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Third Coast Talent
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The Best in Classic
Country Entertainment
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Bill
Anderson
There's an old saying:
"If you want someone's attention,
whisper."
Bill Anderson has been using that philosophy for over
forty years to capture the attention of millions of country music fans around
the world, en route to becoming a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame and
one of the most popular, most enduring entertainers of our time.
He's known, in fact as "Whispering Bill", a nickname hung
on him years ago as a result of his breathy voice and his warm, soft approach to
singing a country song. His credentials, however, shout his prominence:
One of the most awarded songwriters in the history of country music, a million
selling recording artist many times over, television game show host, network
soap opera star, spokesman for a nationwide restaurant chain, and a consummate
onstage performer. His back-up group, The Po' Folks Band, has long been
considered one of the finest instrumental and vocal groups in the business.
Bill Anderson was born in Columbia, South Carolina, but
spent most of his growing-up years around Atlanta, Georgia. He graduated
from the University of Georgia with a degree in journalism, having worked his
way through college as a disc jockey on nearby radio stations. It was
while he was still in school that he began performing and writing songs.
At the age of nineteen he composed the country classic, "City Lights", and began
rapidly carving his place in musical history.
He moved to Nashville, Tennessee, secured a recording
contract with Decca Records, and began turning out hit after hit with songs like
"Po' Folks", "Mama Sang A Son", "The Tips Of My Fingers", "8X10", and the
unforgettable country and pop smash, "Still". His compositions were
recorded by such diverse musical talents as Ray Price, Porter Wagoner, Debbie
Reynolds, Ivory Joe Hunter, Kitty Wells, Faron Young, Lawrence Welk, Dean
Martin, Jerry Lee Lewis, Aretha Franklin, Walter Brennan, and many others.
Bill has been voted Songwriter Of The Year six times, Male
Vocalist Of The Year, half of the Duet Of The Year with both Jan Howard and Mary
Lou Turner, has hosted and starred in the Country Music Television Series Of The
Year, seen his band voted Band Of The Year, and in 1975 was voted membership in
the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Ten years later, the State of
Georgia honored him by choosing him as only the 7th living performer inducted
into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. In 1993, he was made a member of the
Georgia Broadcasters' Hall of Fame. In 1994, South Carolina inducted him
into their Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame. And in 2001, he received
the ultimate honor, membership in Nashville's prestigious Country Music Hall of
Fame.
An entertainer in every sense of the word, Bill Anderson
was the first country artist to host a network game show, starring on ABC-TV's,
"The Better Sex". He also appeared for three years on ABC's Daytime soap
opera, "One Life To Live".
For six years he hosted a country music game show on The
Nashville Network called, "Fandango", later an interview show called "Opry
Backstage", and somehow found time to be co-producer of another TNN Show called,
"You Can Be A Star". In addition, Bill has appeared frequently as a guest
star on television's top variety and game shows, including The Tonight Show, The
Today Show, Match Game, Family Feud, Hee Haw, and others.
Bill Anderson's autobiography, "Whisperin' Bill", was published by Longstreet
Press in 1989 and relates the fascinating details of his life and lengthy career
in show business. The book, which Bill personally wrote over a period of three
years, made bestseller lists all across the south. Bill's second book, a
humorous look at the music business titled, "I Hope You're Living As High On The
Hog As The Pig You Turned Out To Be", was published in 1993 and is currently in
it's third printing.
Bill Anderson continues to paint a broad stroke across the Nashville music
scene. He has been a member of the Grand Ole Opry since 1961 and performs there
regularly. He continues to record, his latest album, "The Way I Feel", having
been released nationally on the Varese-Sarabande label, distributed by
Universal. His most recent gospel album is available on nine different
labels, and his first DVD has been edited and released in both a one-hour and a
two-hour format.
Despite his hectic schedule and the demands of his multi-faceted business
enterprises, Bill has made a renewed commitment to his first love - songwriting.
"I feel like I've come full-circle", he smiles, because songwriting is what got
me to Nashville in the first place." In 1995, Billboard magazine named four Bill
Anderson compositions - "City Lights", "Once A Day", "Still", and "Mama Sang A
Song" - among the Top 20 Country Songs of the past 35-years. No other songwriter
had as many songs listed.
Anderson began 1999 with a pair of #1 hits, "Wish You
Were Here", by Mark Wills and the Grammy nominated "Two Teardrops" by Steve Wariner. His song, "Too Country", recorded by Brad Paisley along with Anderson,
Buck Owens, and George Jones, won CMA Vocal Event Of The Year honors for 2001.
The following year saw Kenny Chesney soar with his version of the Anderson-Dean
Dillon masterpiece, "A Lot Of Things Different", and in 2004 Brad Paisley &
Alison Krauss reached the pinnacle with his and Jon Randall's poignant ballad,
"Whiskey Lullaby". The overwhelming and lasting popularity of that song
led to the writers' winning CMA Song of The Year honors in 2005.
Broadcast Music, Inc. recently named Anderson its first
country songwriting Icon, placing him alongside R&B legends Little Richard,
Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and James Brown as the only recipients of that
prestigious award. His compositions can also be heard on recent or
forthcoming releases by Vince Gill, Lorrie
Morgan, Joe Nichols, George Strait, Sara Evans, Tracy Byrd, and others, serving
notice that the first forty-plus years were only the beginning.
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