|
Web
Site
Advertising
"The
Gospel Music Jukebox"
Singers
Wanted
Download
Country Music
Download All The
Music You Want
Simple & fast! No
Download Fees
Click
Here
Download
MP3 Songs, music videos, software, TV programs and Movies
Click
Here
How
To Make Money Teaching Guitar
A successful guitar school owner reveals all his
business secrets.
Click
Here |
The Country Music Planet
Presents
Conway Twitty
As
in most endeavors, there are those who met the standards and those who
set the standards. For three decades, Conway Twitty
enjoyed unequalled
staying power in an industry whose shooting stars often descend as
quickly as they rise. In the whole world of American popular music only
Conway Twitty has had 55 number one records. The Beatles didn't do it.
Elvis didn't do it. Frank Sinatra didn't do it. Conway's 55th hit
"Crazy in Love" went to number one on the charts as recently
as December 1990.
During the first fifteen years of R&R's (Radio and
Records) country chart histories, this legendary vocalist reigned
unchallenged as Top Artist based upon points tallied for the most #1's,
most Top 5 and most Top 10 hits during that time frame. (And they missed
at least five of his best years when he was having hits like "Hello
Darlin'," "Linda On My Mind," and "You've Never Been
This Far Before." )
According to R&R, "A steady regime of three or
four big hits a year (plus a duet or two) adds up to formidable point
totals. Conway Twitty, who won the country crown for the R&R era,
accumulated more than twice as many points from his legion of year-end
hits than the leader of any other format. Similarly, the artist totals
for most #1's, Top 5 and Top 15 hits outstrip those for any other format
finalist."
When asked how he did it, Conway would quickly explain that
he records songs with the message directed to women. He said they
"get the message quicker than men do." However, these messages
are also for the man who has something he'd like to say to a woman, but
has trouble saying it. "All he has to do is drop a quarter in the
juke box, press the right buttons and squeeze her at the appropriate
time and she'll understand," Conway explained.
Throughout his long career, he has touched virtually every
popular musical category of the nation: rockabilly, blues, rock'n'roll,
Dixieland, R&B, gospel and mainstream country.
Twitty was a child of the Mississippi River. His father, a
riverboat pilot, taught him his first chords on a small guitar when
Conway was only four years old. The family lived in the tiny river town
of Friars Point, Mississippi, a largly black settlement of cotton
patches and tenant farms. Next door lived an old black man Twitty fondly
called "Uncle Fred." Twitty idolized him and learned music at
his knees.
That was just the start of Twitty's interest in music. He
spent many hours out on the ditch bank, next to a black church,
listening to the sound of gospel music coming from inside and of course,
the Grand Ole Opry every Saturday night on the radio.
By the age of 12, his family had moved up the river to
Helena, Arkansas. He had put together his first band, "The Phillips
County Ramblers" and had his own radio show every Saturday morning
on radio station KFFA in Helena.
It was in Helena Twitty discovered his second love,
baseball. It soon became the center of his life, and he decided he
wanted to play professional more than anything else on earth. After
graduating from high school, he was offered a contract to play with the
Philadelphia Phillies, but before he could sign, he was drafted by the
Army.
Although he had a band while he was in the Army, Twitty never thought of
it as a profession. About his professional singing career he says,
"I never had a dream, I simply lived it."
After his discharge from the Army, he heard an Elvis Presley record,
"Mystery Train." It's completely new sound really knocked him
out, "although I loved country music, I didn't think I was good
enough to compete with my idols," Twitty explained. "I did
think I could sing Elvis' style of music. I had to make a decision so I
threw down the baseball bat, picked up the guitar and I've never looked
back!"
Ironically, Conway Twitty didn't break through with rockabilly music the
way the others (Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis and Johnny Cash)
did. He scored his first #1 hit with the powerful teen ballad,
"It's Only Make Believe" on MGM in 1958. It was the first of
dozens of emotion-packed Conway Twitty compositions that have hit the
top of the charts.
Eight years and three gold records later, Twitty decided to make a
change. Despite his wide success as a rock'n'roll star, Twitty was
writing country songs as early as 1960. But he had no oulet for them.
"Finally" he said, "I thought I'd lived long enough and
experienced enough things to compete with my heroes and do justice to a
country song."
A good friend of Twitty's, Harlan Howard, took him to meet Owen Bradley
at Decca Records. Bradley took a chance on Twitty and signed him as a
country act to Decca/MCA. This disillusioned rocker had scored four
straight country #1's by the dawn of the 1970's. By 1980, he had become
the most consistent hit-maker in the history of country music. Although
he had written many (17) of his best known hits, including "Hello
Darlin'," "Linda On My Mind," and "You've Never Been
This Far Before," it's his ability to hear the great songs, written
by others that has kept him on top, Conway believed. He credits much of
his success to choosing the right song. "I know right now that 99%
of my next record depends on how strong that song is, not what I do to
it. I really believe that." That helps explain why Conway would
spend months listening to 2000-plus songs before he would go into the
studio to record an album.
Twitty was very protective of his career and he attributed part of his
longevity in the business by avoiding over-exposure. Over the years he
shied away from interviews and doing too much television. He always
preferred to let his image live through his music. However on the eve of
his 25th anniversary in country music, Conway decided to change this
with appearances on the award-winning "Larry King Radio Show,"
"Late Night with David Letterman," "The Pat Sajak
Show", and of course, "Nashville Now".
In 1989 the A.M.O.A (Amusement and Music Operators of America)
celebrated the 100th birthday of jukeboxes. In honor of this, they
decided to start a "Jukebox Award." The first year at their
annual convention (September, 1989), Conway was honored with this award
in recognition of his lifetime contribution to the success of the
jukebox industry.
In June 1989, Twitty celebrated the seventh anniversary of "Twitty
City," a nine-acre tourist complex in Hendersonville, Tennessee,
just outside of Nashville. Twitty developed the complex with the country
music fan in mind. In one place, fans can find everything they want to
see when they come to Nashville. What really made the attraction unique
was Conway's home and the homes of his four children were on the
grounds. He spent as much time as possible visiting with the fans, the
people who, Twitty said, "have made all of this possible for
me." Besides being a major music figure, Conway Twitty was known as
one of the most honest, forthright men in Nashville who put decency and
dignity above all else. Conway was a gentleman who defined class. He is
truly missed.
From Conway
Twitty's Official
Website. |
Web
Site
Advertising
"Inside
Nashville Jukebox"
Contact
us
Download mp3s unlimited!
Unlimited MP3 Music Downloads
Download Full Albums
Fast Downloads
Download CD & DVD Covers
Burn your own music CDs
Unlimited DVD Quality Movies
Never Pay a Download Fee
Click
here
Attention:
Parents and Music Teachers
How your child or student can read music notes - easily
and quickly!
Click
Here |