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Crystal Gayle
One of
the most popular and widely recognized female country
singers of her era, Crystal Gayle supported her
trademark, nearly floor-length hair with a supple voice,
a flair for ballads, and a crossover-friendly
country-pop style that netted her the occasional
mainstream hit. Gayle was born Brenda Gail Webb in
Paintsville, KY, in 1951; her older sister was future
superstar
Loretta Lynn,
though
Lynn had
already left home by the time Brenda was born. The
family moved to Wabash, IN, when Brenda was four, and
she started singing along with country and pop songs on
the radio at a young age. Inspired in part by
Lynn's
success, Brenda learned guitar and started performing
folk songs in high school, also singing backing vocals
in her brother's band.
Lynn
encouraged her younger sister, and started bringing her
out on tour for a few weeks each summer.
Lynn's
label, Decca, signed the young singer as soon as she was
done with high school, but suggested a name change so as
to avoid confusion with labelmate
Brenda Lee.
Lynn
suggested the name Crystal, inspired by the Krystal
hamburger chain, and Brenda adopted her middle name to
come up with Crystal Gayle.Gayle's debut single was
1970's "I've Cried (The Blues Right Out of My Eyes)";
done in a style very similar to
Lynn's,
it reached the country Top 40. Far from encouraging
Gayle to develop her own style, Decca pushed for more
"little
Loretta"
records, and
Lynn
actually wrote some of her early singles. Unfortunately,
this approach failed to establish Gayle in her own
right, even with regular appearances on
Jim Ed Brown's
television show The Country Place. Frustrated,
she parted ways with Decca and signed with United
Artists in 1974, where she was teamed with producer
Allen Reynolds.
Reynolds
offered Gayle the creative freedom she wanted, and she
began to experiment with her style and phrasing en route
to her own distinctive approach. Her first-ever album,
titled simply
Crystal Gayle,
was released in 1974, and the following year she landed
her first Top Ten country hit, "Wrong Road Again." In
1976, "I'll Get Over You" became the first of her 17
number one country singles.
Reynolds,
feeling that Gayle was poised for a larger breakthrough,
encouraged her to record the jazz-flavored pop ballad
"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue," which he felt sure
had crossover potential. He was right — not only did the
song hit number one on the country charts in 1977, it
also climbed to number two on the pop side, garnered
substantial international airplay, and won Gayle a
Grammy for Best Female Country Vocal. Plus, the
accompanying album,
We Must Believe
in Magic, became the first by a female
country artist ever to go platinum.Now a bona fide star,
Gayle followed her breakthrough success with a string of
hits that lasted for approximately the next decade.
Before the '70s closed, she scored several more number
one country hits: "You Never Miss a Real Good Thing
(Till He Says Goodbye)" (1977), "Ready for the Times to
Get Better" (1978), "Talking in Your Sleep" (1978; also
a pop Top 20 hit), and "Why Have You Left the One You
Left Me For" (1979); plus, 1979's "Half the Way," her
first single for new label Columbia, was a number two
country hit and also reached the pop Top 20. She kept on
scoring as the '80s dawned; 1980 brought two
chart-toppers in "If You Ever Change Your Mind" and
"It's Like We Never Said Goodbye," 1981 another in "Too
Many Lovers," and 1982 her first number one duet, "You
and I," which was recorded with
Eddie Rabbitt
and became her second Top Ten pop hit (it also
inaugurated her tenure with Elektra/Warner). Gayle hit
number one three times in 1983 ("Baby, What About You,"
Rodney Crowell's
"Till I Gain Control Again," "Our Love Is on the
Faultline") and twice more in 1984 ("The Sound of
Goodbye," "Turning Away"), and began to cross over to
the adult contemporary charts with regularity as
well.Gayle's last country number ones came in 1986 with
"Cry" and the smooth
Gary Morris
duet "Makin' Up for Lost Time," after which she — rather
abruptly — all but disappeared from the charts. She did
continue to record, reuniting with
Allen Reynolds
for the 1990 Capitol set
Ain't Gonna Worry,
and cutting specialty projects for smaller labels
thereafter. She recorded two gospel albums during the
'90s,
Someday
(1995) and
He Is Beautiful,
and in 1999 completed a tribute project,
Crystal Gayle
Sings the Heart & Soul of Hoagy Carmichael.
In the meantime, she ran a shop in Nashville devoted to
fine jewelry and (naturally) crystal. Gayle opened the
new millennium with 2000's
In My Arms,
an album of children's songs. |