Wilma Burgess (born Wilma Charlene Burgess; June 11, 1939
– August 26, 2003) was an American country music singer. She rose to fame in
the mid-1960s and charted fifteen singles on the Billboard C&W charts
between 1965 and 1975. She enjoyed a clutch of country hits during the latter
part of the 1960s before abruptly retiring from the music business. The
possessor of a warm and appealing voice, she was an underrated song stylist who
was at her best when handling romantic ballads, most notably her soulful
rendition of Bob Montgomery's "Misty Blue" (1967).
A native of Orlando, Florida, she had little interest in
country music until, as a student in the 1950s, she attended an Eddy Arnold
concert and found herself drawn to the emotional honesty of his performance. In
1960 she completed her studies at Stetson
University, in DeLand, Florida, where she had majored in physical education, and travelled to Nashville at the suggestion of a songwriter friend who believed that her vocal talents would help sell his songs to the city's music publishers.
University, in DeLand, Florida, where she had majored in physical education, and travelled to Nashville at the suggestion of a songwriter friend who believed that her vocal talents would help sell his songs to the city's music publishers.
One of these publishers, Charlie Lamb, of Sound Format,
was impressed by her voice and introduced her to one of the creators of the
famed "Nashville Sound", the producer Owen Bradley. In 1962 she cut a
double-sided single, "Confused" / "Something Tells Me", for
United Artists, but it made little impact on the charts.
Two years later, Bradley signed her to the Decca label
and she recorded a series of minor singles before finally breaking into the Top
Ten with a fine version of Ray Griff's "Baby" (1965). She followed
this with "Don't Touch Me" (1966) and then made it into the Top Five
with "Misty Blue". It became her signature song and was later covered
not only by her original inspiration, Eddy Arnold, but also by the soul singer
Dorothy Moore who, in 1976, took it into the upper reaches of both the pop and
R&B charts.
In 1965 Burgess purchased the Nashville home that had
belonged to Patsy Cline; the purchase was made from Cline's widower Charlie
Dick. Burgess had attended Cline's 30th birthday party and housewarming at the
home six months before Cline's fatal accident. Burgess appeared in the 1966
film The Las Vegas Hillbillys singing "Baby". The film which starred
Jayne Mansfield was a B-movie that showcased several top C&W performers. Burgess
also purchased Jim Reeves' touring bus "Big Blue" in 1969.
She enjoyed further hits with "Fifteen Days",
"Tear Time" (both 1967) and "Parting (Is Such Sweet
Sorrow)" (1969), and released five albums for Decca before then signing
with Shannon Records. Operated by Jim Reeves' widow, Mary Reeves Davis, the
label proved a supportive if not particularly successful musical home for
Burgess. She entered the Top Twenty only once more, scoring with "Wake Me
Into Love" (1974), a duet with a former member of Jim Reeves' band, Bud
Logan. In 1975 Burgess left Shannon signing with RCA Records where her
uneventful tenure lasted until 1978.
In 1982 she ended her recording career with the album
Could I Have This Dance on 51West a Columbia Records label. Later in the decade
Burgess opened the Hitching Post - described as Nashville's first women-only
bar - where she regularly performed. Burgess also worked on and off with Mary
Reeves running the Jim Reeves Museum in Nashville.
Unable to handle the pressures associated with the music
business, Wilma Burgess retired during the mid-Seventies and eventually opened
Nashville's first women-only bar. In 1993 she returned briefly to the spotlight
when, having bought Patsy Cline's former home, she discovered rare tapes of the
singer's early television appearances in her attic.
Burgess was openly a lesbian and preferred to record love
songs with no gender-specific references. She did sometimes agree to record
songs such as "Ain't Got No Man" on condition that her producer Owen
Bradley let her record a song she liked but he didn't.
Wilma Burgess died unexpectedly Monday, August 26, 2003
at 4:05 a.m. at Centennial Medical Centre in Nashville, after suffering a
massive heart attack. She was 64, and had been hospitalized for a week for
tests, and had seemed to be on the road to recovery
(Edited from Wikipedia &
Paul Wadey @ theIndependent)
For “Wilma Burgess – Tear Time” (1968) / “Misty Blue” (1966) go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/10080061/Wima_Burgess_-_2on1.rar.html
01 - Tear Time
02 - Am I That Easy To Forget
03 - Too Much Of You
04 - My Sunshine’s Gone
05 - This Is It
06 - Yesterday
07 - I'm Still Not Over You
08 - (How Can I Write On Paper) What I Feel In My Heart
09 - The Storm
10 - Release Me
11 - I'll Never Find Another You
12 - My Mind Is A Bridge For Your Memory
01 Misty Blue
02 Two Lives Rivers Of Tears
03 The Tips Of My Fingers
04 Ain't Got No Man
05 Touch My Heart
06 Four Walls
07 Making Plans
08 Is It Really Over
09 If The Whole World Stopping Loving
10 When You're Not Around
11 Fifteen Days
12 There Goes My Everything
A big thank you to JackG73 @ loadsamusics forum for original posts.
More great songs. Thanks Bob. Keep bopping.
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