cline ever gave her was, "When you're onstage sing to the audience with all of your heart and mean it.

Then cast a spell over them. If you can't do it with feeling, then don't." In those early days in Nashville, West and her family would often not have enough to pay the rent or buy the week's groceries, so Cline would hire her to help with her wardrobe and West's husband Bill to play in her band.

Cline even offered to help pay West's rent or buy groceries when she and Bill were struggling to stay in Nashville.

When Cline got into a car accident in June 1961, West was one of the first people to arrive on the scene, picking out a piece of glass from Cline's hair.

Shortly before her death, Cline gave West her scrapbook, filled with clippings and photos from over the course of her career. (West later gave the scrapbook to Cline's daughter, Julie.)

On March 5, 1963, Cline died in a plane crash along with Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins, and her pilot and manager Randy Hughes on her way home from a benefit in Kansas City, at Memorial Hall, a benefit West also attended.

West begged Cline to leave with her and Bill in the car, but Cline, anxious to get back home to her children, opted to fly instead.

In 1963, Jim Reeves recorded a selection of West's authorship and composition, "Is This Me," which became a No. 3 hit that year. As a result, Reeves helped West secure a recording contract with RCA Victor the same year.


Country music career

1963 – 1975: Country success

West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner," followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeves "Love Is No Excuse".

Also in 1964, she auditioned for producer Chet Atkins, the architect of the Nashville sound, who agreed to produce her composition "Here Comes My Baby".

The single made Dottie the first female country artist to win a Grammy Award (Best Female Country Vocal Performance), leading to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.[3]

"Here Comes My Baby" reached No. 10 on Billboard Magazine's Country charts in 1964.

After releasing the Here Comes My Baby LP in 1965, Dottie and producer Chet Atkins reunited the following year for Suffer Time, which generated her biggest hit yet in "Would You Hold It Against Me."

In 1967, the West/Atkins pairing issued three separate albums: With All My Heart and Soul (featuring the No. 8 smash "Paper Mansions"), Dottie West Sings Sacred Ballads, and I'll Help You Forget Her.

During the same period, she also appeared in a pair of films, Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar and There's a Still on the Hill.[1]

Dottie continued to have success as a solo artist during the late 1960s with such songs as "What's Come Over My Baby," and "Country Girl" which garnered her an offer to write a commercial based on it for Coca-Cola in 1970.

The soft drink company liked the result so much that it signed her to a lifetime contract as a jingle writer.[citation needed]

After the 1968 LP Country Girl, West teamed with Don Gibson for a record of duets, Dottie and Don, featuring the number two hit "Rings of Gold" released in 1969.

The album was her last with Atkins, and she followed it in 1970 with two releases, Forever Yours and Country Boy and Country Girl, a collection of pairings with Jimmy Dean.

Around the time of Have You Heard Dottie West, released in 1971, she left her husband Bill and, in 1972, married drummer Byron Metcalf, who was 12 years her junior.[4]

Due possibly in part to her recent stratospheric success with duets, her solo career suffered between 1969 and 1972. Most of her singles released at the time had failed even to peak in the Top 40, and her album sales were declining.

In 1973 West provided Coca-Cola with another ad, featuring a song called "Country Sunshine."

The popularity of the commercial prompted her to release the song as a single, and it became one of her biggest hits, reaching No. 2 on the country charts and No. 49 on the Pop charts.

The ad itself also netted a Clio Award for commercial of the year and she became the first country artist ever to win that particular honor.[citation needed]

"Country Sunshine" proved to be a solid comeback as she was nominated for two Grammys for the song, Best Country Song and Best Female Country Vocal Performance a year later.

After the release of House of Love in 1974, West notched a number of Top 40 hits including the Top 10 "Last Time I Saw Him,"[5] "House of Love," and "Lay Back Lover."

Before signing with United Artists Records in 1976, her final album for RCA, Carolina Cousins, was released in 1975.


1976 to 1985: Country-pop

In the late '70s, West's image underwent a huge metamorphosis; the woman who had once performed outfitted in conservative gingham dresses, and had originally refused to record Kris Kristofferson's "Help Me Make It Through the Night" because it was "too sexy," began appearing in spandex-sequined Bob Mackie designs.

(She had relented in late 1970 and recorded "Help Me Make It Through The Night" on the album Careless Hands, which was released in 1971.)

As the sexual revolution peaked, so did West's career.[1]

Under United Artists, West material changed from traditional country to up-tempo and slow-tempo Adult Contemporary-styled music.

 In 1977, West released her first album under United Artists, When It's Just You and Me.

The title track peaked at No. 19 on the country charts.

In 1977, she was recording the song "Every Time Two Fools Collide" when, according to legend, Kenny Rogers suddenly entered the studio and began singing along.

Released as a duet, the single hit number one, West's first; the duo's 1979 "All I Ever Need Is You" and 1981 "What Are We Doin' in Love" topped the charts as well, and a 1979 duets album titled Classics also proved successful.[5]

The duo proved popular enough to be booked in some of the biggest venues in the United States and other countries.

 In 1978 and 1979 they won the Country Music Association's "Vocal Duo of the Year" award, one of West's few major awards.


During the 1980s, West continued to generate solo hits, most notably "A Lesson in Leavin'."

Her popularity as a featured performer on the Grand Ole Opry endured as well.

"A Lesson in Leavin'" was West's first No. 1 solo hit.

It also peaked at No. 73 on the pop charts.

 A week before "A Lesson in Leavin'" reached the No. 1 spot, it was part of a historic Top 5 in country music, when all women held the Top 5 spots.

The album that included this song, Special Delivery, included two other Top 15 Country hits from 1980, "You Pick Me Up (And Put Me Down)" and "Leavin's for Unbelievers".

In 1981, West had a pair of back-to-back No. 1 hits, "Are You Happy Baby" and "What Are We Doin' in Love" with Kenny Rogers.

"What Are We Doin' in Love" was West's only Top 40 hit on the pop charts, reaching No. 14, becoming a major crossover hit in mid-1981. Her 1981 album Wild West was one of her biggest sellers.

As the 1980s progressed, West's popularity began to slip.[1] However, she did introduce herself to younger audiences as she lent her voice to Melissa Raccoon in the film The Raccoons and the Lost Star in 1983, a precursor to the later series produced by Kevin Gillis, The Raccoons.[6]

West's 1982 album High Time spawned her last Top 20 hit, "It's High Time," which reached No. 16.

The album's other single, "You're Not Easy to Forget," only peaked at No. 26. West's next two albums under Liberty Records, Full Circle and New Horizons, were both commercial failures. West's last Top 40 hit was 1983's "Tulsa Ballroom."

In 1984, West departed from her label and switched to the independent label Permian.

In 1981, West's daughter Shelly also made a career in country music; she is best known for her hit duet with David Frizzell, "You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma," which hit No. 1 that year.

As a solo artist, Shelly notched her own No. 1 in 1983 entitled "Jose Cuervo."

During the early and mid '80s, Shelly notched several more hits, including Top 10 solo hits "Flight 309 to Tennessee" and "Another Motel Memory." After getting married in the late 1980s, Shelly left the music business.

In 1980, Dottie West filed for divorce against Byron Metcalf, citing his drinking and infidelity.

In 1982, she was asked to play the lead role in the stage production of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.

That summer, she toured for four weeks in the stage production, performing across the country. She also had her own float in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade that year.

She also posed for a revealing photo in the men's magazine Oui.

In 1983, she married her soundman, Al Winters, 22 years her junior.

In 1984, she appeared in the play Bring it on Home.

In 1986, she made her screen debut in the science fiction film The Aurora Encounter.

In 1984, West released her final studio album, Just Dottie.

This album was not very successful; all three of the singles that it contained failed to chart in the Top 40.

Her last chart hit, "We Know Better Now", reached only number 53 in 1985.[1]


Death and legacy

On August 30, 1991, West was scheduled to perform at the Grand Ole Opry. Shortly after leaving her apartment at Nashville's Wessex Towers, West's car, a Chrysler New Yorker that Kenny Rogers had given her following the loss of her possessions at the IRS auction, stalled in front of the old Belle Meade theater on Harding Road.

West's 81-year-old neighbor, George Thackston, spotted her on the side of the road and offered to drive her to the Opry for her scheduled appearance.

Frantic about getting to the Opry on time, she had urged the man to speed.

He lost control of his vehicle while exiting at the Opryland exit on Briley Parkway at a speed of 55 miles per hour.

The exit ramp was posted for 25 miles per hour. The car left the ramp, went airborne and struck the central division.

West did not believe she was injured as badly as her neighbor had been and reportedly did not seem harmed to officers who responded to the scene.

She insisted he be treated first. West, though she thought she was unharmed, suffered severe internal injuries and proved to have suffered both a ruptured spleen and a lacerated liver.

Her spleen was removed that Friday and, the following Monday, she underwent two more surgeries to stop her liver from bleeding; these ultimately failed in that effort.

Doctors said that West knew the extent of her injuries and even visited with Kenny Rogers shortly before her last operation.

On September 4, 1991, during her third operation, West died on the operating table at 9:43 a.m., at the age of 58.

Her funeral was held at Christ Church on Old Hickory Boulevard.

There were 600 friends and family attendees, including Emmylou Harris, Connie Smith, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash and Larry Gatlin.

Her friend and fellow artist, Steve Wariner, whom she had helped make it to Nashville as a young man, sang "Amazing Grace".

A couple of weeks later, President George H.W. Bush, a longtime fan for whom she had performed at the White House, expressed his condolences at the CMA Awards.

Her hometown of McMinnville, Tennessee dedicated Highway 56 to her memory, naming it the Dottie West Memorial Highway.

Family Feud dedicated a week of shows in the fall of 1991 with the stars of the Grand Ole Opry in her memory.

George Thackston pleaded no contest to a charge of reckless endangerment arising out of the fatal accident.

On March 26, 1992, a judge sentenced him to 11 months and 29 days of probation, and also ordered him to complete an alcohol treatment program.

A blood alcohol test performed after the crash found that Thackston had a blood alcohol level of .08, which was not enough for him to be deemed intoxicated under Tennessee law.[8]

In 1995, actress Michele Lee, with the help of West's daughter Shelly, produced and starred in the made-for-TV biopic Big Dreams and Broken Hearts: The Dottie West Story that premiered on CBS.

Lee starred with Kenny Rogers, wore all of West's original clothes, including her famed Bob Mackie outfits, and even sang West's hits for the movie.

It proved to be one of the most successful TV movies in CBS history.[citation needed]

That same year, a biography book called Country Sunshine: The Dottie West Story was released, written by Judy Berryhill and Francis Meeker.

In 1999, country music singer Jo Dee Messina covered West's biggest solo hit, "A Lesson in Leavin'" for her album, I'm Alright.

The song stayed at No. 2 for seven weeks on the Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart that year, and was one of the year's biggest songs.

In 2000, West was also honored with the BMI Golden Voice Awards with the "Female Golden Legacy Award."

She was the second woman to win this type of BMI award, the first being her friend and mentor Patsy Cline.

Today, her hometown of McMinnville, Tennessee holds a "Dottie West Music Festival" each year in October.

West was ranked No. 23 in Country Music Television's 40 Greatest Women of Country Music in 2002.

Source:Wikipedia


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Donnie/ Sinbad the Sailor Man

Wanda Jackson~ "Right or Wrong"



 

Uploaded on Jan 4, 2008
Right or Wrong by Wanda Jackson
STUDIO VERSION
1961



Wanda Lavonne Jackson (born October 20, 1937) is an American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist who had success in the mid-1950s and '60s as one of the first popular female rockabilly singers and a pioneering rock and roll artist.[2]

She is known to many as the Queen (or First Lady) of Rockabilly.[3]

Jackson mixed country music with fast-moving rockabilly, often recording them on opposite sides of a record.[4]

As rockabilly declined in popularity in the mid-1960s, she moved to a successful career in mainstream country music with a string of hits between 1966 and 1973, including "Tears Will Be the Chaser for Your Wine", "A Woman Lives for Love" and "Fancy Satin Pillows".

She has enjoyed a resurgence of popularity among rockabilly revivalists in Europe and younger Americana fans, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as an Early Influence in 2009.[5][6]


Wanda Jackson
Wanda Jackson.jpg
Jackson in the mid-1950s
Background information
Birth name Wanda Lavonne Jackson
Also known as The Queen of Rockabilly
The First Lady of Rockabilly
Born October 20, 1937 (age 76)
Maud, Oklahoma
Genres Rockabilly, country, gospel
Occupations singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, Guitar, Piano
Years active 1954–present
Labels Decca Records
Capitol Records
CMH Records
Third Man Records
Associated acts Elvis Presley, Jack White, Imelda May, Hank Thompson, Billy Gray, Rosie Flores, Norma Jean, Adele[1]
Website WandaJackson.com

Early life

Wanda Jackson was born to Tom Robert Jackson and Nellie Vera Jackson (December 19, 1913 – January 14, 2011)[7][8] in Maud, Oklahoma, in 1937, but has lived much of her life in Oklahoma City.

Her father, a musician, moved the family to Bakersfield, California, during the 1940s in hopes of a better life.[4]

Two years later, he bought Jackson a guitar and encouraged her to play.

He also took her to see performances by Spade Cooley, Tex Williams and Bob Wills, which left a lasting impression.[2]

 In 1948, when she was 11, the family moved back to Oklahoma. In 1956, she won a talent contest which led to her own radio program, soon extended by 30 minutes.[9]

Jackson began her professional career while still attending Capitol Hill High School[10] in Oklahoma City after being discovered by Hank Thompson in 1954,[2][2] who heard her singing on local station KLPR-AM[7] and invited her to perform with his band, the Brazos Valley Boys.

She recorded a few songs on their label, Capitol Records, including "You Can't Have My Love", a duet with Thompson's bandleader, Billy Gray.

The song was released as a single in 1954 and reached No. 8 on the country chart.

Jackson asked Capitol to sign her, but was turned down by producer Ken Nelson who told her, "Girls don't sell records." Instead, she signed with Decca Records.[4

Career

1955–1959

After graduating from high school, Jackson began to tour with her father as manager and chaperon.[2]

She often shared the bill with Elvis Presley, who encouraged Jackson to sing rockabilly. Jackson briefly dated Elvis, during which time Elvis sometimes would coach Jackson how to play rock 'n' roll.[11]

 She was a cast member of ABC-TV's Ozark Jubilee in Springfield, Missouri from 1955 to 1960, and in 1956 she signed with Capitol, recording a number of singles mixing country with rock and roll. "I Gotta Know", released in 1956, peaked at No. 15.[9][12][13]

She continued to record more rockabilly singles through the decade with producer Ken Nelson. Jackson insisted that Nelson make her records sound like those of label mates Gene Vincent and The Blue Caps.

Nelson brought in many experienced and popular session players, including rock and roll pianist Merill Moore and the then unknown Buck Owens.

In the late 1950s, Jackson recorded and released a number of rockabilly songs, including "Hot Dog!

That Made Him Mad", "Mean, Mean Man", "Fujiyama Mama" (which hit No. 1 in Japan) and "Honey Bop."

The songs, however, were only regional hits.[14]

She toured Japan in February and March 1959.


1960–1964: The Queen of Rockabilly

In 1960, Jackson had a Top 40 pop hit with "Let's Have a Party", a song Presley had cut three years earlier.[9]

She was headlining concerts with her own band, which she dubbed The Party Timers. Prominently featured were pianist Big Al Downing and guitarist Roy Clark, virtually unknown at the time.[14]

Her country music career also began to take off with the self-penned "Right or Wrong", a No. 9 hit, and "In The Middle of a Heartache", which peaked at No. 6. Both songs also enjoyed top 40 pop success.[2]

The unexpected success of her records led Capitol to release a number of albums composed of her 1950s material, including 1960's Rockin' with Wanda and There's a Party Goin' On, which included "Tongue Tied" and "Riot in the Cell Block No. 9".

Her 1961 and 1962 albums, Right or Wrong and Wonderful Wanda, featured her two top ten country hits from 1961.

In 1963, Jackson recorded a final album titled Two Sides of Wanda, which included both rock and roll and country music, including a cover of Jerry Lee Lewis' "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On".[15]

The album earned Jackson her first Grammy nomination for Best Female Country Vocal Performance.


1965–1979: Country, gospel, and foreign language hits

By 1965, Jackson was focusing more exclusively on traditional country music as rockabilly declined in popularity, and had a string of Top 40 hits during the next ten years.

In 1966, she released two singles that peaked in the country top 20, "Tears Will Be the Chaser For Your Wine" and "The Box It Came In".[2]

In early 1965, Jackson was invited by the German distribution partner of Capitol Records, Electrola, to record in German.

Jackson's German language debut single, Santo Domingo (b/w Morgen, ja morgen), recorded at Electrola's studios in Cologne, peaked at No. 5 on the official German charts and at No. 1 on the charts of Germany's most influential teen magazine, Bravo.

In the first months following the chart success of Santo Domingo, Jackson also re-recorded some of her German songs in Dutch and Japanese.

The success of Santo Domingo prompted the recording of eight further German language singles until 1968, which were also released on an album, Made in Germany. A last German single was recorded in 1970.

In 1967, she recorded two albums, and released a string of singles during the next few years that often asserted a fiery and violent persona, including 1969's "My Big Iron Skillet", a top 20 hit which threatened death or assault for cheating on a spouse.[14]

In 1970 and 1971, she had her final top 20 country hits with "A Woman Lives for Love" (her second Grammy nomination) and "Fancy Satin Pillows".

Jackson was a premier attraction in Las Vegas.

She followed Kitty Wells' lead as only the second country female vocalist to have her own syndicated television show, Music Village, from 1967–68.[2]

In the early 1970s, at her children's request, Jackson and her husband began to regularly attend church and discovered Christianity.[14]

She began recording gospel songs and albums, including 1972's Praise the Lord on Capitol.[4]

After Capitol dropped her, she recorded a number of albums for small religious labels and set up evangelical church tours across the country with her husband.

Jackson wanted to record a mix of country and gospel music for her albums; however, religious labels were not interested.[15]

1980–1999: Return to rockabilly

In the early 1980s, Jackson was invited to Europe to play and record rockabilly material when revivalists sought her out.[2]

She regularly toured Scandinavia, England, and Germany during the decade.

Now embracing her rock 'n' roll history, Jackson released a 1984 album titled Rockabilly Fever (later issued by Rounder Records as Rock N' Roll Your Blues Away in 1986), her first secular album in a decade and her first recording of rock music in over twenty years.

Cyndi Lauper acknowledged Jackson's classic rockabilly records were a major influence and inspiration for her during this period and Jackson's fan following also included a new generation of country music female vocalists, among them Rosanne Cash, Pam Tillis, Jann Browne and Rosie Flores.[2]

Jackson recorded a duet with Browne on a 1987 album release by Browne and in 1995, she sang two duets with Flores on her 1995 album, Rockabilly Filly, and then embarked on a United States tour with her, her first American tour since the 1970s.[4]

Source:Wikipedia


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Anita Carter~ "All My Trials"





Uploaded on Dec 12, 2007
 Anita Carter recorded this traditional folk song in 1962. Anita was known as "The Appalachian Angel" and this tribute to her is a reminder to all of us that she truly possessed the voice of an angel.

Here's a bit of info from Wikipedia about this song:

"All My Trials" was an important folk song during the social protest movements of the 1950s and 1960s. It is based on a Bahamian lullaby that tells the story of a mother on her death bed, comforting her children, "Hush little baby, don't you cry./You know your mama's bound to die," because, as she explains, "All my trials, Lord,/Soon be over." 

The message - that no matter how bleak the situation seemed, the struggle would "soon be over" - propelled the song to the status of an anthem, recorded by many of the leading artists of the era.

The song is usually classified as a Spiritual because of its biblical and religious imagery.


Ina Anita Carter (March 31, 1933 – July 29, 1999), the youngest daughter of Ezra and Mother Maybelle Carter, was a versatile American singer who experimented with several different types of music and played upright bass with her sisters Helen Carter and June Carter Cash as The Carter Sisters.

The trio joined the Grand Ole Opry radio show in 1950 (Anita was 17 years old at the time), opened shows for Elvis Presley, and joined The Johnny Cash Show in 1971. 

As a solo artist, and with her family, Carter recorded for a number of labels including RCA Victor, Cadence, Columbia, Audiograph, United Artists, Liberty and Capitol.


Anita Carter
Anita Carter.jpg
Background information
Birth name Ina Anita Carter
Born March 31, 1933
Maces Spring, Virginia
Died July 29, 1999 (aged 66)
Hendersonville, Tennessee
Genres country, folk
Occupations singer-songwriter
Instruments Bass, vocals
Labels RCA Victor, Cadence, Columbia, Audiograph, United Artists, Liberty, Capitol
Associated acts Carter Family
The Carter Sisters
Johnny Cash
Hank Snow
Waylon Jennings

 

Biography

Born in Maces Spring, Virginia, she scored two Top Ten hits in 1951 with "Down The Trail of Achin' Hearts" with Hank Snow at No. 2 and "Blue Bird Island" at No. 4

She reached the Top Ten again in 1968 with "I Got You" with Waylon Jennings at No. 4

Other solo releases charted as well. Carter recorded two folk albums in the 1960s. In 1962, she recorded a song co-written by her sister June and Merle Kilgore called "Love's Ring Of Fire".

After hearing the record, her future brother-in-law, Johnny Cash, reportedly dreamed of hearing Mexican horns on the record and told Anita that if her song did not hit in five or six months he would record it "the way I feel about it." 

After the song failed to make the charts, Cash recorded it as "Ring Of Fire" in March 1963 with the horns and the Carter Sisters (along with Mother Maybelle). 

The revised song went on to gain wide international popularity and became one of the biggest hits of his career. She appears in a video clip, currently on YouTube, in a duet with Hank Williams, of his song 'I Can't Help It'.

 Marriages


Carter married fiddler Dale Potter in 1950 (they later divorced), session musician Don Davis in 1953 (divorced and then re-married), and Bob Wootton (lead guitarist for Johnny Cash's band The Tennessee Three) in 1974 (divorced). She had two children, Lorrie Frances and Jay Davis.

Death

Carter suffered from rheumatoid arthritis for many years, and the drugs used to treat it severely damaged her pancreas, kidneys, and liver.

She died on July 29, 1999, at the age of 66,[1] a year after eldest sister Helen and four years before middle sister June. 

She was under hospice care at the home of Johnny and June Carter Cash in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

Source:Wikipedia


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Brenda Lee~ "All Alone Am I" (Original Stereo)


 
Uploaded on Sept 27, 2011


Brenda Mae Tarpley (born December 11, 1944), known as Brenda Lee, is an American performer and the top-charting female vocalist of the 1960s. 

She sang rockabilly, pop and country music, and had 47 US chart hits during the 1960s, and is ranked fourth in that decade surpassed only by Elvis Presley, The Beatles and Ray Charles.[1]

She is best known for her 1960 hit "I'm Sorry", and 1958's "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree", a US holiday standard for more than 50 years.

At 4 ft 9 inches tall (approximately 145 cm), she received the nickname Little Miss Dynamite in 1957 after recording the song "Dynamite"; and was one of the earliest pop stars to have a major contemporary international following.

Lee's popularity faded in the late 1960s as her voice matured, but she continued a successful recording career by returning to her roots as a country singer with a string of hits through the 1970s and 1980s.

She is a member of the Rock and Roll, Country Music and Rockabilly Halls of Fame. She is also a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient. Brenda currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee.


Brenda Lee
Brenda Lee 1977.JPG
Brenda Lee in 1977
Background information
Birth name Brenda Mae Tarpley
Born December 11, 1944 (age 69)
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Genres Pop, rockabilly, country
Occupations Singer
Years active 1955–present
Labels Decca (1959–1969)
MCA Records (1970–1991)
Warner Bros. Records (1991–1993)
Telstar Records (1994–1996)
Bear Family Records (1997–1998)
MCA Nashville (1999–present)
Associated acts Connie Francis, Skeeter Davis, Ricky Nelson, Lesley Gore, Red Foley, Muruga Booker
Website Brenda Lee.com



Biography

Early years

Lee was born Brenda Mae Tarpley in the charity ward of Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia. She weighed 4 pounds 11 ounces at birth.

She attended grade schools wherever her father found work, primarily in the corridor between Atlanta and Augusta. Her family was poor, living hand-to-mouth; she shared a bed with her two siblings in a series of three-room houses without running water.

 Life centered on her parents finding work, their extended family, and the Baptist Church, where she sang solos every Sunday.[2]

Lee's father, Ruben Tarpley, was the son of a farmer in Georgia's red-clay belt. Although he stood 5 ft 7 inches, he was an excellent left-handed pitcher and spent 11 years in the U.S. Army playing baseball.

Her mother, Annie Grayce Yarbrough, had a similar background of an uneducated working-class family in Greene County, Georgia.

Lee was a musical prodigy. Although her family did not have indoor plumbing until after her father's death, they had a battery-powered table radio that fascinated Brenda as a baby.

By the time she was two, she could whistle the melody of songs she heard on the radio.[3]

Both her mother and sister remembered taking her repeatedly to a local candy store before she turned three; one of them would stand her on the counter and she would earn candy or coins for singing.


1956 publicity photo

Child performer

Lee's voice, pretty face and stage presence won her wider attention from the time she was five years old.

At age six, she won a local singing contest sponsored by local elementary schools.

The reward was a live appearance on an Atlanta radio show, Starmakers Revue, where she performed for the next year.

Her father died in 1953, and by the time she turned ten, she was the primary breadwinner of her family through singing at events and on local radio and television shows.

During that time, she appeared regularly on the country music show "TV Ranch" on WAGA-TV in Atlanta; she was so short, the host would lower a stand microphone as low as it would go and stand her up on a wooden crate to reach it.

 In 1955, Grayce Tarpley was remarried to Buell "Jay" Rainwater, who moved the family to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he worked at the Jimmy Skinner Music Center.

Lee performed with Skinner at the record shop on two Saturday programs broadcast over Newport, Kentucky radio station WNOP.

The family soon returned to Georgia, however, this time to Augusta, and Lee appeared on the show The Peach Blossom Special on WJAT-AM in Swainsboro.

 

Brenda Lee at The Granada, Sutton, April 1962

National exposure and stardom

Her break into big-time show business came in February 1955, when she turned down $30 to appear on a Swainsboro radio station in order to see Red Foley and a touring promotional unit of his ABC-TV program Ozark Jubilee in Augusta.

An Augusta DJ persuaded Foley to hear her sing before the show. Foley was as transfixed as everyone else who heard the huge voice coming from the tiny girl and immediately agreed to let her perform "Jambalaya" on stage that night, unrehearsed.

Foley later recounted the moments following her introduction:
I still get cold chills thinking about the first time I heard that voice. One foot started patting rhythm as though she was stomping out a prairie fire but not another muscle in that little body even as much as twitched. And when she did that trick of breaking her voice, it jarred me out of my trance enough to realize I'd forgotten to get off the stage. There I stood, after 26 years of supposedly learning how to conduct myself in front of an audience, with my mouth open two miles wide and a glassy stare in my eyes.
 

The audience erupted in applause and refused to let her leave the stage until she had sung three more songs.

On March 31, 1955, the 10-year-old made her network debut on Ozark Jubilee in Springfield, Missouri. Although her five-year contract with the show was broken by a 1957 lawsuit brought by her mother and her manager,[4] she made regular appearances on the program throughout its run.

Less than two months later—on July 30, 1956—Decca Records offered her a contract, and her first record was "Jambayala" backed with "Bigelow 6–200".

Lee's second single featured two novelty Christmas tunes: "I'm Gonna Lasso Santa Claus", and "Christy Christmas". Though she turned 12 on December 11, 1956, both of the first two Decca singles credit her as "Little Brenda Lee (9 Years Old)."

Neither of the 1956 releases charted, but her first issue in '57, "One Step at a Time", written by Hugh Ashley, became a hit in both the pop and country fields. Her next hit, "Dynamite", coming out of a 4 ft 9 inch frame, led to her lifelong nickname, Little Miss Dynamite.

Lee first attracted attention performing in country music venues and shows; however, her label and management felt it best to market her exclusively as a pop artist, the result being that none of her best-known recordings from the 1960s were released to country radio, and despite her country sound, with top Nashville session people, she did not have another country hit until 1969, and "Johnny One Time".

 Biggest hits: 1958–1965

Lee achieved her biggest success on the pop charts in the late 1950s through the mid-1960s with rockabilly and rock and roll-styled songs.

Her biggest hits included "Jambalaya", "Sweet Nothin's" (No. 4, written by country musician Ronnie Self), "I Want to Be Wanted" (No. 1), "All Alone Am I" (No. 3) and "Fool No. 1" (No. 3).

She had more hits with the more pop-based songs "That's All You Gotta Do" (No. 6), "Emotions" (No. 7), "You Can Depend on Me" (No. 6), "Dum Dum" (No. 4), 1962's "Break It to Me Gently" (No. 2), "Everybody Loves Me But You" (No. 6), and "As Usual" (No. 12).

Lee's total of nine consecutive top 10 Billboard Hot 100 hits from "That's All You Gotta Do" in 1960 through "All Alone Am I" in 1962 set a record for a female solo artist that was not equalled (and later broken) until 1986 (by Madonna).

The biggest-selling track of Lee's career was a Christmas song.

 In 1958, when she was 13, producer Owen Bradley asked her to record a new song by Johnny Marks, who had had success writing Christmas tunes for country singers, most notably "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" (Gene Autry) and "A Holly, Jolly Christmas" (Burl Ives).

Lee recorded the song, "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree", in July with a prominent twanging guitar part by Hank Garland and raucous sax soloing by Nashville icon Boots Randolph.

Decca released it as a single that November, but it sold only 5,000 copies, and did not do much better when it was released again in 1959.

However, it eventually sold more than five million copies.

In 1960, she recorded her signature song, "I'm Sorry", which hit No. 1 on the Billboard pop chart.

It was her first gold single and was nominated for a Grammy.

Even though it was not released as a country song, it was among the first big hits to use what was to become the Nashville sound – a string orchestra and legato harmonized background vocals.

"Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" got noticed in its third release a few months later, and sales snowballed; the song remains a perennial favorite each December and is the record with which she is most identified by contemporary audiences.

Her last top ten single on the pop charts was 1963's "Losing You" (No. 6), while she continued to have other chart songs such as her 1966 song "Coming On Strong" and "Is It True?" in 1964.

The latter, featuring Big Jim Sullivan, Jimmy Page on guitars, Bobby Graham on drums, was her only hit single recorded in London, England, and was produced by Mickie Most (but the slide guitar and background singers were overdubbed in Nashville).

It was recorded at Decca Records' number two studio at their West Hampstead complex, as was the B-side, a version of Ray Charles' 1959 classic cut, "What'd I Say?", which wasn't released in America. 
 
Brenda Lee in 1965

 Source:Wikipedia


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