Альбомы исполнителя
Melba Montgomery Country Legends
2001 · альбом
Golden Moments
2001 · альбом
Vintage Collections
1996 · сборник
I Still Care
1982 · альбом
Your Picture
2023 · альбом
American Portraits: Melba Montgomery
2020 · альбом
Do You Know Where Your Man Is
2013 · альбом
Jambalaya (On The Bayou) & Other Favorites
2012 · альбом
Things That Keep You Going
2010 · альбом
Melba Montgomery: Studio 102 Essentials
2008 · альбом
No Charge
2007 · альбом
Country Girl
2005 · альбом
Party Pickin'
2005 · альбом
Melba Toast
1967 · альбом
Singing What's In Our Hearts
1963 · альбом
Miss Country Music
0000 · альбом
Bluegrass Hootenanny
1964 · альбом
Hallelujah Road
1966 · альбом
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Биография
While a successful singer in her own right, Melba Montgomery is perhaps best remembered in tandem with her string of duet recordings with the likes of George Jones, Charlie Louvin, and Gene Pitney. Born October 14, 1938, in Iron City, TN, and raised in Florence, AL, Montgomery gained her first exposure to music through her father, a fiddler and guitarist who taught vocal lessons at the town's Methodist church. At the age of ten, she was given her own guitar, and a decade later, she and her brother won an amateur talent contest held at Nashville radio station WSM's Studio C, which then housed the Grand Ole Opry. Montgomery's performance so impressed contest judge Roy Acuff that he asked the young singer to replace his departing lead vocalist June Webb; she accepted and toured with Acuff for the next four years. After going solo in 1962, Montgomery released a self-titled LP and then teamed for a series of duets with Jones. Their first joint effort, a rendition of Montgomery's self-penned "We Must Have Been Out of Our Minds," reached the Top Three in 1963, and the follow-up, "What's in Our Heart"/"Let's Invite Them Over," was a two-sided Top 20 hit. Between 1963 and 1967, the Jones-Montgomery team generated a total of five Top 40 hits and two LPs (1966's Close Together and 1967's Let's Get Together), and while Montgomery maintained a successful solo career during the same period, she remained best known as a duet singer and so recorded an album of collaborations with Pitney titled Being Together in 1966. After a few minor solo hits in the late '60s, in 1970 Montgomery found new partners in Louvin and producer Pete Drake. The duo's first hit, "Something to Brag About," was also their biggest, and after a string of singles and a 1971 album -- also titled Something to Brag About -- she and Louvin parted ways, although Montgomery did continue on with Drake. In 1974, he produced her lone number one hit, a rendition of Harlan Howard's "No Charge," culled from the LP No Charge. While she continued to record throughout the decade, subsequent albums like Don't Let the Good Times Fool You and Aching Breaking Heart found little commercial success, and by the 1980s Montgomery focused largely on touring and appearing at festivals. In 1988, she even published a cookbook of family recipes. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi