

- #THE RED RED ROBIN MITCH MILLER GOLDEN RECORDS 78 RPM PLUS#
- #THE RED RED ROBIN MITCH MILLER GOLDEN RECORDS 78 RPM TV#
Three O’Kanes albums (1987-1990), three solo albums (1994-2012).Ĭountry singer-songwriter. Songs recorded by many-Conlee, T.G., Conway, Johnny Lee, Yearwood, Chicks, Randy Travis, Emmylou, McGraw, Sara Evans, Oaks, Pam, Josh Turner, Janie Fricke, Mel McDaniel, Shelby Lynne, Mattea, Wopat, Dave & Sugar and several bluegrass acts. Also notable for farm-crisis song “Bidding America Goodbye” (Tanya, 1987) and own record/video of Vietnam War elegy “50,000 Names” (1994). Also wrote “Wandering Eyes” (Ronnie McDowell, 1981), “Older Women” (McDowell, 1981), “Talkin’ to Myself to Again” (Tammy, 1987), “Desperately” (Don Williams, 1988), “You’ve Got to Talk to Me” (Lee Ann Womack, 1997), “The Cold Hard Truth” (George Jones, 2000), “When Love Starts Talkin’” (Wynonna, 1997), “When We’re Gone Long Gone” (Lnda/Dolly/Emmylou, 1999), “Man To Man” (Gary Allan, No. Grammy Country Song of Year for “Grandpa (Tell Me Bout the Good Old Days)” (Judds, 1986). 1, 1987) and 1978-88 successes “Daddies Need to Grow Up Too,” “Just Lovin’ You,” “One True Love,” “Blue Love” all collaborations with Kieran Kane. Team’s hits “Oh Darlin’” (1986), “Can’t Stop My Heart From Loving You” (No. Recording artist in 1980s duo The O’Kanes. Hosted bluegrass radio show in Pennsylvania for 25 years. Own band Smith Hollow with LP Lonely Tonight.
#THE RED RED ROBIN MITCH MILLER GOLDEN RECORDS 78 RPM PLUS#
(real name: Anthony Joseph Fardella III).īanjo player noted for tenure in Del McCoury’s Dixie Pals (1970-78), plus stints with Bob Paisley & Southern Grass, Square Deal. Riley, Tommy Overstreet, Jerry Wallace, Claude Gray, George Kent, others. Scholarship at Lipscomb University in his name. Solo album Walkin’ the Winter Wonderland (2013). On Grammy winning CD Songs From the Neighborhood: The Songs of Mister Rogers (2005). Performed & recorded with John England & The Western Swingers.

Nashville accordionist/keyboard player with experience as director of cruise-ship shows, arranger, composer, music educator, Broadway, Opryland, etc.
#THE RED RED ROBIN MITCH MILLER GOLDEN RECORDS 78 RPM TV#
Own TV show, recording studio, record label in Chattanooga. Cult favorite 1963’s “I Got a Rocket in My Pocket.” Sound engineer for Emmylou, Righteous Brothers, Carl Perkins, Ray Charles, etc. Former solo career as “Jacqueline Hyde” & “Maryann Mail.” (real name: Mary Donahue Blanchard). Later formed jazz trio with her on piano, Blanchard on bass & a hired drummer. Recorded for Mercury/Wayside, Mega, Chalice, Epic, United Artists, Playback, Stardust, Omni and own Velvet Saw label. She and Jack co-produced everything, making her a trailblazing female record producer in Music City. Two charted LPs, Birds of a Feather (1971), Two Sides of Jack & Misty (1972). Fifteen charted singles & seven top-40 successes, including “Somewhere In Virginia in the Rain” (1972), “There Must Be More to Life (Than Growing Old)” (1971), “You’ve Got Your Troubles (I’ve Got Mine)” (1970) and “Just One More Song” (1974). Follow-up “Humphrey the Camel” (1970) also a top-10 hit. 1 with Grammy-nominated “Tennessee Bird Walk” 1970. Half of 1970s country hit making duo Jack Blanchard & Misty Morgan. We miss all of them as we offer our annual “hail and farewell” list. And we smile at our memories of such great personalities and contributors as Connie Bradley, Bob Moore, Bill Owens, Ron Cornelius and Ken Kragen. Thomas, Jamie O’Hara, Misty Morgan and Ed Bruce sang for us. We give thanks for hits that Stonewall Jackson, B.J. The span of our losses is illustrated by the farewells we said to the Station Inn’s JT Gray, country-outlaw producer/drummer Richie Albright, Nashville pop/rock visionary Robb Earls, Americana honoree Nanci Griffith, Mexican ranchera music superstar Vincent Fernandez and country-rock pioneer plus video trail blazer Michael Nesmith.Īs was the case last year (John Prine, Joe Diffie, Bill Pursell, Charley Pride, Bill Mack, etc.), the COVID pandemic claimed the lives of a number of our colleagues in 2021 - Larry Willoughby, Gene Kennedy, Ed Pearl, Jim Hall, Jeff Lisenby, Kenny Malone and more.

Both of them are members of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, which was also hit by obituaries for Jim Weatherly, Charlie Black and DeWayne Blackwell.Īmong those departing are Bluegrass Hall of Fame members Sonny Osborne and Bill Emerson. The Country Music Hall of Fame lost Tom T. “Go rest high on that mountain” we sing in Vince Gill’s enduring funeral anthem, and that’s the sentiment for those we lost in 2021.
