Showing posts with label Bobbie Gentry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bobbie Gentry. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Jody Reynolds born 3 December 1932


Jody Reynolds (born Ralph Joseph Reynolds on December 3, 1932, Denver, Colorado, died November 7, 2008 in Palm Desert, California, aged 75) was an American singer and guitarist. He was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame in 1999. 

"Jody" moved to Oklahoma with his family as a child and grew up there. He listened to music on the radio from artists such as Eddy Arnold and Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys. As a teenager he learned to play the guitar and began to write songs, and in the 50's Reynolds formed a rockabilly band called the Storms. In the mid-50's artists such as Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and Carl Perkins came along, and Jody Reynolds liked what he heard from them. 

One day in 1956 Jody was performing in Yuma, Arizona with his band and during a break he wrote a song that he titled Endless Sleep. It was a song with a haunting melody and shadowy lyrics. They performed the song later that day and it received a good reception. Reynolds told the Phoenix New Times in 2001 that he wrote "Endless Sleep" right after listening to Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" five times in a row on a jukebox. He loved the desolate quality of the story and Presley's vocal, and came up with an even darker tale, about a boy in search of his girlfriend after they had a fight. 
 
 
Two years went by and Reynolds had moved on to San Diego, where he became acquainted with a music publisher from Los Angeles named Herb Montei. Reynolds submitted a number of demo records to Montei, who had little interest in them until he heard Endless Sleep. Montei forwarded the demo to Demon Records, and arrangements were made for a recording session. Endless Sleep became a huge hit nationally in the summer of 1958 for Jody Reynolds, and it ascended into the top ten. Writing credits for the song went to Jody Reynolds and Dolores Nance; according to Jody, Nance is a fictitious person created by the record company to make him appear to be part of a song writing duo. 

Reynolds was now a star, if only for the time being, and made appearances in some of the Alan Freed shows in New York as well as those of  Dick Clark. Endless Sleep was on the leading edge of what came to be known as the teenage disaster songs, a wave that included Mark Dinning's Teen Angel, Ray Peterson's Tell Laura I Love Her, and Dickey Lee's Patches, even though a careful listener will hear a happy ending to Endless Sleep. Reynolds followed up later in 1958 with a lesser hit, Fire of Love. They were to be his only two hits in the United States, although Marty Wilde would sell many copies of his own recording of Endless Sleep in England a short time later. In the years to come the song would be recorded by a number of other artists, including Hank Williams, Jr. and John Fogerty. 

Jody Reynolds continued writing songs and performing with the Storms throughout the 60's. He also continued to tour and record into the 1970’s for several labels including Smash, Brent and Pulsar Records. He moved to Palm Springs, California and pursued a variety of interests. His old friend Alan Freed moved to Palm Springs and the two travelled to Phoenix where Freed produced Reynolds' record Raggedy Ann. 

Reynolds retained his interest in song writing and recording. He set up a small recording studio in his home in Palm Springs. He also worked as a real estate agent in La Quinta, as well as occasionally touring the rock oldies circuit. His final appearance was at a benefit show in 2007 for the firemen who fought the Fallbrook and San Diego fires.  
 
 
Jody Reynolds suffered from cancer of the liver and a malignant brain tumour and passed away on November 7, 2008 in Palm Desert, California. In the history of pop rock music, Jody will always be remembered as "The King of Teardrop Rock.” (Info edited mainly from Tom Simon)
 

Saturday, 27 July 2013

Bobbie Gentry born 27 July 1944



Bobbie Gentry (b. Roberta Lee Streeter in Chickasaw County, Mississippi on July 27, 1944) is an American singer-songwriter and remains one of the most interesting and underappreciated artists to emerge out of Nashville during the late '60s.

Bobbie Gentry Best-known for her crossover smash "Ode to Billie Joe," was one of the first female country artists to write and
produce much of her own material, forging an idiosyncratic, pop-inspired sound that, in tandem with her glamorous, bombshell image, anticipated the rise of latter-day superstars like Shania Twain and Faith Hill. Of Portuguese descent, Gentry was born Roberta Streeter in Chickasaw County, MS, on July 27, 1944; her parents divorced shortly after her birth and she was raised in poverty on her grandparents' farm. After her grandmother traded one of the family's milk cows for a neighbor's piano, seven-year-old Bobbie composed her first song, "My Dog Sergeant Is a Good Dog," years later self-deprecatingly reprised in her nightclub act; at 13, she moved to Arcadia, CA, to live with her mother, soon beginning her performing career in local country clubs. The 1952 film Ruby Gentry lent the singer her stage surname.

After graduating high school, Gentry settled in Las Vegas, where
she appeared in the Les Folies Bergère nightclub revue; she soon returned to California, studying philosophy at U.C.L.A. before transferring to the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. In 1964, she made her recorded debut, cutting a pair of duets — "Ode to Love" and "Stranger in the Mirror" — with rockabilly singer Jody Reynolds. Gentry continued performing in clubs in the years to follow before an early 1967 recording a demo found its way to Capitol Records producer Kelly Gordon; upon signing to the label, she issued her debut single, "Mississippi Delta." However, disc jockeys began spinning the B-side, the self-penned "Ode to Billie Joe" struck a chord on country and pop radio alike, topping the pop charts for four weeks in August 1967 and selling three million copies. Although the follow-up, "I Saw an Angel Die," failed to chart, Gentry nevertheless won three Grammy awards, including Best New Artist and Best Female Vocal, also the Academy of Country Music's Best New Female Vocalist.


 

In 1968 Gentry issued a duet album with Glen Campbell, returning to the country Top 20 with "Let It Be Me"; the duo regularly collaborated throughout the 1970s.

In 1969, Gentry generated her first U.K. number one, a smoldering rendition of the Burt Bacharach/Hal David perennial "I'll Never
Fall in Love Again." The single's success also earned Gentry her own short-lived BBC television variety series.

Gentry's 1969 marriage to Desert Inn Hotel manager Bill Harrah ended after only three months, but the following year she returned to the county and pop Top 40 with the title cut from her fifth album Fancy. In 1971, she issued her final Capitol effort, Patchwork, primarily confining her performing to her nightclub act for the next several years. A CBS summer replacement series, The Bobbie Gentry Happiness Hour, aired for four episodes in 1974; Gentry next surfaced on the big screen, credited as co-writer for a 1976 film adaptation of Ode to Billie Joe.

 
 After a second marriage, to fellow singer/songwriter Jim Stafford, ended in 1979 after only 11 months, Gentry gradually receded from public view, retiring from performing and eventually settling in Los Angeles. She since has remarried, but the groom is not known at this time. (info mainly edited from AMG)