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Carlene Carter

 
Artist: Carlene Carter
Carlene Carter

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Charlene Carter, Carter Carter, Perry Lamek, Howie Epstein, James Eller, Benmont Tench, Robert Ellis Orrall, Al Anderson

Worked With:

Terry Williams, Bobby Irwin, Martin Belmont, Roger Bechirian, Tracy Nelson, Paul Carrack

Relationship With:

See Carlene Carter Lyrics
  • Born: September 26, 1955, Nashville, TN
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Piano, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Hindsight 20/20," "Musical Shapes/Blue Nun," "Little Love Letters"
  • Representative Songs: "I Fell in Love," "Cry," "Do Me Lover"

Biography

Carlene Carter has always straddled the line between country and rock. Beginning her career as a rock singer in the mid-'70s, she became immersed in the new wave in the late '70s, before emerging as a new country singer in the late '80s, Throughout it all, her music has always infused roots music -- whether country or rock & roll -- with a nervy, edgy energy.

Carlene is the daughter of June Carter and Carl Smith, who divorced when their daughter was just two. June would frequently take her daughter on Carter Family tours, which meant that Carlene developed a musical interest at an early age. When she was 12, her mother married Johnny Cash. Following the marriage, Carlene and her stepsister, Rosanne Cash, became backup singers in the Carter/Cash touring show.

At the age of 15 she married Joe Simpkins and had a child; they were divorced within a few years. Carter enrolled in college as a piano major in her late teens, but she never graduated. At 19, she married Jack Routh and had another child; they were divorced within two years.

In 1978, she decided to pursue a musical career, heading to Los Angeles where she received a record contract with Warner Bros. Her debut album, Carlene Carter, was a rock & roll record recorded in London with Graham Parker's backing band, the Rumour. The following year, she released her second album, Two Sides to Every Woman, which featured support from the Doobie Brothers. That same year she married singer/songwriter/producer Nick Lowe, who was currently the co-leader of the new wave rock & roll revival band, Rockpile. Lowe helped Carter shape her musical direction in the early '80s, and her third album -- the new wave-inflected country-rock record Musical Shapes (1980) -- showed the influence of Lowe, Rockpile, and Dave Edmunds. Although the album was critically acclaimed, it was a commercial failure. She followed Musical Shapes in 1981 with Blue Nun, which continued to pursue a new wave-country direction; like its predecessor, it was ignored.

During the early '80s, Carter was shut off from the country community because she was living in England with Lowe. After Blue Nun, she stopped recording, choosing to perform solo shows instead; she also had a starring role in the theatrical production Pump Boys and Dinettes. Carter and Lowe's marriage collapsed in the mid-'80s and she returned to the States, where she became part of the touring Carter Family.

In 1989, she began working on a comeback record with Howie Epstein, the bassist for Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers. That same year, she performed a duet with Southern Pacific on the Top 40 hit "Time's Up." Reprise signed Carter in 1990 and she released her overdue fifth album, I Fell in Love, later that year. I Fell in Love still had rock influences, but it was a more straightforward country record than her previous albums, and country radio paid attention. The album became a hit and two singles, "I Fell in Love" and "Come on Back," climbed all the way to number three. Little Love Letters, her 1993 follow-up (which was released on Giant Records), was equally successful; its first single, "Every Little Thing," was another number three hit. Little Acts of Treason, her 1995 album, wasn't as big a hit as its two predecessors, but it still enjoyed moderate success on the country charts. A hits collection, Hindsight 20/20, appeared in the fall of 1996. A variety of personal and professional problems hit Carter at this point, and aside from a concert album, Live in London at the Marque Club, in 2005, no new studio material appeared from her until the reaffirming comback album Stronger in 2008. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Carlene Carter
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Carlene Carter
Birth name Rebecca Carlene Smith
Born September 26, 1955 (1955-09-26) (age 54)
Origin Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Genres Country
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals
Guitar
Years active 1978-Present
Labels Reprise
Giant
Associated acts Johnny Cash, June Carter Cash, Rosanne Cash, Carter Family

Carlene Carter (born Rebecca Carlene Smith; September 26, 1955) is an American country singer and songwriter. She is the daughter of June Carter and her first husband, Carl Smith.

Between 1978 and the present, Carter has recorded twelve albums, primarily on major labels. In the same timespan, she has released more than twenty singles, including three #3-peaking hits on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.

Contents

Career

In 1987, Carlene Carter joined with the singing trio The Carter Sisters, consisting of her mother June Carter Cash and June's sisters Helen and Anita Carter in a revived version of The Carter Family, and were featured on a 1987 television episode of Austin City Limits along with Carlene's stepfather Johnny Cash.[1]

Her solo recording career had begun in the late 1970s with her eponymous debut album. In 1977, during a concert at New York's Bottom Line, she introduced a song by stating, "If this song don't put the cunt back in country, I don't know what will." The comment was quoted widely in the press, and Carter spent much of the next decade trying to live the comment down.[2] It was with 1990's I Fell in Love that Carter's career really took off, with the album and title song topping the US country albums and singles charts, respectively. Following a stint in the UK and in the run-up to her divorce from the English singer-songwriter Nick Lowe, Carter had returned to America, where in 1988 she met musician Howie Epstein. Epstein helped Carter get her career back on track, producing I Fell in Love and co-authoring its title track with longtime collaborator, Milwaukee writer Perry M. Lamek. In 1991, the song 'I Fell In Love' earned a Grammy nomination for Best Female Country Vocal Performance. The album, which featured straight-ahead, retro-sounding country unlike her prior work which had combined country, rock and roll and pop sounds, was among the first successes of the 1990s "neotraditionalist" movement in country.

Three years later, Epstein produced Carter's follow-up CD Little Love Letters, which featured the hit "Every Little Thing", which was accompanied by one of the top-rated music videos of the year. Epstein and Carter were engaged in the mid to late 1990s, but never married.

Carter provided the voice of "Red" in the 1994 Williams pinball machine, Red & Ted's Road Show, designed by Pat Lawlor. A clip of Carter's hit, "Every Little Thing," is played after the player scores a jackpot. A picture of Carter appears in the game's backglass artwork.

Carter had a cameo appearance in the 1994 film Maverick. She played a waitress on the gambling casino ship run by Commodore Duvall (James Coburn).

In 1995 Carter's Little Acts of Treason was critically well received but failed to achieve the commercial success of Carter's two previous releases. In 1996, Carter released Hindsight 20/20, a greatest hits album but it too failed to achieve success.

She also found limited amounts of fame with the song "It Takes One to Know Me," which was released on the albums Johnny Cash: The Legend and Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash: Duets. Originally recorded in 1977 with a full string backing group, it was lost in a tape collection in Hendersonville and uncovered in 2003. It was then remastered by her brother John Carter Cash. In the remastered version John added his and his wife Laura's (her sister-in-law) backing vocals and a guest appearance from Carlene herself—more than 25 years after she wrote and recorded the song.

In 2001, a New Mexico police officer pulled over Carter and Epstein. A search of the vehicle revealed that it was stolen and drugs were found.[3]

She was played by Victoria Hester in the movie Walk the Line.

On August 8, 2009, Carlene Carter played a live acoustic set at Hecksher Park in Huntington, NY. During the performance, she stated that it was the first time in more than 30 years that she performed by herself. During her hour-long set, she played the title track from her latest release, "Stronger," and said it was written in memory of her younger sister, who had passed away six years earlier. The track was performed on the piano and brought Carter to tears. Her younger sister is also mentioned in her track "Wildwood Rose." She ended the set playing "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" with the opening band "The Homegrown String Band" a family band from the area. She said it brought back memories of playing with her own family.

Personal life

Carlene Carter has been married four times:

  • Joseph Simpkins Jr. (1971-1972)
    • One child Tiffany Anastasia Lowe (b. February 23, 1972)
  • Jack Wesley Routh (1974-1977)
    • One child John Jackson Routh (b. January 15, 1976)
  • Nick Lowe (1979-1990)
  • Joseph Breen (2006- )

Carter was for many years linked romantically with the late bass player Howie Epstein, best known for his work with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.[4]

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album details Peak chart positions Certifications
(sales thresholds)
US Country US CAN Country CAN
1978 Carlene Carter
1979 Two Sides to Every Woman
  • Released: 1979
  • Label: Warner Bros. Records
1980 Musical Shapes
  • Released: 1980
  • Label: Warner Bros. Records
139
1981 Blue Nun
  • Released: 1981
  • Label: Warner Bros. Records
1983 C'est C Bon
1990 I Fell in Love 19
1993 Little Love Letters 35 196 2 45
  • CAN: Gold
1995 Little Acts of Treason
  • Released: August 8, 1995
  • Label: Giant Records
65 18
2008 Stronger 69

Compilations and live albums

Year Album details
1994 Hurricane: Live at the Crazy Horse
  • Released: 1994
  • Label: RSM
1996 Hindsight 20/20
  • Released: September 10, 1996
  • Label: Giant
2007 The Platinum Collection

Singles

Year Single Peak chart positions Album
US Country US CAN Country
1978 "Never Together (But Close Sometimes)" Carlene Carter
"Love Is Gone"
1979 "Do It in a Heartbeat" 42 108 56 Two Sides to Every Woman
"Old Photographs"
1980 "Baby Ride Easy" (with Dave Edmunds) 76 Musical Shapes
"Ring of Fire"
1981 "Oh How Happy" (with Paul Carrack) Blue Nun
"Do Me Lover" (with Paul Carrack)
1983 "Heart to Heart" C'est C Bon
1990 "I Fell in Love" 3 3 I Fell in Love
"Come on Back" 3 2
1991 "The Sweetest Thing" 25 8
"One Love" 33 17
1993 "Every Little Thing" 3 3 Little Love Letters
"Unbreakable Heart" 51 34
1994 "I Love You 'Cause I Want To" 50 20
"Sweet Meant to Be"
"Something Already Gone" 43 44 Maverick (soundtrack)
1995 "Love Like This" 70 54 Little Acts of Treason
"Hurricane" 75
1996 "He Will Be Mine" 84
2008 "Bring Love" Stronger

Guest singles

Year Single Artist Peak chart positions Album
US Country US CAN Country
1983 "I Couldn't Say No" Robert Ellis Orrall 32 Special Pain
1989 "Time's Up" Southern Pacific 26 19 County Line

Other charted songs

Year Single Chart positions Album
US Country
1995 "Rockin' Little Christmas" 66 A Giant Country Christmas, Vol. 1

Further reading

  • Everett, Todd (1998). "Carlene Carter". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 82–3.

References

  1. ^ Johnny Cash with The Carter Family, Austin City Limits, 1987
  2. ^ Chapman, Marshall (2003). Goodbye, little rock and roller. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-31568-6. 
  3. ^ http://www.cmt.com/artists/news/1444835/06282001/carter_carlene.jhtml CMT.com Retrieved on 05-15-07
  4. ^ Carlene Carter grows "Stronger"

External links


 
 

 

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