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RCS
Productions books Patty Loveless
Contact
RCS Productions for booking
Patty
Loveless in
concert.
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Patty Loveless was born Jan. 4, 1957, in
Pikeville, Ky., with the name Patricia Ramey. As a young
girl, she listened to the Opry on a radio propped in the
kitchen window and first saw live music when her father,
a coal miner, took her to see
Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs at the Polly Anna Drive-In.
It wasn't long until the big-voiced child began singing
-- in another room because she was too shy to look at her
audience -- for company.
At 14, her traditional country roots led her to Nashville.
She and brother Roger Ramey met with Porter Wagoner to show
him her songs; Wagoner, though positive, told her to finish
high school. At 16, she had a writing/singing stint with
the Grand Ole Opry's Wilburn Brothers, which meant that
she could hang around backstage at country music's shrine,
learning from such greats as Wagoner and Dolly Parton. She
signed with the Wilburns’ publishing firm, Sure-Fire
Music.
Loveless married Terry Lovelace, the Wilburns' drummer,
in 1976, and after moving with him to Kings Mountain, N.C.,
they both played in various rock bands in the Charlotte
area. Her father, who retired at 42 because of black lung
disease, died in 1979. After a bout with alcoholism, Loveless
moved to Nashville in 1985 to pursue a career in country
music again. Although her marriage broke up that year, she
kept her married name, changing the spelling slightly.
Her brother Roger, now her manager, helped her secure a
singles deal with Tony Brown at MCA Records, and she cut
her first album in 1987. Her first Top 10 hit was "If
My Heart Had Windows," originally a hit for George
Jones in 1967. Other hits followed, including "A Little
Bit in Love," "Timber, I'm Falling in Love"
and "Chains." The Opry inducted her in 1988, and
she married husband/producer Emory Gordy Jr. in 1989.
She left MCA, dissolved her managerial relationship with
her brother, and arrived at Epic Records in 1992. She immediately
hit No. 1 with "Blame It on Your Heart" in 1993,
from the album Only What I Feel. The heartbreaking "How
Can I Help You Say Goodbye" entered the Top 10 in 1994.
With the feisty "I Try to Think About Elvis,"
and the delicate "Here I Am" and "You Don't
Even Know Who I Am," When Fallen Angels Fly was awarded
the 1995 CMA album of the year -- only the second time a
woman has won.
With that momentum, Loveless scored two No. 1 hits -- "You
Can Feel Bad" and "Lonely Too Long" -- from
1996's The Trouble With the Truth. That year, she was voted
the CMA female vocalist of the year and the Academy of Country
Music's top female vocalist in 1996. A hard-core country
duet with George Jones, "You Don't Seem to Miss Me,"
earned a 1998 CMA vocal collaboration award.
Loveless' frequent duets with Vince Gill have also earned
her accolades. "My Kind of Woman, My Kind of Man"
won the 1999 CMA vocal event of the year award and received
a Grammy nomination. The song appears on Loveless’
1999 hits package Classics. In 2000, she released Strong
Heart, but none of its singles reached the Top 10.
She took a break from commercial country music with the
celebrated album Mountain Soul in 2001. Revisiting the Appalachian
music of her youth, the album sparked a wave of critical
acclaim and led to Loveless performing at numerous bluegrass
festivals, joining the O Brother-inspired Down From the
Mountain tour and co-hosting the International Bluegrass
Music Association (IBMA) awards. The Christmas album, Bluegrass
& White Snow, followed in 2002.
Even without hit singles, Loveless was nominated for the
CMA female vocalist in 2003, along with fellow traditionalists
Dolly Parton, Alison Krauss and Terri Clark. She released
On Your Way Home in 2003.
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For
booking information contact
RCS Productions, Inc. |
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