REAL COUNTRY MUSIC JUKEBOX
WELCOME TO THE REAL COUNTRY MUSIC JUKEBOX.
WHERE YOU WILL ONLY HERE THE TRADITIONAL COUNTRY MUSIC.
THERE IS NO GUITAR SMASHING, ROPE SWINGING, SLEAZY STUFF HERE. PURE 100% DIE HARD COUNTRY IS WHAT WE ARE.
Country singer Jeannie C. Riley, was born as Jeanne Carolyn Stephrural on Friday, October 19th, 1945 in the very small & rural town of Anson, Texas. Her father was an automobile mechanic and her mother was a nurse. Jeannie fell in love with country music while growing up in Texas and made her public debut as a teenager on her guitarist & uncle, Johnny Moore's local jamboree show. She married husband Mickey Riley while still in high school. Her daughter Kim Michelle Riley was born on Tuesday, January 11th, 1966. The Riley family moved to Nashville, Tennessee later in the year. Jeannie worked as a secretary at Passkey Records while recording demos on the side. Her debut single "What About Them" was a flop. However, Riley scored a massive smash in 1968 with the marvelously sharp comical, sassy, embarrassing & exasperating (others see it different, in their own eyes, ways & personalities), Tom T. Hall's composition of "Harper Valley P.T.A.". An extremely excellent & witty critique of small town moral hypocrisy, the song was a huge crossover success. It peaked on both the pop and country charts, on the Nielson Top 40, that Casey Kasem counted down, on radio stations all across North America, alike at #1, thus making Jeannie the first female country singer to have a hit single simultaneously soar to the #1 spot on both the Nielson pop & country charts. Riley not only won the Grammy Award for Best Female Country Vocal Performance (she was also nominated for Grammys as "Best New Artist" & "Record of the Year"), Harper Valley P.T.A. also won the Single of the Year from the Country Music Association. In addition, the song inspired a 1969 TV musical variety program with Riley as the host, a 1978 film adaptation starring Barbara Eden, & an early 80's spin-off sitcom that also starred Eden. Jeannie's follow-up singles "The Girl Most Likely", "Country Girl", "Oh, Singer", "Good Enough to be Your Wife" were all Top 10 country hits. At the height of her popularity in the early 1970's, Riley not surprisingly made guest appearances on numerous TV shows. In the mid-1970 decade, Jeannie became a born-again & very devout Christian & formed the band "The Red River Symphony", which had a minor hit in 1976 with "The Best I Ever Had". She continued to remain a popular contemporary Christian music singer throughout the 1980 & 1990 decades. Following a taxing six year bought with clinical depression, Riley has bounced back and even hosts her own weekly radio show called "Inside Nashville Country". Jeannie C. Riley currently resides in Franklin, Tennessee.