Sleeping Single In A Double Bed (Dave Audé Remix)
Sample excerpt for album Sleeping Single In A Double Bed (Dave Audé Remix).
Read MoreSleeping Single In A Double Bed (Dave Audé Remix)
Sample excerpt for album Sleeping Single In A Double Bed (Dave Audé Remix).
Read MoreAfter All These Years: The Collection
Sample excerpt for album After All These Years: The Collection.
Read MoreThe Essential Barbara Mandrell – The Columbia and Epic Years
Sample excerpt for album The Essential Barbara Mandrell – The Columbia and Epic Years.
Read MoreThe Best of Barbara Mandrell
Sample excerpt for album The Best of Barbara Mandrell.
Read MoreBorn To Die
Sample excerpt for Born To Die.
Read MoreDarlin’
Sample excerpt for Darlin’.
Read MoreA Perfect Match
Sample excerpt for A Perfect Match.
Read MoreSleeping Single In A Double Bed – Single Version
Sample excerpt for Sleeping Single In A Double Bed – Single Version.
Read MoreI Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool – (Duet With George Jones)
Sample excerpt for I Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool – (Duet With George Jones).
Read MoreBarbara Mandrell
Thanks to a string of hit singles and a popular television variety series, vocalist Barbara Mandrell was arguably the biggest female star in country music in the late ’70s and early ’80s. Born the oldest daughter into a musical family in Houston, Texas, on Christmas Day, 1948, Mandrell was already reading music and playing accordion by the age of five. Just six years later, she was so adept at playing the steel guitar that her father escorted her to a music trade convention in Chicago, where her talents caught the attention of Chet Atkins and Joe Maphis. Soon after, she was a featured performer in Maphis’ Las Vegas nightclub show, followed by television performances and tours with Red Foley, Johnny Cash, and Tex Ritter.
When Mandrell was 14, her family formed its own group, with her father Irby on vocals and guitar, her mother Mary Ellen on bass, and Barbara handling pedal steel and saxophone. The band also included drummer Ken Dudney, whom Mandrell would eventually marry. The family toured the U.S. and Asia before Barbara made her first recordings in 1963, among them the minor hit ‘Queen for a Day.’ After a few more years of touring, she briefly retired in order to become a housewife, but she soon grew restless and returned to the music business. After signing with Columbia in 1969, she notched her first chart hit, a cover of the Otis Redding classic ‘I’ve Been Loving You Too Long.’ In 1970, Mandrell scored the first of many Top 40 hits with ‘Playin’ Around with Love.’ In the same year, she began performing with singer David Houston, and their partnership also generated considerable chart success.
In 1975, Mandrell jumped to the ABC/Dot label, and under the guidance of producer Tom Collins reached the Top Five for the first time with the single ‘Standing Room Only.’ After a series of successive hits, she earned her first number one with 1978’s ‘Sleeping Single in a Double Bed,’ which was immediately followed by another chart-topper, ‘(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don’t Want to Be Right,’ in early 1979. Later in the year, ‘Years’ also reached number one, as did three more singles — ‘I Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool,’ ”Til You’re Gone,’ and ‘One of a Kind Pair of Fools’ — between 1981 and 1983, a period during which Mandrell also received numerous industry awards and accolades.