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Toni Tennille

 
Artist: Toni Tennille

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Performed Songs By:

Worked With:

Bruce Johnston, Daryl Dragon
  • Born: May 08, 1943, Montgomery, AL
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Do It Again

Biography

With her husband, Daryl Dragon, pop singer Toni Tennille made up the popular '70s duo the Captain & Tennille. Tennille was the vocalist for the group, while Dragon played the keyboard and other instruments. She is known for her pop, rock, jazz and orchestral music and has sold more than a million records with popular hits like "Do That to Me One More Time" and "The Way I Want to Touch You."

Toni Tennille was born into a musical family in Montgomery, Alabama. Her father, Frank Tennille, sang and recorded under the pseudonym Clark Randall. He was with Ben Pollack's band and was still performing with the band when Bob Crosby took over. Toni Tennille attended Auburn University in Alabama, paying her way by singing popular tunes of the '30s and '40s.

In 1975, she married Daryl Dragon. The two combined their musical talents to produce the Captain & Tennille. During the partnership, the duo earned an impressive five gold albums, six gold singles, two platinum albums and one platinum single. In 1976, the two entered the television scene with their own show on ABC, Captain & Tennille Variety Show, and appeared on several other ABC specials. Captain & Tennille's Greatest Hits, released in 1977, included the duo's 1975 Grammy Award-winning Song of the Year "Love Will Keep Us Together."

In 1980, she hosted the syndicated Toni Tennille Variety Talk Show. Two of Tennille's hit albums, All of Me and More Than You Know, were produced herself and then fine-tuned by the Count Basie Orchestra's musical arranger Sammy Nestico. In 1984, when the couple moved to Nevada, Tennille began to work once again on renditions of songs from the '30s and '40s. She is known in the United States and Canada as a frequent symphony guest artists, with eight to ten appearances a year.

In 1992, she broadened her career to include the stage, starring in the Los Angeles production of Stardust. She received rave reviews in all the trade magazines for her musical performance.

The Captain & Tennille made a 20th anniversary album in 1995, featuring some of the group's hit singles and jazz ballads from the last twenty years. The album, Captain & Tennille -- 20 Years of Romance, also marked the couple's 20th wedding anniversary.

Studying classical piano for ten years has allowed Toni Tennille to broaden her career to include songwriting. Through her participation in the Captain & Tennille, her orchestra tours across the United States and Canada, her jazz and pop albums and her television appearances, Toni Tennille has become known as a complete singer and entertainer. Nevada Governor Bob Miller named Tennille an Ambassador for the Arts for her numerous contributions. ~ Kim Summers, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Toni Tennille
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Cathryn Antoinette "Toni" Tennille (born May 8, 1940, Montgomery, Alabama) is one-half of the 1970s Grammy Award winning duo Captain & Tennille.[1] Tennille has also done musical work independently of her husband Daryl Dragon. Tennille has a contralto vocal range.[2]

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Biography

Tennille was born and raised in Montgomery, Alabama, as part of a family of entertainers. Her father, Frank Tennille, was a big band singer with Bob Crosby and the Bobcats and her mother, Cathryn Tennille, was a local television pioneer, being the hostess of Montgomery’s first daytime TV talk show. Tennille's musical sisters, Jane, Louisa, and Melissa, all sang on her variety TV shows, as well as on the Captain & Tennille albums. Tennille began her career studying classical piano at Auburn University and singing with the university's big band, the Auburn Knights.

Tennille sang backup vocals on Pink Floyd's, The Wall, and she also did backup singing for Elton John's recordings: performing on at least three John albums, including Caribou, Blue Moves, 21 at 33 and most notably on the song, "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me".

Tennille is 5 feet 11 inches (180 cm) tall. She married Kenneth Shearer in June 1962; they divorced in 1972. She then married Daryl Dragon on 11 November 1975; they now live in Prescott, Arizona.

Tennille toured with The Beach Boys during the 1970s with her husband, both playing keyboards for the group.

In 1988, Tennille appeared in the Broadway musical, Stardust, along with Sean Young and Hinton Battle in Los Angeles, California.

Education

Tennille graduated from Sidney Lanier High School and Auburn University in Alabama.

References

  1. ^ IMDB (2008-02-07). "Biography for Toni Tennille". The Internet Movie Database. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0855120/bio. Retrieved 2008-02-07. 
  2. ^ Contralto, Toni Tennile.

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