Sunday, April 21, 2013

Barbara Fairchild~ "The Teddy Bear Song"




Very different video creation from me. I had not planned to upload this video but decided someone may enjoy my mess. LOL!

It is a great song regardless of the video.


Barbara Fairchild (born November 12, 1950) is an American country and gospel music singer who is best known for her hit 1973 country song "The Teddy Bear Song."

After the success of the song, she continued to have success on the country charts.


Barbara Fairchild
BarbaraFairchildAtHerDiner.jpg
Background information
Birth name Barbara Fairchild
Origin Knobel, Arkansas
Genres Country, Gospel
Occupations Singer, Songwriter
Years active 1969–present
Labels Columbia Records
Daywind Records
Associated acts Sharon White, Billy Walker, Connie Smith
Website Barbara Fairchild Official Site

 

Early life & beginnings in Nashville

Barbara started her career at a very young age singing country music.

She cut her very first single at only 15 years old. In 1963, she moved to St. Louis, MO, and by 1965, she was a regular on a local TV show and recorded for a local label, Norman Records, but none of her singles released were much more than regional hits.

In 1968, after high school graduation, she decided to follow her dream and moved to Nashville. She briefly signed with Kapp Records with no success. She also recorded briefly for MCA Records.

After this, she met producer Billy Sherrill, who had discovered another country singer Tammy Wynette.

He listened to Barbara's songs and decided that she was ready for a major record deal and he signed her with Columbia Records in 1969.

Her first single in 1969, "Love Is A Gentle Thing", was a minor hit as was her next single, "A Woman's Hand".

In 1970, she scored her first Top 40 hit with "A Girl Who'll Satisfy Her Man".

Between 1970 and 1972, Barbara scored 4 more Top 40 hits, the biggest of these being "Love's Old Song" and "Thanks For The Mem'ries".

The success of "Teddy Bear Song"

1973 would turn out to be the breakthrough year for Barbara as she released the biggest hit of her career with "Teddy Bear Song".

It not only became a number 1 hit on the country charts but also reached the pop charts as well peaking at No. 32. It was also nominated for a Grammy that year.

"Teddy Bear Song" spent 2 weeks at the No. 1 spot and became Fairchild's signature song. She followed up "Teddy Bear Song" very well with another smash hit with "Kid Stuff" that year which reached number 2 on the country charts and barely made the Top 100 on the pop charts at No. 95.

 In 1974, she scored another Top 10 with the song "Baby Doll". Between 1974 and 1977, she had several other major successes among these being "Standing In Your Line", "Little Girl Feelin'", "Mississippi" (originally recorded by the Dutch band Pussycat), "Cheatin' Is" and "Let Me Love You Once Before You Go".

But by 1978, her country success began to rapidly fade away as her singles began to show up in the lower regions of the charts.

In 1980, she signed with Paid Records where she recorded several duets with Billy Walker but none of these singles brought her back into the upper regions of the charts.

In 1982, Fairchild married the evangelical singer/songwriter Milton Carroll in San Antonio, Texas.

In 1986, she signed with Capitol Records in an attempt at a comeback but the single released "Just Out Ridin' Around" only reached No. 84 and would represent her last single to chart.

Source: Wikipedia.org



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Donnie/ Sinbad the Sailor Man

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Roy Orbison~ "Running Scared"


Roy Kelton Orbison (April 23, 1936 – December 6, 1988), also known by the nickname The Big O, was an American singer-songwriter, best known for his distinctive, powerful voice, complex compositions, and dark emotional ballads.

Orbison grew up in Texas and began singing in a rockabilly/country and western band in high school until he was signed by Sun Records in Memphis. His greatest success came with Monument Records between 1960 and 1964, when 22 of his songs placed on the Billboard Top Forty, including "Only the Lonely", "Crying", and "Oh, Pretty Woman".

His career stagnated through the 1970s, but several covers of his songs and the use of "In Dreams" in David Lynch's Blue Velvet revived his career in the 1980s.

In 1988, he joined the supergroup Traveling Wilburys with George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and Jeff Lynne and also released a new solo album. He died of a heart attack in December that year, at the zenith of his resurgence.

His life was marred by tragedy, including the death of his first wife and his two eldest sons in separate accidents.

Orbison was a natural baritone, but music scholars have suggested that he had a three- or four-octave range.[1]

The combination of Orbison's powerful, impassioned voice and complex musical arrangements led many critics to refer to his music as operatic, giving him the sobriquet "the Caruso of Rock".[2][note 1]

 Elvis Presley and Bono have stated his voice was, respectively, the greatest and most distinctive they had ever heard.[3]

While most men in rock and roll in the 1950s and 1960s portrayed a defiant masculinity, many of Orbison's songs instead conveyed a quiet, desperate vulnerability. He was known for performing while standing still and solitary, wearing black clothes and dark sunglasses which lent an air of mystery to his persona.

Orbison was initiated into the second class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987 by longtime admirer Bruce Springsteen. The same year he was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and the Songwriters Hall of Fame two years later.

Rolling Stone placed Orbison at number 37 on their list of The Greatest Artists of All Time, and number 13 on their list of The 100 Greatest Singers of All Time.[4]

In 2002, Billboard magazine listed Orbison at number 74 in the Top 600 recording artists.[5]


Roy Orbison
Roy Orbison 1965.jpg
Orbison in 1965
Background information
Birth name Roy Kelton Orbison
Born April 23, 1936
Vernon, Texas, U.S.
Died December 6, 1988 (aged 52)
Madison, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres Rock & roll, rockabilly, country
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, harmonica
Years active 1953–1988
Labels Sun, Monument, MGM, London, Mercury/PolyGram, Asylum, Virgin/EMI Records
Associated acts Traveling Wilburys, Teen Kings, The Wink Westerners, Class of '55
Website http://www.royorbison.com
Notable instruments

Early life

Roy Orbison was born in Vernon, Texas, the middle son of Orbie Lee Orbison, an oil well driller and car mechanic, and Nadine Shultz, a nurse.

Both of Orbison's parents were unemployed during the Great Depression. Searching for work, the family moved to Fort Worth during his childhood. He attended Denver Ave. Elementary School, until a polio scare prompted them to return to Vernon. Later, the family moved to Wink, Texas.

Orbison would later describe the major components of life in Wink as "Football, oil fields, oil, grease and sand",[6] and in later years expressed relief that he was able to leave the desolate town.[note 2]

All the Orbison children were afflicted with poor eyesight; Roy used thick corrective lenses from an early age. A bout with jaundice as a child gave him a sallow complexion, and his ears protruded prominently. Orbison was not particularly confident in his appearance; he began dyeing his nearly white hair black when he was young.[7]

He was quiet and self-effacing, remarkably polite and obliging—a product, biographer Alan Clayson wrote, of his Southern upbringing.[8] However, Orbison was readily available to sing, and often became the focus of attention when he did.

He considered his voice memorable if not great.[6] 

On his sixth birthday, Orbison's father gave him a guitar. Orbison later recalled that, by the age of seven, "I was finished, you know, for anything else"; music would be his life.[9] Orbison's major musical influences as a youth were in country music.

He was particularly moved by the way Lefty Frizzell sang, slurring syllables.[10] He also enjoyed Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers. One of the first musicians he heard in person was Ernest Tubb playing on the back of a flatbed truck in Fort Worth.

In West Texas, however, he was exposed to many forms of music: "sepia"—a euphemism for what became known as rhythm and blues (R&B); Tex-Mex; orchestral Mantovani, and zydeco. The zydeco favorite "Joli Blon" was one of the first songs Orbison sang in public.

At eight, Orbison began appearing on a local radio show. By the late 1940s, he was the host.[11]
In high school, Orbison and some friends formed The Wink Westerners, an informal band that played country standards and Glenn Miller songs at local honky-tonks, and had a weekly radio show on KERB in Kermit.[12]

When they were offered $400 to play at a dance, Orbison realized that he could make a living in music. Following high school, he enrolled at North Texas State College, planning to study geology so that he could secure work in the oil fields if music did not pay.[13]

He formed another band called The Teen Kings, and sang at night while working in the oil fields or studying during the day. Orbison saw classmate Pat Boone get signed for a record deal, further strengthening his resolve to become a professional musician.

His geology grades dropping, he switched to Odessa Junior College to consider becoming a teacher.
While living in Odessa, Orbison drove to Dallas to be shocked at the on-stage antics of Elvis Presley, who was only a year older and a rising star in the music scene.[14]

Johnny Cash toured the area in 1955, playing on the same local radio show as the Teen Kings and suggested that Orbison approach Sam Phillips at Sun Records, home of rockabilly stars including Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Cash.

In their conversation, Phillips told Orbison curtly, "Johnny Cash doesn't run my record company!"[note 3] but he was convinced to listen to a song composed by Dick Penner and Wade Moore in mere minutes atop a fraternity house at North Texas State, named "Ooby Dooby", that the Teen Kings had recorded on the Odessa-based Je–Wel record label.[6]

Phillips was impressed and offered the Teen Kings a contract in 1956.


1957–59: Sun Records and Acuff-Rose

The Teen Kings went to Memphis and although Orbison had grown weary of "Ooby Dooby", Phillips wanted to cut the record again in a better studio.

Orbison rankled quietly at Phillips' dictating what the band would play and how Orbison was to sing it.[15] However, with Phillips' production, the record broke into the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 59 and selling 200,000 copies.[6]

The Teen Kings toured with Sonny James, Johnny Horton, and Cash. Much influenced by Elvis Presley, Orbison performed frenetically, doing "everything we could to get applause because we had only one hit record".[16]

The Teen Kings also began writing more material such as "Go! Go! Go!" and "Rockhouse", generally in standard rockabilly style. The band ultimately split over disputed writing credits and royalties, but Orbison stayed in Memphis and asked his 16-year-old girlfriend, Claudette Frady, to join him.[note 4]

They stayed in Phillips' home, where they slept in separate rooms; in the studio Orbison concentrated on the mechanics of recording. Sam Phillips remembered being much more impressed with Orbison's mastery of the guitar than his voice;[17] a ballad Orbison wrote called "The Clown" was met with lukewarm appreciation at best.

Sun Records producer Jack Clement told Orbison after hearing it that he would never make it as a ballad singer.[18]

He found a modicum of success at Sun Records and found his way into Elvis Presley's social circle, once going to pick up a date for Presley in his purple Cadillac. Orbison sold "Claudette", a song he wrote about Frady, whom he married in 1957, to The Everly Brothers and it appeared on the B-side of their smash hit "All I Have To Do Is Dream".

The first and perhaps only royalties Orbison earned from Sun Records enabled him to make a down-payment on his own Cadillac. However, frustrated at Sun, Orbison gradually stopped recording, toured music circuits around Texas to make a living, and for seven months in 1958 quit performing completely.[19]

His car repossessed and in dire financial straits, he often depended on family and friends for funds.[20]

For a brief period in the late 1950s Orbison made his living at Acuff-Rose, a songwriting firm concentrating mainly on country music. After spending an entire day writing a song, he would make several demo tapes at a time and send them to Wesley Rose, who would try to find the musical acts to record them.

Orbison attempted to sell to RCA Victor songs he recorded that were written by other writers as well, working with and being completely in awe of Chet Atkins who had played guitar with Presley.

Orbison tried one song penned by Boudleaux Bryant called "Seems to Me". Bryant's impression of Orbison was "a timid, shy kid who seemed to be rather befuddled by the whole music scene. I remember the way he sang then—softly, prettily but almost bashfully, as if someone might be disturbed by his efforts and reprimand him."[21]

Playing shows late into the night, and living with his wife and young child in his tiny apartment, Orbison often sought refuge by taking his guitar to his car and writing songs there. Songwriter Joe Melson, an acquaintance of Orbison's, tapped on his car window one day in Texas in 1958 and the two decided to try to write some songs together.[22]

During three recording sessions in 1958 and 1959, Orbison and Melson recorded seven songs at RCA Nashville, with Atkins producing, but only two songs were judged worthy of release by RCA;[23] Wesley Rose maneuvered Orbison into the sights of producer Fred Foster at Monument Records.

Source:Wikipedia.org


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Donnie/ Sinbad the Sailor Man 

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Mickey Gilley~ "Room Full of Roses"

Uploaded on Jun 26, 2010
Copyright holder is respected & not infringed upon. For entertainment purposes only.



Mickey Leroy Gilley (born March 9, 1936) is an American country music singer and musician.

Although he started out singing straight-up country and western material in the 1970s, he moved towards a more pop-friendly sound in the 1980s, bringing him further success on not just the country charts, but the pop charts as well.

Among his biggest hits are "Room Full of Roses," "Don't the Girls All Get Prettier at Closing Time," and the remake of the Soul hit "Stand by Me".

He is also the cousin of Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl McVoy, Jim Gilley and Jimmy Swaggart.

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, Gilley is a licensed pilot, who holds an instrument rating with commercial pilot privileges for multi-engine airplanes, as well as private pilot privileges for single engine aircraft.[1]



Mickey Gilley
Mickey Gilley.png
Mickey Gilley in 1970
Background information
Birth name Mickey Leroy Gilley
Born 9 March 1936 (age 79)
Origin Natchez, Mississippi, United States
Genres Country
Pop
Countrypolitan
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals
piano
Years active 1964–present
Labels Playboy Records
Epic Records
Branson Records
Varèse Sarabande
Associated acts Jerry Lee Lewis
Carl McVoy
Charly McClain
Website www.gilleys.com



  Early life and the rise to fame

He was born to Arthur Fillmore Gilley and Irene (Lewis) Gilley[2] in Natchez, the seat of Adams County in western Mississippi.

For many years, Gilley lived in the shadow of his cousin, Jerry Lee Lewis, the rock and roll singer and musician in the 1950s.

The two as children grew up close by each other; Gilley lived just across the Mississippi River from Louisiana where Lewis grew up.

Gilley, Lewis, and another cousin Jimmy Swaggart played piano together as children. This is when Gilley first learned to play the piano.

Together, they all sang boogie-woogie and Gospel music, however, Gilley did not consider himself a professional singer until Jerry Lee hit the top of the charts in the 1950s.

Mickey cut a few singles on his own in late 1950s and played sessions in New Orleans with producer Huey Meaux. In 1958, he had a record "Call Me Shorty" on the Dot label and it sold well.

In the 1960s, he played at many clubs and bars, getting a following at the Nesadel Club in Pasadena, Texas.

In 1967, Paula Records released Gilley's first album called Down the Line and the following, he had a minor hit from the album called "Now I Can Live Again".

In 1970 Gilley opened up his first club in Pasadena, Texas, called Gilley's Club, replacing the club that was there called Shelley's Club.

The club later became known as the "world's biggest honky tonk."

He owned "Gilley's Club" with former owner of Shelley's Club, Sherwood Cryer, who asked Gilley to re-open the bar with him.

The club portion of Gilley's burned in 1990, and later the rodeo arena portion was razed in 2005 to make way for a school.

Recording career in the 1970s before Urban Cowboy

 

In 1974, Gilley recorded a song that originally was only supposed to be recorded for fun entitled "Room Full of Roses", written by Tim Spencer of the Sons of the Pioneers, which was a one-time hit for George Morgan.

The song was released by Astro Records that year, and then Playboy Records got a hold of the single, and got national distribution for "Room Full of Roses".

From then on, Gilley was signed to Playboy Records working with his long-time friend Eddie Kilroy.

"Room Full of Roses" became the song that put Gilley on national radar, hitting the very top of the Country charts that year, as well as making it to No. 50 on the pop music charts.

"Room Full of Roses" today remains as one of his signature songs.

He had a string of top tens and No. 1s throughout the 1970s.

Some of these hits were cover versions of songs, including the Bill Anderson song "City Lights", George Jones' "Window Up Above", and Sam Cooke's "Bring It On Home to Me".

He remained a popular Country act for the rest of the 1970s.

Other hits in the 1970s include "Chains of Love" (1977), "Honky Tonk Memories" (1977), "She's Pulling Me Back Again" (1977), and "Here Comes the Hurt Again" (1978).

These songs were a mix of honky tonk and countrypolitan that brought Gilley to the top of the charts in the 1970s.

However, a new breed of singers were entering Country Music.

These singers were Country-crossover artists that brought Country success with them onto the pop charts.

These singers include Glen Campbell, Crystal Gayle, Olivia Newton-John, Barbara Mandrell, and Kenny Rogers.

 In order to compete with these new breed of Country singers, Gilley had to sound like them and have that kind of country-pop success that these singers were having.

In 1978, Gilley signed on with Epic Records, when Playboy Records was bought by Epic. By 1979, his success was fading slightly.

Songs like "The Power of Positive Drinkin'", "Just Long Enough to Say Goodbye", and "My Silver Lining" just made the Top Ten.

  Later career

For his contribution to the recording industry, Mickey Gilley has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6930 Hollywood, Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.

He also turned his attention to Branson, Missouri, where he became one of the first to build a theater there, which was a soon-to-be boom town for the Country Music industry.

On March 2, 2002, Gilley, along with his two famous cousins Lewis and Swaggart, were inducted into the Delta Music Museum Hall of Fame in Ferriday, Louisiana.

Gilley also appeared on "Urban Cowboys", episode 9 in the third season of American Pickers, which aired originally on September 5, 2011.

In 2012, Gilley signed a Branson-based vocal group, Six, to a three-year lease to perform in his theater, with an option to buy it when the contract expires.[3]

Personal

Gilley's first wife was Geraldine Garrett, who he married in 1953 and divorced in 1961. She was the mother of three of his four children (Keith Ray, Michael, and Kathy). Geraldine died on March 6, 2010.

Gilley's second wife is the former Vivian McDonald, by whom he has another son, Gregory. They married in 1962.[2]

Gilley's children Kathy and Keith are in the music business.

In July 2009, Gilley was helping a neighbor move some furniture when he fell with the love seat falling on top of him, crushing four vertebrae.

The incident left him temporarily paralyzed from the neck down, but with some intense physical therapy he was able to walk again and return to the stage a year later.

However, he still lacks the hand coordination necessary to play the piano.[4]


Recording career in the 1970s before Urban Cowboy

In 1974, Gilley recorded a song that originally was only supposed to be recorded for fun entitled "Room Full of Roses", written by Tim Spencer of the Sons of the Pioneers, which was a one-time hit for George Morgan.

The song was released by Astro Records that year, and then Playboy Records got a hold of the single, and got national distribution for "Room Full of Roses".

From then on, Gilley was signed to Playboy Records working with his long-time friend Eddie Kilroy.

"Room Full of Roses" became the song that put Gilley on national radar, hitting the very top of the Country charts that year, as well as making it to No. 50 on the pop music charts.

"Room Full of Roses" today remains as one of his signature songs.

He had a string of top tens and No. 1s throughout the 1970s. Some of these hits were cover versions of songs, including the Bill Anderson song "City Lights", George Jones' "Window Up Above", and Sam Cooke's "Bring It On Home to Me".

He remained a popular Country act for the rest of the 1970s.

Other hits in the 1970s include "Chains of Love" (1977), "Honky Tonk Memories" (1977), "She's Pulling Me Back Again" (1977), and "Here Comes the Hurt Again" (1978).

These songs were a mix of honky tonk and countrypolitan that brought Gilley to the top of the charts in the 1970s.

However, a new breed of singers were entering Country Music.

These singers were Country-crossover artists that brought Country success with them onto the pop charts.

These singers include Glen Campbell, Crystal Gayle, Olivia Newton-John, Barbara Mandrell, and Kenny Rogers.

In order to compete with these new breed of Country singers, Gilley had to sound like them and have that kind of country-pop success that these singers were having.

In 1978, Gilley signed on with Epic Records, when Playboy Records was bought by Epic. By 1979, his success was fading slightly. Songs like "The Power of Positive Drinkin'", "Just Long Enough to Say Goodbye", and "My Silver Lining" just made the Top Ten.

Recording career in the 1980s with the success of Urban Cowboy

By 1980, Gilley decided to come up with a new sound, in order to bring him country crossover success so many other Country singers (including Eddie Rabbitt, Juice Newton, Kenny Rogers, and Dolly Parton) were having at the time.

His career was given a second go-around when one of his recordings was featured on the box-office-selling movie Urban Cowboy.

The song was the Country remake of the Soul standard "Stand by Me".

As the movie was becoming successful, so was "Stand by Me".

The song rose to the top of the Country charts in 1980, as well as hitting the Top 5 of the Adult Contemporary charts, as well as making the Pop Top 40.

The song turned Gilley into a pop-country crossover success, yet, despite it being his only Adult Contemporary hit, it did become one of his signature songs.

"Room Full of Roses", "True Love Ways," and "You Don't Know Me" also hit the Billboard Hot 100; additionally, "Bring It On Home To Me," "That's All That Matters" and "Talk to Me" bubbled under (at 101, 101 and 106, respectively).

A string of six number-ones on the Country charts followed the success of Urban Cowboy.

Other No. 1s include "True Love Ways", "A Headache Tomorrow (Or a Heartache Tonight)", "You Don't Know Me", and "Lonely Nights".

He never had any other Pop hits though.

In 1983, he had other hits, like "Fool For Your Love"; "Paradise Tonight", a duet with Charly McClain; and "Talk to Me" (not to be confused with the Stevie Nicks hit of the same name).

All these songs from 1983 were No. 1 hits for Gilley. In 1984, he had a hit, which just missed topping the Country charts called "You've Really Got a Hold On Me".

Another hit followed with a duet with Charly McClain, "Candy Man," and a solo hit with "Too Good To Stop Now", both of which made the Top 5 that year.

However, his stream of hits was beginning to start coming to an end.

Up until 1986, Gilley struggled to make it into the Top 10. He was only releasing two singles each year.

The year 1985 brought Top 10's with "I'm the One Mama Warned You About" and "You've Got Something On Your Mind", followed by a Top 5 with "Your Memory Ain't What It Used To Be", and a Top 10 with "Doo-Wah Days" in 1986.

"Doo-Wah Days" was Gilley's last Top 10 hit on the Country charts, as a new breed of George Strait-inspired Country singers called the "Traditionalists" were moving into Nashville, like Clint Black, Patty Loveless, Reba McEntire, and Randy Travis.

Not only was his chart success fading, but Gilley has a series of financial problems that led to the closing of his club in Pasadena, Texas.

In 1988, Gilley signed with Airborne Records, and released an album, Chasin' Rainbows, which resulted in his last Top 40 country hit in "She Reminded Me Of You," which made No. 23 that year.

Overall in his career, that spanned 15 years of chart success, Gilley has had 17 No. 1 hits on the Country charts.

Source: Wikipedia.org


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Donnie/ Sinbad the Sailor Man

Friday, February 1, 2013

Connie Smith~ "Once A Day"


Connie Smith (born Constance June Meador; August 14, 1941) is an American country music artist.

Active since 1964, Smith is widely considered to be one of the genre's best female vocalists. She has earned 11 Grammy award nominations, 20 top ten Billboard country singles, and 31 charting albums, three of which have hit number one.

On October 21, 2012, Smith became the 12th solo female vocalist and 19th woman to be elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame.[1]

Despite her success, Smith is often considered among the most underrated vocalists in country music history due to the decision not to pursue super stardom with the non-country general media market like such contemporaries as Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, and Tammy Wynette .[2]

Artists such as Parton,[3] George Jones,[4] and Chely Wright[5] have cited Smith as either one of the best vocalists in the music industry or their favorite female artist.


Connie Smith

Smith at the Grand Ole Opry in 2007
Background information
Birth name Constance June Meador
Born August 14, 1941 (age 71)
Elkhart, Indiana, U.S.
Genres Country, gospel
Occupations Singer, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1963–present
Labels RCA, Columbia, Monument, Epic, Warner Bros., Daywind, Sugar Hill
Associated acts Bill Anderson, Dallas Frazier, Nat Stuckey, Marty Stuart
Website www.conniesmithmusic.com



Early life

Constance June Meador was born in Elkhart, Indiana, the daughter of Hobart and Wilma Meador. Her parents were originally from West Virginia, and when Smith was five months old, the family returned there. They would later move to Dungannon, Ohio.[6]

Her father was abusive when she was a child, which would eventually cause her to suffer a mental breakdown when she was a teenager.[2] When she was seven, her mother divorced her father and remarried Tom Clark, who had eight children, along with the five additional children Smith's mother previously had.

The couple would eventually have two more children together, which in total added up to fourteen children, including Smith. As a child, Smith was surrounded by music. Her stepfather played mandolin, while her brother played fiddle, and her other brother played guitar.

On Saturday nights Smith would listen to the Grand Ole Opry radio broadcast.[6] While she was a teenager, Smith was injured in a lawnmower accident, which nearly cut her leg off. While in the hospital recovering, she was given a guitar and learned how to play different chords. Following the recovery, she began to perform in various local talent contests.[7]

 In 1959, Smith graduated from Salem-Liberty High School as the class salutatorian.[8]

In August 1963, she entered a talent contest at the Frontier Ranch country music park near Columbus, Ohio. Performing Jean Shepard's "I Thought of You", Smith won the talent contest and five silver dollars.[9]

That day at the park, country artist Bill Anderson heard Smith perform and was impressed by her voice. In January 1964, Smith ran into Anderson again at a country music package concert, where he invited her to perform with him on Ernest Tubb's Midnight Jamboree program in Nashville, Tennessee.[10]

After performing on the program, Smith returned to Nashville that May to record demos by Anderson that he planned on pitching to other country artists. Anderson's manager Hubert Long brought the demo recording to RCA Victor Records, where producer Chet Atkins heard it.

Also impressed by her vocals, Atkins offered Smith a recording contract, and she eventually signed with the label on June 24, 1964.[9][10]



Musical career

1964–1967: Breakthrough

Because Chet Atkins found himself too busy with other artists, Bob Ferguson acted as Smith's producer on her first sessions and would continue to work as her producer until her departure from RCA.

Smith's first session took place on July 16, 1964, where she recorded four songs, three of which were written by Bill Anderson.[11] One of the four songs recorded during the session entitled "Once a Day" (written by Anderson especially for Smith) was chosen to be Smith's debut single.

The song was rush-released as a single on August 1, 1964 and became Smith's breakout single, reaching No. 1 on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart on November 28 and remained at the number one position for eight weeks.[9]

"Once a Day" became the first debut single by a female country artist to reach number one. For nearly 50 years the single held the record for the most weeks spent at number one on the Billboard country chart by a female artist.[12]

RCA released Smith's self-titled debut album in March 1965 which also reached No. 1, spending seven weeks at the top of the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, and spending 30 weeks on the chart overall.[13]

In addition, the album also peaked at No. 105 on the Billboard 200 albums chart around the same time.[14] Dan Cooper of Allmusic called the production of the album to sound as if she was "a down-home Streisand fronting The Lennon Sisters."[15]

During this time, Anderson wrote a series of singles that would jump-start Smith's career in the country music industry.[16]

Among these songs was Smith's follow-up single to "Once a Day" released in early 1965 titled "Then and Only Then". The song peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard country chart. In addition, its B-side, "Tiny Blue Transistor Radio" (originally intended for Skeeter Davis), was also written by Anderson and peaked within the Top 25 on the same singles chart.[13]

In 1965 Smith officially became a member of the Grand Ole Opry radio show in Nashville, Tennessee. It had been a dream of Smith's to become a member since childhood, remembering saying at the age of five, "Someday I’m gonna sing on the Grand Ole Opry."[17]

In the mid-60s Smith was temporarily fired from the Grand Ole Opry for not being on the show for twenty six weeks out of the year, which was the required amount of weeks to stay a member at the time. In the 1970s, Smith was nearly fired from the show for testifying about Jesus Christ.[10]



Smith performing at the Grand Ole Opry, May 18, 2007
 
Bill Anderson wrote her next single with Bette Anderson, which was released in April 1965 called "I Can't Remember". The single peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart and No. 30 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 singles chart.[18]

In October 1965, Smith released her second studio album Cute 'n' Country.[18] The album featured both cover versions of other country songs and newer songs written by Bill Anderson. It included cover versions of songs by such artists as Jim Reeves, Webb Pierce, and Ray Price.[19]

Like her first album, Cute 'n' Country reached No. 1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and spent thirty weeks on the chart as well.[18]

Her next two singles, "If I Talk to Him" and "Nobody But a Fool (Would Love You)", both reached No. 4 on the Hot Country Singles chart and were issued on Smith's third album, Miss Smith Goes to Nashville (1966).[20]

The album peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart.[21] With her next few sessions, Smith's producer Bob Ferguson felt pressured from RCA headquarters in New York City to market Smith's sound toward more "middle-of-the-road" country pop material.

This change of sound was evident on her next two studio albums Born to Sing (1966) and Downtown Country (1967). Both albums featured full orchestras in the background and cover versions of singles by pop artists of the time.[22]

Spawned from Born to Sing and Downtown Country were the singles "Ain't Had No Lovin'" and "The Hurtin's All Over", which both peaked within the Top 5 on the Hot Country Singles chart.[2]

During this time, Smith also appeared in several country music vehicle films, where she performed many of her current hit recordings.[23]

In 1966, she appeared in the films Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar and The Las Vegas Hillbillys, the latter of which starred Jayne Mansfield. In 1967, she appeared in The Road to Nashville and Hell on Wheels.[24]

In February 1967, Smith released an album with RCA Camden entitled Connie in the Country, which mainly featured cover versions of country hits recorded at the time, including songs by Loretta Lynn and Buck Owens.[25]

In May 1967 Smith released an album of songs written entirely by Bill Anderson entitled Connie Smith Sings Bill Anderson. Smith later commented that, "...it was an honor, not a favor" to record an album of all Bill Anderson songs. Included in the album was covers of Anderson's own hits such as "City Lights" and "That's What It's Like to Be Lonesome". Also featured was Anderson's "I Love You Drops", which Smith wanted to release as a single; however Anderson wanted to release the song as his own single.

Smith stated, "We begged him for that song. But I cut 33 of his songs." It would later become a top ten hit for Anderson.[26]

Between 1966 and 1968, Smith had five top ten singles in a row on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart:[2] "I'll Come Running" (which Smith wrote herself), "Cincinnati, Ohio", "Burning a Hole in My Mind", "Baby's Back Again", and "Run Away Little Tears". "Cincinnati, Ohio" would later inspire the city of Cincinnati, Ohio to declare their own "Connie Smith Day" in June 1967.[26]

1968–1972: New directions

By 1968, Smith began to feel large amounts of pressure from the music business. The stress of touring, recording, promoting, and trying to keep a personal life led Smith to contemplate the possibility of suicide.

Although she thought about suicide, Smith later clarified that she never saw the idea as an actual possibility.[10] These pressures eventually led Smith to seek solace in both her family life and religion, becoming a Born Again Christian in the spring of 1968.[9][16]

 Although she did not give up her music career completely, Smith did balance it with a lighter schedule in order to avoid stress.[2]

In 1968 and 1969, Smith also began to record darker songs, including the single "Ribbon of Darkness", among others. Smith stated that it was reflection on her personal life, after recently divorcing her first husband Jerry Smith.[10]

Despite her recent personal troubles, Smith continued to enjoy the same commercial success she had before. In 1969 her next single "You and Your Sweet Love" (written by Bill Anderson) reached No. 6 on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart. This was followed by another top ten single in 1970, entitled "I Never Once Stopped Loving You", which reached No. 5 on the same singles chart.[2][27]

Between 1969 and 1970, Smith released two collaborative albums with American country artist Nat Stuckey called Young Love and Sunday Morning with Nat Stuckey and Connie Smith, the latter of which was a gospel album.[10]

Between 1970 and 1971, both the singles "Louisiana Man" and "Where Is My Castle" became top 20 hits on the Billboard Magazine country singles chart.[28]

In 1971 Smith's cover of Don Gibson's 1960 single "Just One Time" reached No. 2 on the Hot Country Singles chart.[28] An album of the same name was also released, which reached No. 20 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart.[29]

By the early 1970s, Smith started to incorporate more Gospel music into her regular studio albums and touring show.[2] Smith later stated that by incorporating more Gospel music into her secular recording career would make her leap into Christianity "count".[10]

In 1971, she released her third gospel album, Come Along and Walk with Me, which Smith later stated was her favorite gospel record out of the many she has made.[30]

In 1972, all three of Smith's singles reached the top ten on the Billboard Magazine Hot Country Singles chart: "Just for What I Am" (#5), "If It Ain't Love (Let's Leave It Alone)" (#7), and "Love Is the Look You're Looking for" (#8).[2]

In addition, three albums were also released to accommodate the success of the three singles, including a tribute to songwriter Dallas Frazier named If It Ain't Love and Other Great Dallas Frazier Songs.[20]

In November 1972, Smith announced she would depart from RCA Records, the same week that country artist Eddy Arnold also announced his departure.[27]

Smith later explained in an interview with Razor & Tie that she felt RCA showed a lack of respect for her and she felt she would have been happier recording elsewhere.[31]


Personal life

Smith has been married four times. In 1961, she married her first husband, Jerry Smith, a ferroanalyst at the Inter-Lake Iron Corporation in Beverly, Ohio. The couple had one child together on March 9, 1963 named Darren Justin.[8]

In the late 1970s, Darren went to Europe to become a missionary, and is currently a psychologist.[10][49] In the mid-1960s, the couple divorced and Smith married the guitarist in her touring band, Jack Watkins. They had a son, Kerry Watkins, before separating nearly a year after marrying.

Shortly afterward, Smith married telephone repairman Marshall Haynes. In the early 70s, the Haynes frequently toured with Smith on her road show. The couple had three daughters: Jeanne, Julie, and Jodi Haynes.[27]

After divorcing Haynes in the early 1990s, Smith stated that she would never marry again,[10] but on July 8, 1997 Smith married 1990s country artist Marty Stuart. The couple met while writing songs together for Smith's 1998 comeback album.

Thirty eight years before, Stuart first encountered her one night after attending her concert: "I met Connie when I was 12 years old. She came to the Indian reservation in my hometown to work at a fair.

She hasn't changed a bit. She looked great then and she looks great now."[50] Smith said that they have sustained their marriage by making "...the Lord the center ... and commit."[51]


Source: Wikipedia




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