Slinger FranciscoORTTCMTOBE (born July 9, 1935), better known as Mighty Sparrow, is a calypsosinger, songwriter, and guitarist of Trinidadian citizenship. Known as the "Calypso King of the World", he is one of the best-known and most successful calypsonians. He has won Trinidad's Carnival Road March competition eight times, Calypso King/Monarch eight times, and has twice won the Calypso King of Kings title.
Career
Slinger Francisco was born in the fishing village of Grand Roy, Grenada, West Indies on July 9, 1935. He moved to Trinidad with his mother, his father having relocated there in 1937. He grew up in Port of Spain. He began singing as a small child, but his love of calypso was discouraged while at Newtown Boys Catholic School, where he sang in the choir. At the age of 14 he joined a steel band comprising neighbourhood boys, and performed with the band at Carnival.
He received his performing name "Little Sparrow" during his early career, as a result of his energetic stage performances:
"Country Girl" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Dottie West. It was released March 1968 as the first single and title track from the album Country Girl. The song peaked at number 15 on the BillboardHot Country Singles chart. In addition, "Country Girl" became West's first song to chart among the Canadian RPM Country chart, reaching a peak of number 5. West wrote the song with Red Lane.
"Country Girl" is identified with West's early career persona: the lyrics of the song's chorus are written on her grave. The lyrics themselves describe her love of the country and the carefree feeling – including such things as blue skies, green meadows, butterflies, home-cooked meals and family – it brings.
Provided to YouTube by RCA Records Label Nashville
Country Girl · Dottie West
The Essential Dottie West
℗ Recorded Prior To 1972. All Rights Reserved By BMG Music
Released on: 1996-01-30
Composer, Lyricist: Red Lane
Producer: Chet Atkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
published: 08 Nov 2014
Dottie West-Country Girl
From the 1968 album Country Girl
published: 18 Jun 2011
Dottie West - Country Girl (with Lyrics)
Do you miss the old-fashioned tunes? I have a song for you, Country Girl by Dottie West, that will make you feel lively and thrilled.
Dottie West was an American country music singer and songwriter. Along with her friends and fellow recording artists Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn, she is considered one of the genre's most influential and groundbreaking female artists.
Dottie West was also a modern country pioneer in writing advertising jingles (including Coca-Cola’s famous “Country Sunshine” campaign of the 1970s) and a wide-ranging duet singer.
Here's the link to her famous Coca-Cola jingle Country Sunshine (with Lyrics) https://youtu.be/zNmKn_tVhCk
Enjoy!
🔔 If you like what you're seeing, you can support our YouTube Channel "Golden Vintage Archive" by liking, commenting, and subscrib...
published: 11 Nov 2023
Dottie West- I'm Your Country Girl
From the album If it's alright with you/Just what ive been looking for
published: 06 Oct 2010
Michelle Lee - The Dottie West Story - Country Girl
1963 – 1975: Country success
West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner", followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeves "Love Is No Excuse". Also in 1964, she auditioned for producer Chet Atkins, the architect of the Nashville sound, who agreed to produce her composition "Here Comes My Baby". The single made Dottie the first female country artist to win a Grammy Award (Best Female Country Vocal Performance), leading to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.[3] "Here Comes My Baby" reached No. 10 on Billboard Magazine's Country charts in 1964.
After releasing the Here Comes My Baby LP in 1965, Dottie and producer Chet Atkins reunited the following year for Suffer Time, which generated her biggest hit yet in "Would You Hold It Against Me". In 196...
Provided to YouTube by RCA Records Label Nashville
Country Girl · Dottie West
The Essential Dottie West
℗ Recorded Prior To 1972. All Rights Reserved By BMG ...
Provided to YouTube by RCA Records Label Nashville
Country Girl · Dottie West
The Essential Dottie West
℗ Recorded Prior To 1972. All Rights Reserved By BMG Music
Released on: 1996-01-30
Composer, Lyricist: Red Lane
Producer: Chet Atkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Provided to YouTube by RCA Records Label Nashville
Country Girl · Dottie West
The Essential Dottie West
℗ Recorded Prior To 1972. All Rights Reserved By BMG Music
Released on: 1996-01-30
Composer, Lyricist: Red Lane
Producer: Chet Atkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Do you miss the old-fashioned tunes? I have a song for you, Country Girl by Dottie West, that will make you feel lively and thrilled.
Dottie West was an Americ...
Do you miss the old-fashioned tunes? I have a song for you, Country Girl by Dottie West, that will make you feel lively and thrilled.
Dottie West was an American country music singer and songwriter. Along with her friends and fellow recording artists Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn, she is considered one of the genre's most influential and groundbreaking female artists.
Dottie West was also a modern country pioneer in writing advertising jingles (including Coca-Cola’s famous “Country Sunshine” campaign of the 1970s) and a wide-ranging duet singer.
Here's the link to her famous Coca-Cola jingle Country Sunshine (with Lyrics) https://youtu.be/zNmKn_tVhCk
Enjoy!
🔔 If you like what you're seeing, you can support our YouTube Channel "Golden Vintage Archive" by liking, commenting, and subscribing to our channel.
🔔 By subscribing to our channel, you'll get more videos like this in the future and more updates on our YouTube Channel.
🔔 Please also share so more people can listen together!
Thank you and enjoy! ❤️
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This video contains photographs, videos, and music, not property owned by Golden Vintage Archive.
Golden Vintage Archive's only purpose is to republish older content for the sole purpose of entertainment and education.
The ownership rights to this content are property owned by its legal owners, artists, and publishers. We purposely share this content for educational and entertainment only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do you miss the old-fashioned tunes? I have a song for you, Country Girl by Dottie West, that will make you feel lively and thrilled.
Dottie West was an American country music singer and songwriter. Along with her friends and fellow recording artists Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn, she is considered one of the genre's most influential and groundbreaking female artists.
Dottie West was also a modern country pioneer in writing advertising jingles (including Coca-Cola’s famous “Country Sunshine” campaign of the 1970s) and a wide-ranging duet singer.
Here's the link to her famous Coca-Cola jingle Country Sunshine (with Lyrics) https://youtu.be/zNmKn_tVhCk
Enjoy!
🔔 If you like what you're seeing, you can support our YouTube Channel "Golden Vintage Archive" by liking, commenting, and subscribing to our channel.
🔔 By subscribing to our channel, you'll get more videos like this in the future and more updates on our YouTube Channel.
🔔 Please also share so more people can listen together!
Thank you and enjoy! ❤️
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This video contains photographs, videos, and music, not property owned by Golden Vintage Archive.
Golden Vintage Archive's only purpose is to republish older content for the sole purpose of entertainment and education.
The ownership rights to this content are property owned by its legal owners, artists, and publishers. We purposely share this content for educational and entertainment only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1963 – 1975: Country success
West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner", followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeve...
1963 – 1975: Country success
West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner", followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeves "Love Is No Excuse". Also in 1964, she auditioned for producer Chet Atkins, the architect of the Nashville sound, who agreed to produce her composition "Here Comes My Baby". The single made Dottie the first female country artist to win a Grammy Award (Best Female Country Vocal Performance), leading to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.[3] "Here Comes My Baby" reached No. 10 on Billboard Magazine's Country charts in 1964.
After releasing the Here Comes My Baby LP in 1965, Dottie and producer Chet Atkins reunited the following year for Suffer Time, which generated her biggest hit yet in "Would You Hold It Against Me". In 1967, the West/Atkins pairing issued three separate albums: With All My Heart and Soul (featuring the No. 8 smash "Paper Mansions"), Dottie West Sings Sacred Ballads, and I'll Help You Forget Her.
During the same period, she also appeared in a pair of films, Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar and There's a Still on the Hill. Dottie continued to have success as a solo artist during the late 1960s with such songs as "What's Come Over My Baby", and "Country Girl" which garnered her an offer to write a commercial based on it for Coca-Cola in 1970. The soft drink company liked the result so much that it signed her to a lifetime contract as a jingle writer.
After the 1968 LP Country Girl, West teamed with Don Gibson for a record of duets, Dottie and Don, featuring the number two hit "Rings of Gold" released in 1969. The album was her last with Atkins, and she followed it in 1970 with two releases, Forever Yours and Country Boy and Country Girl, a collection of pairings with Jimmy Dean. Around the time of Have You Heard Dottie West, released in 1971, she left her husband Bill and, in 1972, married drummer Byron Metcalf, who was 12 years her junior. Due possibly in part to her recent stratospheric success with duets, her solo career suffered between 1969 and 1972. Most of her singles released at the time had failed even to peak in the Top 40, and her album sales were declining.
In 1973 West provided Coca-Cola with another ad, featuring a song called "Country Sunshine". The popularity of the commercial prompted her to release the song as a single, and it became one of her biggest hits, reaching No. 2 on the country charts and No. 49 on the Pop charts. The ad itself also netted a Clio Award for commercial of the year and she became the first country artist ever to win that particular honor. "Country Sunshine" proved to be a solid comeback as she was nominated for two Grammys for the song, Best Country Song and Best Female Country Vocal Performance a year later.
After the release of House of Love in 1974, West notched a number of Top 40 hits including the Top 10 "Last Time I Saw Him", "House of Love", and "Lay Back Lover". Before signing with United Artists Records in 1976, her final album for RCA, Carolina Cousins, was released in 1975.
1963 – 1975: Country success
West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner", followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeves "Love Is No Excuse". Also in 1964, she auditioned for producer Chet Atkins, the architect of the Nashville sound, who agreed to produce her composition "Here Comes My Baby". The single made Dottie the first female country artist to win a Grammy Award (Best Female Country Vocal Performance), leading to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.[3] "Here Comes My Baby" reached No. 10 on Billboard Magazine's Country charts in 1964.
After releasing the Here Comes My Baby LP in 1965, Dottie and producer Chet Atkins reunited the following year for Suffer Time, which generated her biggest hit yet in "Would You Hold It Against Me". In 1967, the West/Atkins pairing issued three separate albums: With All My Heart and Soul (featuring the No. 8 smash "Paper Mansions"), Dottie West Sings Sacred Ballads, and I'll Help You Forget Her.
During the same period, she also appeared in a pair of films, Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar and There's a Still on the Hill. Dottie continued to have success as a solo artist during the late 1960s with such songs as "What's Come Over My Baby", and "Country Girl" which garnered her an offer to write a commercial based on it for Coca-Cola in 1970. The soft drink company liked the result so much that it signed her to a lifetime contract as a jingle writer.
After the 1968 LP Country Girl, West teamed with Don Gibson for a record of duets, Dottie and Don, featuring the number two hit "Rings of Gold" released in 1969. The album was her last with Atkins, and she followed it in 1970 with two releases, Forever Yours and Country Boy and Country Girl, a collection of pairings with Jimmy Dean. Around the time of Have You Heard Dottie West, released in 1971, she left her husband Bill and, in 1972, married drummer Byron Metcalf, who was 12 years her junior. Due possibly in part to her recent stratospheric success with duets, her solo career suffered between 1969 and 1972. Most of her singles released at the time had failed even to peak in the Top 40, and her album sales were declining.
In 1973 West provided Coca-Cola with another ad, featuring a song called "Country Sunshine". The popularity of the commercial prompted her to release the song as a single, and it became one of her biggest hits, reaching No. 2 on the country charts and No. 49 on the Pop charts. The ad itself also netted a Clio Award for commercial of the year and she became the first country artist ever to win that particular honor. "Country Sunshine" proved to be a solid comeback as she was nominated for two Grammys for the song, Best Country Song and Best Female Country Vocal Performance a year later.
After the release of House of Love in 1974, West notched a number of Top 40 hits including the Top 10 "Last Time I Saw Him", "House of Love", and "Lay Back Lover". Before signing with United Artists Records in 1976, her final album for RCA, Carolina Cousins, was released in 1975.
Provided to YouTube by RCA Records Label Nashville
Country Girl · Dottie West
The Essential Dottie West
℗ Recorded Prior To 1972. All Rights Reserved By BMG Music
Released on: 1996-01-30
Composer, Lyricist: Red Lane
Producer: Chet Atkins
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Do you miss the old-fashioned tunes? I have a song for you, Country Girl by Dottie West, that will make you feel lively and thrilled.
Dottie West was an American country music singer and songwriter. Along with her friends and fellow recording artists Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn, she is considered one of the genre's most influential and groundbreaking female artists.
Dottie West was also a modern country pioneer in writing advertising jingles (including Coca-Cola’s famous “Country Sunshine” campaign of the 1970s) and a wide-ranging duet singer.
Here's the link to her famous Coca-Cola jingle Country Sunshine (with Lyrics) https://youtu.be/zNmKn_tVhCk
Enjoy!
🔔 If you like what you're seeing, you can support our YouTube Channel "Golden Vintage Archive" by liking, commenting, and subscribing to our channel.
🔔 By subscribing to our channel, you'll get more videos like this in the future and more updates on our YouTube Channel.
🔔 Please also share so more people can listen together!
Thank you and enjoy! ❤️
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This video contains photographs, videos, and music, not property owned by Golden Vintage Archive.
Golden Vintage Archive's only purpose is to republish older content for the sole purpose of entertainment and education.
The ownership rights to this content are property owned by its legal owners, artists, and publishers. We purposely share this content for educational and entertainment only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1963 – 1975: Country success
West earned her first Top 40 hit in 1963 with "Let Me Off at the Corner", followed a year later by the Top Ten duet with Jim Reeves "Love Is No Excuse". Also in 1964, she auditioned for producer Chet Atkins, the architect of the Nashville sound, who agreed to produce her composition "Here Comes My Baby". The single made Dottie the first female country artist to win a Grammy Award (Best Female Country Vocal Performance), leading to an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry.[3] "Here Comes My Baby" reached No. 10 on Billboard Magazine's Country charts in 1964.
After releasing the Here Comes My Baby LP in 1965, Dottie and producer Chet Atkins reunited the following year for Suffer Time, which generated her biggest hit yet in "Would You Hold It Against Me". In 1967, the West/Atkins pairing issued three separate albums: With All My Heart and Soul (featuring the No. 8 smash "Paper Mansions"), Dottie West Sings Sacred Ballads, and I'll Help You Forget Her.
During the same period, she also appeared in a pair of films, Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar and There's a Still on the Hill. Dottie continued to have success as a solo artist during the late 1960s with such songs as "What's Come Over My Baby", and "Country Girl" which garnered her an offer to write a commercial based on it for Coca-Cola in 1970. The soft drink company liked the result so much that it signed her to a lifetime contract as a jingle writer.
After the 1968 LP Country Girl, West teamed with Don Gibson for a record of duets, Dottie and Don, featuring the number two hit "Rings of Gold" released in 1969. The album was her last with Atkins, and she followed it in 1970 with two releases, Forever Yours and Country Boy and Country Girl, a collection of pairings with Jimmy Dean. Around the time of Have You Heard Dottie West, released in 1971, she left her husband Bill and, in 1972, married drummer Byron Metcalf, who was 12 years her junior. Due possibly in part to her recent stratospheric success with duets, her solo career suffered between 1969 and 1972. Most of her singles released at the time had failed even to peak in the Top 40, and her album sales were declining.
In 1973 West provided Coca-Cola with another ad, featuring a song called "Country Sunshine". The popularity of the commercial prompted her to release the song as a single, and it became one of her biggest hits, reaching No. 2 on the country charts and No. 49 on the Pop charts. The ad itself also netted a Clio Award for commercial of the year and she became the first country artist ever to win that particular honor. "Country Sunshine" proved to be a solid comeback as she was nominated for two Grammys for the song, Best Country Song and Best Female Country Vocal Performance a year later.
After the release of House of Love in 1974, West notched a number of Top 40 hits including the Top 10 "Last Time I Saw Him", "House of Love", and "Lay Back Lover". Before signing with United Artists Records in 1976, her final album for RCA, Carolina Cousins, was released in 1975.
Slinger FranciscoORTTCMTOBE (born July 9, 1935), better known as Mighty Sparrow, is a calypsosinger, songwriter, and guitarist of Trinidadian citizenship. Known as the "Calypso King of the World", he is one of the best-known and most successful calypsonians. He has won Trinidad's Carnival Road March competition eight times, Calypso King/Monarch eight times, and has twice won the Calypso King of Kings title.
Career
Slinger Francisco was born in the fishing village of Grand Roy, Grenada, West Indies on July 9, 1935. He moved to Trinidad with his mother, his father having relocated there in 1937. He grew up in Port of Spain. He began singing as a small child, but his love of calypso was discouraged while at Newtown Boys Catholic School, where he sang in the choir. At the age of 14 he joined a steel band comprising neighbourhood boys, and performed with the band at Carnival.
He received his performing name "Little Sparrow" during his early career, as a result of his energetic stage performances:
(Talk to me) I am not at peace honey (Talk to me) tell me you love me sincerely (Talk to me) darling don't remain silent (Talk to me) because I love the excitement Doobdidoob doodeeyah For when you talk I fell like a man And I get more zeal and inspiration Even though I know it is mama i gizem. Refrain: Tell me you think I'm sweeter than honey, Tell me if I ever leave you you'll kill me. Scratch up me back bite off me ears when I ask "Whats the matter?" Tell me there's too much wood in the fire. (Promise me) Promise me everything you wish (Promise me) Give me in french or in spanish (Promise me) Say something good or something bad (Promise me) As long as I make you talk I'm glad Doobdidoob doodeeyah Our little love talk has turned me on I could carry on from dusk till dawn As long as I hear your sexy conversation. Refrain (Do you need) Mama rev up your engine (Do you need) Give vent to your feelings (Do you need) Honey bunch now some at all (Do you need) Shame to the must get on and fall I want a nice little mournful cry Like uhoo, uhoo, uhoo, uhoo