Earl Thomas Conley (October 17, 1941 – April 10, 2019) was an American country music singer-songwriter. Between 1980 and 2003, he recorded ten studio albums, including seven for RCA Records. In the 1980s and into the 1990s, Conley also charted more than 30 singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, of which 18 reached Number One. His 18 Billboard Number One country singles during the 1980s were the third most by any artist in any genre during that decade, after Alabama and Ronnie Milsap.
Conley was born in Portsmouth, Ohio, to Glenna Ruth (née Davis; 1918–2002) and Arthur Conley (1910–1989). When he was 14, his father lost his job with the railroad, forcing the young boy to move in with his older sister in Jamestown, Ohio. He was offered a scholarship to an art school, but rejected it in favor of joining the U.S. Army. While in the Army, he became a member of a Christian-influenced trio, where his musical talent and vocal ability first became apparent. He then decided to consider performing as a serious career option. He shifted more deeply into the classic country sounds of artists such as Merle Haggard and George Jones.
During this period he first tried his hand at songwriting. In 1968, after his honorable discharge from the Army, he began commuting from Dayton to Nashville. In 1973 while in Nashville, he met Dick Heard, who produced country music singer Mel Street. This meeting eventually led to the Conley-Heard collaboration on the song "Smokey Mountain Memories", which made the top 10 for Street. After his discharge from the military, Conley had been playing in clubs in Nashville at night, supporting himself by working blue-collar jobs during the day.
In his early days before fame, Conley worked in a steel mill near Portsmouth, Ohio. Until one day he made the bold decision to pack up and move to Nashville. Feeling that he was not making any progress in Nashville, Conley moved to Huntsville, Alabama. There, he met record producer Nelson Larkin, who helped him sign with independent record label GRT in 1974. Conley released four singles on that label, none of which became hits. At the same time, he was selling songs that he had written to other artists, including Conway Twitty and Mel Street, who were having much success with them.
In 1977, Conley signed with Warner Bros., and in early 1979 he had his first Top 40 hit, "Dreamin's All I Do" but none of the rest of his Warner singles became big hits, and he left the label at the end of 1979. After spending six months reassessing his career and musical direction, he signed to Sunbird Records and began working with Nelson Larkin again. Conley's first single for Sunbird, "Silent Treatment," was an immediate Top Ten hit late in 1980, and it was quickly followed by the number one "Fire and Smoke" early in 1981. Following his breakthrough success, RCA signed Conley to a long-term deal. "Tell Me Why," his first single for the label, reached number ten in late 1981, followed shortly afterward by the number 16 "After the Love Slips Away."
In the summer of 1982, "Heavenly Bodies" kicked off a string of 21 straight Top Ten hits that ran for seven years. During that time, he had a remarkable 17 number one hits, including a record-setting four number one singles from 1984's Don't Make It Easy for Me -- it was the first time any artist in any genre had four number one hits from the same album. Though he had some financial and vocal problems during the mid-'80s, the hits never stopped coming during the entire decade. In 1983 he was nominated for multiple Grammy Awards for his song "Holding Her and Loving You". In 1986, Conley was credited with breaking down country music barriers in his duet with pop/R&B singer Anita Pointer of the Grammy-winning Pointer Sisters. Their single, "Too Many Times", the title track to his 1986 album, reached No. 2 on the Country chart. With the song, Conley also became the only country artist to appear on the syndicated music program Soul Train.
By the end of the '80s, he had stopped working with Nelson Larkin, preferring to collaborate with Randy Scruggs, which brought his music back to his country and R&B roots. His sales took a dramatic dip during 1990 due to the rise of contemporary country, but he had two new Top Ten hits, "Shadow of a Doubt" and the Keith Whitley duet "Brotherly Love." The singles set the stage for the harder-edged country of his 1991 album, Yours Truly. Despite receiving some of the best reviews of Conley's career, the record was a commercial failure, and RCA dropped him shortly after its release. For much of the '90s, he was without a record label, yet he continued to give concerts and to tour, finally landing on Intersound for 1998's Perpetual Emotion.
Conley, one of the most
successful country singers of the 1980s, passed away in Nashville on April 10,
2019, following a battle with a condition similar to dementia. He was 77.
(Edited from Wikipedia &
AllMusic)
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For ”Earl Thomas Conley – Essential (2018 Sony) (digital download @192)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/aUFWt
Disc 1
1. Fire and Smoke 03:14
2. Silent Treatment 03:10
3. I Have Loved You Girl (But Not Like This Before) 02:35
4. Angel In Disguise 03:52
5. All Tangled Up In Love (with. Gus Hardin) 03:00
6. Crowd Around the Corner 04:38
7. Don't Make It Easy for Me 03:29
8. Your Love's On the Line 03:22
9. Somewhere Between Right and Wrong 04:09
10. Smokey Mountain Memories 03:22
11. Too Much Noise (Trucker's Waltz) 02:40
12. Tell Me Why (You Love Me Baby) 03:20
13. After the Love Slips Away 03:17
14. The Highway Home 03:43
15. You Can't Go On (Like a Rolling Stone) 03:07
16. Bottled Up Blues 02:21
17. Once In a Blue Moon 03:35
18. Chance of Lovin' You 02:53
19. Love Don't Care (Whose Heart It Breaks) 03:22
20. Honor Bound 03:12
DISC 2
1. Heavenly Bodies 03:05
2. Too Many Times 03:52
3. Right from the Start 03:04
4. Love Out Loud 03:47
5. Bring Back Your Love to Me 03:45
6. Who's Gonna Tell Her Goodbye 03:33
7. Borrowed Money 03:44
8. Brotherly Love (with.Keith Whitley) 03:15
9. You Must Not Be Drinking Enough 04:10
10. I Can't Win for Losin' You 04:00
11. That Was a Close One 04:24
12. What I'd Say 03:51
13. Nobody Falls Like a Fool 03:21
14. Holding Her and Loving You 03:08
15. What She Is (Is Woman In Love) 03:57
16. Hard Days and Honky Tonk Nights 02:34
17. If Only Your Eyes Could Lie 04:05
18. One of Those Days 04:05
19. White Christmas 03:13
20. Love's the Only Voice 04:10
The Essential by Earl Thomas Conley highlights the gruff-voiced country singer's 20 chart-topping entries from the late '70s and early '80s. These original RCA recordings include "Holding Her and Loving You," "Angel in Disguise," "Chance of Loving You," and his first number one single, "Fire and Smoke." (Available on most streamers)
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