|
Email CMP
Email CMP
Email CMP
Email CMP |
Morna Anne Murray (born June 20, 1945)
is a Canadian singer in pop, country and adult contemporary styles whose
albums have sold over 54 million copies. Anne Murray was the first
Canadian female solo singer to reach #1 on the U.S. charts,
and also the
first to earn a Gold record for one of her signature songs, "Snowbird"
(1970). She is often
cited as the woman who paved the way for other Canadian international
success stories such as Céline Dion, Sarah McLachlan and Shania Twain.
She is also the first woman and the first Canadian to win "Album
of the Year" at the Country Music Association Awards for her 1984 album,
A Little Good News.
Anne Murray has received four Grammy Awards, 24 Juno Awards (she holds
the record for the most Junos awarded to an artist), three American Music
Awards, three Country Music Association Awards, and three Canadian Country
Music Association Awards. She has been inducted into the Canadian Country
Music Hall of Fame, the Juno Hall of Fame, The Songwriters Hall of Fame and
the Hit Parade Hall of Fame. She is a member of the Country Music Hall of
Fame Walkway of Stars in Nashville, and has her own star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame in Los Angeles and on Canada's Walk of Fame in Toronto.
In 2011, Billboard ranked her number 10 on their list of the 50
Biggest Adult Contemporary Artists Ever.
Early career
In 1965 Anne Murray appeared on the University of New Brunswick student
project record "The Groove" (500 pressed). She sang two songs on the record
- "Unchained Melody" and "Little Bit of Soap". On the label her name was
misspelled "Anne Murry".
While at university, Anne Murray was encouraged to audition for the 1960s
CBC musical variety television show, Singalong Jubilee, but Anne
Murray was not offered a singing position. Two years later she received a
call from Singalong Jubilee co-host and associate producer, Bill
Langstroth, and was asked to return for a second audition. Following that
second audition, Anne Murray was cast for the show.
After a summer of singing in local venues across the Maritimes, Anne
Murray began teaching Physical Education at a high school in Summerside,
Prince Edward Island. After one year of teaching, she was offered a spot on
a television show Let's Go, and returned to Singalong Jubilee.
As a regular member of the "Singalong Jubilee" cast, Murray appeared on
the Singalong Jubilee Vol. III soundtrack and Our Family Album -
The Singalong Jubilee Cast records released by Arc Records. The show's
musical director, Brian Ahern, advised Anne Murray that she should move to
Toronto and record a solo album. Anne Murray's first album, What About Me,
was produced by Ahern in Toronto and released in 1968 on the Arc label.
Success
Anne Murray's debut album was on the Canadian Arc label, titled What
About Me (Arc AS 782). The lead single was the cut of the same name, was
written by Scott McKenzie, and was a sizable Canadian radio hit. The project
was produced by Brian Ahern, and covered songs by Joni Mitchell, Ken Tobias
and John Denver. After a year-long stint on Arc, Anne Murray switched to
Capitol Records in 1969 to record her second album, This Way Is My Way,
which was released in the fall of the same year. This album featured the
single that launched her successful career, "Snowbird", which became a #1
hit in Canada. "Snowbird" became a surprise hit on the U.S. charts as well,
reaching #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1970. It was also the first of
eight #1 Adult Contemporary hits for Anne Murray. The song led to Anne
Murray being awarded the first Gold record ever given to a Canadian artist
in the United States (RIAA certified Gold on November 16, 1970).
As one of the most successful female artists at that time, Anne
Murray became in demand for several television appearances in Canada and the
United States, eventually becoming a regular on the hit U.S. TV series
The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour.
After the success of "Snowbird", Anne Murray had a number of subsequent
singles that charted both pop and country simultaneously. During the 1970s
and early 1980s, her hits included Kenny Loggins' "Danny's Song" (1972)
(peaked at #7 on the Hot 100) and "A Love Song" (1973); "He Thinks I Still
Care" and her Top 10 cover of The Beatles' "You Won't See Me" (1974); her
all-time career-peaking #1 Hot 100 hit "You Needed Me" (1978) — oddly,
though, the biggest pop and commercially successful hit of her career (and,
she claims, her personal favourite song in her entire repertoire) stalled
out at #4 on Billboard's country singles chart and #3 on Billboard's U.S.
Adult Contemporary chart; "I Just Fall in Love Again", "Shadows in the
Moonlight", and "Broken Hearted Me" (all from 1979); her revival of The
Monkees' 1967 #1 hit "Daydream Believer" and "Could I Have This Dance" from
the Urban Cowboy motion picture soundtrack, both from 1980; "Blessed
Are the Believers" (1981); "Another Sleepless Night" (1982); "A Little Good
News" (1983); 1984's "Just Another Woman in Love" and "Nobody Loves Me Like
You Do" (a duet with Dave Loggins of 1974's "Please Come to Boston" fame and
cousin of Anne Murray's frequent songwriter Kenny); and "Time, Don't Run Out
On Me" from 1985.
She performed "O Canada" at the first American League baseball game
played in Canada on April 7, 1977, when the Toronto Blue Jays played the
Chicago White Sox at Exhibition Stadium. Anne Murray reprised the Canadian
national anthem prior to Game 3 of the 1992 World Series at SkyDome.
Anne Murray was a celebrity corporate spokeswoman for The Bay, and she
also did commercials and sang the company jingle ("You Can Count on the
Commerce") for the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
Anne Murray's last Hot 100 charting pop hit was "Now and Forever (You and
Me)" from 1986; it also was her last #1 on both American and Canadian
country charts. Her last charting single in the U.S. was 1991's "Everyday,"
which appeared in Billboard's Country Singles chart, and her last charting
single in Canada was 2000's "What a Wonderful World".
Anne Murray was ranked #24 in Country Music Television's 40 Greatest
Women of Country Music in 2002.
Anne Murray is a Companion of the Order of Canada, the highest honour
that can be awarded to a Canadian civilian. She was a recipient of the Order
of Nova Scotia in its inaugural year.
In 1996, Anne Murray signed on with a new manager, Bruce Allen, who also
has managed careers for Bryan Adams, Michael Bublé, Martina McBride and Jann
Arden. She recorded her first live album in 1997 and in 1999, she released
What a Wonderful World, a Platinum selling inspirational album,
which went to Billboard #1 Contemporary Christian, # 4 Country and
#38 on the pop charts. She released Country Croonin' in 2002, the
follow-up to her successful 1993 album, Croonin'. In 2004, she
released I'll Be Seeing You in Canada only, which features a
collection of songs from the early 20th century through to the mid-1940s.
The American version, titled All of Me, features a bonus disc
containing many of her hit singles, followed in 2005.
In 2006 Anne Murray received a tremendous honour when the Canadian
Songwriters Hall of Fame chose her and Leonard Cohen as recipients of the
Legacy Award for their extraordinary contributions to and support of the
Canadian songwriting industry. Murray was recognized for her unfailing
support of Canada’s songwriters, through her performances and her
recordings.
On June 29, 2007, Canada Post issued the limited edition Anne Murray
Stamp. She was recognized along with three other iconic Canadian recording
artists: Paul Anka, Gordon Lightfoot and Joni Mitchell.
Anne Murray's final studio album Anne Murray Duets: Friends & Legends,
was released in November 2007 in Canada and January 2008 in the U.S. The
album comprises 17 tracks that include many of Anne Murray's biggest hits
over her four-decade career, re-recorded as duets with other established,
rising, and – in one case – deceased female singers. These artists included
Canadian superstars Céline Dion and Shania Twain along with other fellow
Canadians k.d. lang, Nelly Furtado, Jann Arden, a CD-closing French-language
duet with Québec's Isabelle Boulay, and Anne Murray's daughter, Dawn
Langstroth; Australia's decades-long veteran Olivia Newton-John; Nashville's
Emmylou Harris, Martina McBride, Shelby Lynne, and pop/country/contemporary
Christian crossover artist Amy Grant; songwriting and recording legend
Carole King; influential folk-rock duo Indigo Girls; Irish sextet Celtic
Woman; Britain's late blue-eyed soul legend and close personal friend of
Anne Murray's, Dusty Springfield; and a duet of her landmark,
career-establishing #1 hit from 1970, "Snowbird," with world's biggest
selling soprano, Sarah Brightman.
Anne Murray Duets: Friends and Legends was recorded in four cities
- Toronto, Nashville, New York and Los Angeles. According to Billboard
magazine, the album reached #2 on the Canadian pop album charts and was
certified Double Platinum in Canada after merely two months, representing
sales of over 200,000 units. Anne Murray Duets: Friends and Legends
was the second-highest debuting CD on the Billboard Top 200 albums chart for
the week ending February 2, 2008. It entered the chart at #42, making it her
highest-charting U.S. CD release since 1999's What a Wonderful World,
which peaked at #38 on the Top 200 and was certified Platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Also, for the week ending
February 2, 2008, the CD debuted at #8 on Billboard's Top Country
Albums chart and at #3 on its Top Internet Albums chart. Anne Murray was
nominated for the 2008 Juno Award for Album of the Year and Pop Album of the
Year.
Murray's album What a Wonderful World was re-released in July 2008
in North America as a 14-song package. A new Christmas album, titled Anne
Murray's Christmas Album with bonus DVD was released in October 2008,
and Sony BMG Music released an Elvis Presley Christmas album, titled
Elvis Presley Christmas Duets, on October 14, 2008 featuring a virtual
duet of "Silver Bells" with Anne Murray.
According to Linda Thompson (Elvis Presley's girlfriend from 1972–1976),
Elvis Presley was a fan of Anne Murray.
On October 10, 2007, Anne Murray announced that she would embark on her
final major tour. She toured in February and March 2008 in the U.S.,
followed by the "Coast-to-Coast – One Last Time" tour in April and May in
Canada. Anne Murray's final public concert was held at the Sony Centre in
Toronto on May 23, 2008.
On August 25, 2008 Murray appeared on the popular TV program Canadian
Idol as a mentor.
In January, 2009, Alfred A. Knopf Canada announced that Anne Murray, in
collaboration with author Michael Posner, would be writing a memoir of her
private life and 40-year career in show business. The autobiography, titled
All of Me, was released on October 27, 2009. The autobiography is a
self-portrait of Canada’s first great female recording artist. All of Me
documents Anne Murray's life, from her childhood in the tragedy-plagued
small coal-mining town of Springhill, Nova Scotia, to her success on the
world stage. The book remains on Canada's non-fiction best sellers list.
Following the release of her autobiography, All of Me, Anne Murray
embarked on a 15-city book signing tour, starting in Nashville on October
27, 2009 and ending in Ottawa on November 24, 2009. The tour also included a
special In Conversation interview with Michael Posner at the
International Festival of Authors in Toronto on October 30, 2009.
On February 12, 2010, Anne Murray was one of the eight Canadians who
carried the Olympic flag during the opening ceremonies of the XXI Olympic
Winter Games in Vancouver.
Personal life
Morna Anne Murray was born on June 20, 1945, in the small coal-mining
town of Springhill, Nova Scotia. Her father, James Carson Murray, was the
town doctor and her mother, Marion Margaret Murray, was a registered nurse
who focused her life on raising her family and community charity work. Anne
Murray was raised as the only girl in a family of five brothers - David,
Daniel, Harold, Stewart and Bruce.
After expressing an early interest in music, she studied piano for six
years; by age fifteen, she began taking voice lessons. Every Saturday
morning, she took a bus ride from Springhill to Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia,
for her singing lesson with her teacher, Karen Mills. One of Anne Murray's
earliest performances was of the religious song "Ave Maria" at her high
school graduation in 1962.
Following high school, Anne Murray attended Mount Saint Vincent
University in Halifax for one year. She later studied Physical Education at
University of New Brunswick in Fredericton. After receiving her degree, Anne
Murray taught physical education at a high school in Summerside, Prince
Edward Island for one year.
Anne Murray married Bill Langstroth on June 20, 1975, and gave birth to
two children: William, in 1976, and the better-known of her children, Dawn
Langstroth, in 1979, a singer/songwriter and artist who has recorded with
her mother a number of times, including the duet "Let There Be Love" in 1999
for Murray's What A Wonderful World album. Anne and Dawn were
featured in a mother-daughter duet of "Nobody Loves Me Like You Do" on
Murray's hit 2008 U.S. CD (released in late 2007 in Canada), Anne Murray
Duets: Friends & Legends, Murray's highest-charting release in nine
years.
In recent years, Anne Murray has faced many personal challenges: her
departure from Capitol Records after more than a quarter-century; the
apparent suicide of Gene MacLellan, the composer of her first hit single,
"Snowbird", which hit #1 in both Canada and the U.S. and virtually
established her international singing career overnight; the death of her
beloved manager and close friend, Leonard T. Rambeau, from colon cancer; the
separation and subsequent divorce from her husband, Bill; her daughter
Dawn's battle with anorexia (Dawn and Anne reluctantly did the US talk-show
circuit to raise awareness of the deadly affliction);
and most recently, the loss of her best friend to cancer (she
recorded her 2005 album All of Me as a tribute to her).
She emerged from those personal adversities in 1999 with her best-selling
album in 20 years, What a Wonderful World, which was certified
Platinum, and her 2002 CD Country Croonin’ was certified Gold by the
RIAA. Anne Murray's 2007/2008 Anne Murray Duets: Legends & Friends CD
was the second-highest debuting album on Billboard's Top 200 Albums chart
(U.S.) for the week ending February 2, 2008, and was Murray's
highest-charting album in the U.S. since What a Wonderful World was
released in 1999. The CD also debuted on Billboard's Top Country Albums
chart at #8 and Top Internet Albums chart at #3 for the same week.
Anne Murray has always kept strong ties with her hometown,
Springhill, Nova Scotia, located about an hour south of Moncton, New
Brunswick, and two hours north of Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Anne Murray
Centre, located in Springhill, houses a vast collection of memorabilia from
both her personal life and professional career in a series of award winning,
three-dimensional displays. The Anne Murray Centre, which opened on July 28,
1989, is a registered Canadian charity. As a non-profit association, all the
revenue generated from its operation is used to provide employment for local
people and for its ongoing maintenance. The Anne Murray Centre has
successfully fostered tourism in the area and has promoted awareness of the
music of Nova Scotia and Canada
Anne Murray was also instrumental in the construction of the Dr. Carson
and Marion Murray Community Centre in Springhill, Nova Scotia. Murray served
as the honorary chair of the fundraising campaign to replace the town arena
that collapsed after a peewee hockey game in 2002. Named for her parents,
the Dr. Carson and Marion Murray Community Centre sports an NHL-size ice
sheet with seating for 800 people, a walking track, multi-purpose room,
community room with seating for up to 300, and a gym. The Dr. Carson and
Marion Murray Community Centre has become an integral part of the Springhill
community since opening on September 15, 2004.
Murray's personal success combined with her visible love and support for
Springhill was featured in the article, “Women of Success – Impact on The
Economy of Their Hometowns,” in Progressive Choices – Canadian Women In
Business magazine (Summer/Fall 2004 edition).
When a devastating tsunami brought tragedy on December 26, 2004, Anne
Murray joined other Canadian music stars in the Canada for Asia Telethon, a
three-hour, tsunami relief concert broadcast on CBC Television (January 13,
2005) to support CARE Canada’s efforts. Bryan Adams and Anne Murray closed
the show with a duet, "What Would It Take".
Anne Murray is also passionate about environmental affairs, and she has
been a public supporter of renowned Canadian environmentalist and geneticist
Dr. David Suzuki’s Nature Challenge.
Anne Murray has also been involved in a variety of charitable
organizations. In addition to being the Honorary National Chairperson of the
Canadian Save The Children Fund, she has served as a spokeswoman for many
charities throughout her career - most recently Colon Cancer Canada. On May
20, 2009, Colon Cancer Canada launched the inaugural Anne Murray Charity
Golf Classic. Over $150,000 was raised through the event.
Anne Murray's father, Dr. Carson Murray, died in 1980 at the age of 72
from complications from leukemia. Her mother, the former Marion Margaret
Burke, died April 10, 2006, at the age of 92 after suffering a series of
strokes during heart surgery.
A longtime golf enthusiast, Anne Murray made history in October 2003 at
the Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona, New York, by becoming the first
woman to score a hole-in-one on the 108-yard, par 3, 17th hole at the
Kaluhyat Golf Club.
On May 11, 2007, Golf For Women magazine named Anne Murray the world's
best female celebrity golfer, noting her 11 handicap
TV Work
Murray has had five highly-rated US specials on CBS (over 40 million
viewers each), countless Canadian specials on CBC (such as Anne Murray in
Nova Scotia, Intimate Evening with Anne Murray, Anne Murray
RSVP, A Special Anne Murray Christmas, Legends & Friends,
Greatest Hits II, What A Wonderful World, Ladies Night Show,
Anne Murray in Walt Disney World and Anne Murray's Classic
Christmas) and has appeared on Solid Gold, Sesame Street,
The Muppet Show, Saturday Night Live, The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson, Dean Martin Summer Show, Singalong
Jubilee, Dinah!, The Today Show, Dolly!, The
Mike Douglas Show, Christmas in Washington, Boston Pops,
The Helen Reddy Show, The Oprah Winfrey Show, 20/20,
CNN, Perry Como's Christmas in New Mexico, The Glen Campbell
Goodtime Hour, Night of a 100 Stars, Live with Regis and
Kathie Lee, The Pat Sajak Show, Royal Canadian Air Farce
and Good Morning America. Her 2005 CBC special Anne Murray: The
Music of My Life broke ratings records for a Thursday night, with more
than 7 million Canadian viewers tuned in. The guests on her TV specials have
included Julio Iglesias, Patti LaBelle, Céline Dion, Bryan Adams, Dusty
Springfield, Bananarama, Dionne Warwick, John Denver, k.d. lang, Kris
Kristofferson, Barenaked Ladies, Alan Thicke, Roch Voisine, Glen Campbell,
Valerie Harper, Ruth Buzzi, Rita MacNeil, Andrea Martin, The Rankin Family,
Diana Krall, Dawn Langstroth, Jann Arden, and Miss Piggy. The record for the
highest-rated variety special in Canadian television history is Anne
Murray's Family Christmas, which garnered a 43 per cent share on CBC
with 4.2 million viewers. |