Susan Raye (born October 8, 1944, Eugene, Oregon) is an
American country music singer. She enjoyed great popularity during the early
and mid-1970s and chalked up seven top 10 and nineteen top 40 country hits, most
notably the song "L.A. International Airport", an international
crossover pop hit in 1971.
Susan Raye first began singing with a high-school rock
group, but after the band called it quits, she auditioned for a local country
station. Not only did she begin performing on the radio, she also landed work
as a disc jockey, eventually becoming the host of a Portland TV program called
Hoedown.
It was at one of Raye's performances at an area nightclub
where she met Jack McFadden, Buck Owens' manager. McFadden was so impressed
with her vocal talents that he persuaded Owens to fly her to his home in
Bakersfield, CA, for an audition. Owens immediately offered Raye a slot on an
upcoming tour, and in 1969, she cut her first record, "Maybe If I Close My
Eyes (It'll Go Away)." Her next record, a cover of Jackie DeShannon's pop
smash "Put a Little Love in Your Heart," was also her first Top 30
hit. At about the same time, she began a nine-year stint as a featured
performer on the program Hee Haw.
Raye issued her first solo LP, One Night Stand, in 1970; the
single "Willy Jones" became her first Top Ten hit, lending its name
to the title of her follow-up album the next year. Also Susan’s first sessions
as Buck Owens's duet partner were released in 1970. The albums We're Gonna Get
Together and The Great White Horse were
Top 20 hits that year, as were the title tracks to each album and a third
single, "Togetherness". The song "The Great White Horse"
peaked at No. 8 and was the most successful Owens-Raye duet.
Raye's biggest year as a solo artist came in 1971, when she
issued three consecutive Top Ten hits: "L.A. International Airport",
"Pitty, Pitty, Patter", and "(I've Got A) Happy Heart". The
title track of 1972's My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own also reached the Top Ten.
Although not her biggest country hit, "L.A.
International Airport" became Raye's signature song, peaking at No. 9 on
the Billboard Country Chart and a minor hit on the Billboard Pop Top 100,
peaking at No. 54. The record was a major international pop hit in several
countries, however, enjoying its greatest success in New Zealand where it hit
No. 1 for two weeks,
and in Australia where it hit No. 2 and ranked as the No. 5 best-selling pop record of the year, outselling Lynn Anderson's country crossover international smash "Rose Garden (in Australia only). "Airport" did well in the Record World "Non-Rock" chart, while strangely failing to appear in Billboard's comparable "Easy Listening" Top 40.
and in Australia where it hit No. 2 and ranked as the No. 5 best-selling pop record of the year, outselling Lynn Anderson's country crossover international smash "Rose Garden (in Australia only). "Airport" did well in the Record World "Non-Rock" chart, while strangely failing to appear in Billboard's comparable "Easy Listening" Top 40.
Susan Raye became the first woman to become a major country
artist without recording in Nashville, a feat previously accomplished only by
male stars like Owens and Merle Haggard. Raye was nominated for five Academy of
Country Musicawards, three times as "Top Female Vocalist". Raye
married Owens' drummer Jerry Wiggins in 1972.
After hitting number nine in 1974 with "Whatcha Gonna
Do With a Dog Like That" and scoring a success with Owens on a cover of
the Mickey & Sylvia classic "Love Is Strange," Raye's hitmaking
days were largely over; after issuing the 1976 LP Honey, Toast and Sunshine,
she left Owens' tutelage to release a self-titled album in 1977. A year later,
she retired in order to raise her six kids and returned to college to receive a
bachelor's degree in psychology and a master's degree in education school counselling.
Being a devoted Christian, she has had a successful career since as a Christian
psychologist.
In 1985, she came out of exile to release the album Susan
Raye: There and Back, which generated the minor hit single "I Just Can't
Take the Leaving Anymore."
Raye returned to LAX on August 6, 2003 during the 75th
anniversary year of LAX. She performed the song with a Bakersfield band and
backup vocalists for an enthusiastic outdoor crowd from the airport community.
(Compiled from bio’s from Jason Ankeny @ All Music &
Wikipedia)
For “16 Greatest Hits - Susan Raye (1999)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www53.zippyshare.com/v/61888568/file.html
01 Put A Little Love In Your Heart
02 One Night Stand
03 Willy Jones
04 L.A. International Airport
05 Pitty Pitty Patter
06 I've Got A Happy Heart
07 A Song To Sing
08 My Heart Has A Mind Of It's Own
09 Wheel Of Fortune
10 Love Sure Feels Good In My Heart
11 Cheating Game
12 Plastic Trains Paper Planes
13 When You Get Back From Nashville
14 Stop The World And Let Me Off
15 You Can Sure See It From Here
16 Whatcha Gonna Do With A Dog Like That
A big thank you to Maria @ El Rancho blog for active link.
She was my boyhood fantasy lady along with asian ladies from the Streets of San Francisco. Have an estranged spouse named Mai whose Amerasian from Vietnam. I love her very much hurting me badly she is not with me. Mai looks exactly like what I imagined a beautiful lady should look like. We married in 1999, divorced in 2002, never forgot her through 9 years of separation, kept praying for her, reconciled in March of 2011, now estranged from her with things to resolve. I still love her in spite of everything that has happened. Pray for us.
ReplyDeleteCan you re up this please?
ReplyDeleteHello Stefano, Here's Susan.......
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/13045410/Susan_Raye_-_Hits.rar.html
thaaanks
ReplyDeleteI'm stull a fan & would like to meet her. Ed
ReplyDelete