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Wynonna Judd

 
Artist: Wynonna Judd
Wynonna Judd

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Performed Songs By:

Billy Kirsch, David Tyson, Mike Reid, Gary Nicholson, Roger Murrah, Brent Maher, Sam Lorber, Naomi Judd, Marcus Hummon, Stewart Harris, Jill Colucci, Tina Arena, Dave Loggins

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Willie Weeks, Steuart Smith, Kim Fleming, Eddie Bayers, Don Potter, Matt Rollings

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See Wynonna Judd Lyrics
  • Born: May 30, 1964, Ashland, KY
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Collection," "Sing: Chapter 1," "Tell Me Why"
  • Representative Songs: "No One Else on Earth," "To Be Loved by You," "She Is His Only Need"

Biography

As one half of the Judds, Wynonna Judd became one of the most popular and respected female country stars of her time. On her own since the early '90s, Judd demonstrated an eclecticism that increasingly confounded hardcore country fans and radio programmers but also helped her retain a core of admiring followers. Her solo records might stick with Judds-style country-pop or delve into roots rock, blues, gospel, adult contemporary pop, folk, or Southern R&B.

Judd was born Christina Ciminella in Ashland, KY, on May 30, 1964. Her mother, Naomi (then known by her birth name, Diana), was still in high school at the time, and her biological father abandoned the family almost immediately; Naomi married another man, Michael Ciminella, to create a traditional family unit. In 1968, they moved to Los Angeles, but the marriage disintegrated in 1972. Wynonna spent parts of the next few years living on welfare and returned to Kentucky with her mother in 1976. They lived in a mountain home with no phone or television, and listening to country music on the radio was a major source of entertainment. Wynonna learned to play guitar after receiving one as a gift and was soon singing close harmony with her mother. By the time she was a teenager, her vocal talents were apparent, and in 1979, the family moved to Nashville to try their luck in the music business. Naomi and Wynonna landed a contract with RCA in 1983, and over the remainder of the '80s, they became the biggest-selling duo in country music history (a title that would later be taken over by Brooks & Dunn). Wynonna wasn't always as career-minded as her mother, who effectively ran the group, and was growing ever more rebellious when, in 1990, Naomi was diagnosed with hepatitis C; she retired from performing after a farewell tour in 1991.

Wynonna was at first unsure whether she wanted to carry on without her mother but quickly decided to embark on a solo career, signing with MCA. Her first album on her own, Wynonna, was released in 1992 and was an instant smash, selling over three million copies; it also topped the country charts, reached the Top Five on the pop side, and earned many positive reviews as well. Her first three solo singles -- "She Is His Only Need," "I Saw the Light," and "No One Else on Earth" -- all went to number one on the country charts, and "My Strongest Weakness" also made the Top Five. Judd's 1993 follow-up, Tell Me Why, was another platinum-selling, number one country/Top Five pop album; it gave her five more Top Ten hits in the title track, "Only Love," "Girls with Guitars," "Rock Bottom," and "Is It Over Yet." However, Judd's career hit a snag when it was revealed that, like her mother before her, she had become pregnant out of wedlock. The tabloids had a field day, and more conservative country fans attacked her as being an immoral role model.

Judd eventually married her son's father, Nashville businessman Arch Kelly, in 1996, and that year she finally released her third album, Revelations. It was a more introspective affair that gave her a number one single in "To Be Loved by You" and eventually went platinum despite not producing any further Top Ten hits. For the follow-up, 1997's The Other Side, Judd refashioned her sound into a bluesy, rock-driven roots music blend that often recalled Bonnie Raitt. It reached the country Top Five yet failed to sell a million copies for the first time in Judd's solo career, prompting her to split with MCA and move to Mercury. By this point, Judd had also had a second child, but her marriage fell apart in 1998; instead of releasing another solo album right away, Judd reunited with her mother for a New Year's Eve concert to ring in the year 2000. They embarked on a full-fledged tour together in 2000, and four new Judds songs were released on an exclusive bonus disc with Wynonna's Mercury debut, New Day Dawning. Her most eclectic effort to date (and her first as a co-producer), the album featured covers of Joni Mitchell and the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and while it didn't spawn any major hit singles, it again climbed into the Top Five on the country album charts.

Judd returned to her country roots in 2003 with What the World Needs Now Is Love, which found her reuniting on one track ("Flies on the Butter") with her mother. The live Her Story: Scenes from a Lifetime, released on DVD and CD, arrived in 2005, hitting number two on the Top Country Album charts, and the next year, just in time for the holiday season, the singer released Classic Christmas. An album of covers and standards, Sing: Chapter 1, appeared in 2009. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Wynonna Judd
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Wynonna Judd

Background information
Birth name Christina Claire Ciminella[1]
Also known as Wynonna
Born May 30, 1964 (1964-05-30) (age 45)[2]
Origin Ashland, Kentucky, USA
Genres Country
Occupations Singer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1992-present
Labels RCA Records/Curb, MCA/Curb, Universal/Curb, Mercury/Curb, Asylum-Curb
Associated acts The Judds
Website Wynonna.com

Wynonna Ellen Judd (born Christina Claire Ciminella, May 30, 1964 in Ashland, Kentucky) is an American country music singer. Her solo albums and singles are all credited to the singular name Wynonna (pronounced /waɪˈnoʊnə/). Wynonna first rose to fame in the 1980s alongside her mother, Naomi, in the country music duo The Judds. The duo released seven albums on Curb Records, in addition to charting twenty-six singles, of which fourteen were Number One hits.

After The Judds disbanded in 1991, Wynonna began a solo career, also on Curb. In her solo career, she has released eight studio albums, a live album and a compilation album, in addition to charting more than twenty singles of her own. Her first three singles — "She Is His Only Need", "I Saw the Light" and "No One Else on Earth" — all reached Number One on the U.S. country singles charts, as did 1996's "To Be Loved by You". Three of her albums are certified platinum or higher by the RIAA. Her most recent recording, Sing: Chapter 1, was released on February 3, 2009. Wynonna is most recognized for her musical work, although starting in the 2000s, has also pursued other interests, including acting and philanthropy.

Contents

Early life

Wynonna was born Christina Claire Ciminella in Ashland, Kentucky on May 30, 1964 [2]. She was given the last name Ciminella after Michael Ciminella, the man her mother quickly married after being abandoned by her boyfriend/Judd's biological father Charles Jordan. Jordan died in 2000. Her younger half-sister is actress Ashley Judd. Naomi and Michael moved to Los Angeles in 1968 but divorced in 1972 [2]. By 1976, Wynonna and Naomi were living in Kentucky, where Wynonna took inspiration from the country music that her mother listened to, and learned to play guitar after receiving one for Christmas. The two of them moved to Nashville, Tennessee in 1979 in pursuit of a musical career.

Her immediate family consists of her mother, Naomi Judd, half-sister Ashley Judd, and two children.

The Judds

Wynonna and Naomi were signed to Curb Records in 1983 as the duo The Judds. Between 1983 and 1991, The Judds charted twenty-three hit singles on the Billboard Hot Country Singles (now Hot Country Songs) charts, including fourteen Number Ones. They also recorded eight studio albums and two Greatest Hits compilations. In their six year career, The Judds sold more than twenty million records worldwide and had won over sixty industry awards including five Grammy Awards, nine Country Music Association awards ( seven of them consecutive ) and eight Billboard Music Awards [3]. At the time, they were the biggest-selling duo in country music, and would remain so until they were eclipsed by Brooks & Dunn in the 1990s [2]. Although Wynonna sang lead vocals on all of the duo's songs, Naomi ran the duo. The mother/daughter relationship has always been tumultuous, with Wynonna always late and forgetful and Naomi being critical of her daughter.

A chronic bout of hepatitis C forced Naomi into retirement following a 1991 farewell tour. After the duo broke up, Wynonna signed to MCA Records as a solo artist.

Solo career

1992 — 1998: Breakthrough success

On April 2, 1992, Wynonna performed solo on television for the first time at the American Music Awards. She unveiled "She Is His Only Need", the first single from her self-titled solo debut album. This album, Wynonna, was released in 1992 via MCA/Curb, under the production of Tony Brown.[4] "She Is His Only Need" went to Number One on the Billboard country singles charts that year, as did the album's next two singles, "I Saw the Light" and "No One Else on Earth",[2] the former of which was also the Number One country song of 1992 according to Billboard Year-End. "She Is His Only Need" and "No One Else on Earth" were also minor Adult Contemporary hits, and the latter peaked at #83 on the Billboard Hot 100. "My Strongest Weakness", the album's final single, was a #4 country hit. The album shipped five million copies in the United States, earning a 5× Multi-Platinum certification from the RIAA.

Her second album, Tell Me Why, was released by MCA/Curb in 1993 [2]. Also a platinum-selling album, it accounted for five consecutive Top Ten hits on the country charts: the title track, "Only Love", "Is It Over Yet", "Rock Bottom" and "Girls with Guitars", which was written by Mary Chapin Carpenter. "Tell Me Why" was her third crossover hit, peaking at #77 on the pop charts and #24 on the Adult Contemporary charts. Between "Tell Me Why" and "Only Love", she sang guest vocals on Clint Black's 1993 single "A Bad Goodbye" (from the album No Time to Kill), which became her biggest pop hit at #43. The success of this song led to a tour called the Black & Wy tour, featuring Black and Wynonna as headliners [5].

In 1994, she also made an appearance on the Lynyrd Skynyrd tribute album Skynyrd Frynds, on which she covered their song "Free Bird". She also sang duet vocals on pop/Christian singer Michael English's debut single "Healing", which peaked at #120 on the pop charts. After "Girls with Guitars" fell from the charts, Wynonna became the subject of negative publicity as she had a child out of wedlock [2]. She was absent from the country charts for all of 1995, and in response to feedback from conservative fans, she married Arch Kelly, the father of her son, in 1996 [2].

Revelations was the title of her third album, released by MCA/Curb in 1996. Also certified platinum, this album was led off by her fourth and final Number One hit, the Mike Reid/Gary Burr co-write "To Be Loved by You". Despite this song's minor Adult Contemporary success, the album's other three singles did not fare as well:[2] "Heaven Help My Heart" peaked at #14, while both "My Angel Is Here" and "Somebody to Love You" missed Top 40 entirely.

Wynonna's fourth and final album for MCA was titled The Other Side. Unlike her previous country pop-oriented albums, this album focused on a more blues and rock sound.[2] It was released in 1997 and it produced four singles. The album did not sell as well as her first three, however, only earning a gold certification. Its singles were not as successful on the charts, either: although "When Love Starts Talkin'" and "Come Some Rainy Day" reached #13 and #14 respectively, "Always Will" fell short of Top 40 and "Love Like That" became the first single of her career not to chart at all. After the release of a greatest hits album called Collection, Wynonna left MCA in favor of Mercury Records.

2000 — 2004: Success in the new millennium

In 2000, Wynonna decided to reunite with her mother for a tour, beginning on New Year's Day. A month later, Wynonna released her fifth solo album, New Day Dawning. This album, the first of her career that Wynonna co-produced, included a four-song bonus disc entitled Big Bang Boogie, composed of four new Judds songs.[2] New Day Dawning produced the minor singles "Can't Nobody Love You (Like I Do)" and "Going Nowhere". "Stuck in Love", one of the songs from Big Bang Boogie, also had minor chart success, peaking at #26.

What the World Needs Now Is Love, released in August 2003, was Wynonna's first album for the Asylum-Curb Records label. Lead-off single "What the World Needs" reached the Top 20 on the country charts, followed by the lesser singles "Heaven Help Me" and "Flies on the Butter (You Can't Go Home Again)", at #37 and #33 respectively. This latter song, originally recorded by Lari White on her album Stepping Stone, featured backing vocals from Naomi, and was credited on the charts as "Wynonna with Naomi Judd" instead of The Judds. Judd had success on the Hot Dance Airplay charts with a cover of Foreigner's "I Want to Know What Love Is". Her rendition peaked at #12 on that chart in 2005.[6] Also included on What the World Needs Now Is Love were two songs from soundtracks: a cover of the Elvis Presley hit "Burning Love", which Wynonna recorded for the animated movie Lilo & Stitch, and "You Are", which was included in the movie Someone Like You, a film starring half-sister Ashley Judd.

2005 — present: New career directions

Her second release for Asylum-Curb was a live CD/DVD package called Her Story: Scenes from a Lifetime, released in 2005. The album included one new studio track, "Attitude". Written by Wynonna and John Rich of Big & Rich, this song was issued as a single, peaking at #40 on the country charts. One year later, she released her autobiography, Coming Home to Myself, followed by a Christmas album called A Classic Christmas.[2] She also sang an overdubbed duet with Elvis Presley on the late 2008 album Christmas Duets.

Sing: Chapter 1, her first studio album in six years, was released on February 3, 2009. This album is largely composed of cover songs, except for the title track, an original composition by Rodney Crowell. It also reunites her with producers Brent Maher and Don Potter, who produced all of The Judds' 1980s albums. This album's lead-off single is "I Hear You Knocking", a blues standard first recorded by Smiley Lewis.

Television

Judd provided the voice of the rock star Molly Cule in the cartoon The Magic School Bus (Meets Molly Cule). During the fifth season of Touched by an Angel, Judd guest starred as a singer whose son was dying of Cystic Fibrosis. In 2007, Wynonna starred in a special television event on NBC honoring her 23 year career titled "Wynonna: A Tribute on Ice", which featured skating champions such as Kimmie Meissner and Brian Boitano. Both Wynonna and Naomi performed on this special. Additionally, in 2007, Wynonna hosted the fourth season of USA Network’s “Nashville Star".[3] She also appeared as herself on the NBC sitcom Kath & Kim. In August 2009, she guest starred as herself on the 10th anniversary of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire with Regis Philbin for Backpack Ministries.[7]

Awards and nominations

In 2007, Wynonna was presented with a star on the Music City Walk of Fame.[8]

In 2005, she received the USO’s Merit Award for service to all divisions of the United States Armed Forces[9] and teamed up with Habitat for Humanity to record “Heart of America”, with Michael McDonald and Eric Benet which in turn helped raise over $90 million dollars for victims of natural disasters to the Gulf Coast. She continues to bring attention to the global emergency of AIDS in her fourth year as United States Ambassador for YouthAIDS [10].

Additional Interests

On June 7, 2008, Wynonna sat down for a live Internet chat for her fans in which she was asked questions submitted during the session. Over 6000 fans signed up in a 5 minute span causing the server to crash. A total of 18,000 fans eventually logged on to watch Wynonna's chat live via Stickam.com.[11] She also lent her voice to an international music documentary on BBC radio about Stevie Wonder.[12] In 2009, she also became the spokeswoman for alli, the only FDA-approved over-the-counter weight loss product, which features the artist in a national marketing campaign.[13]

Personal life

Wynonna met Arch Kelley III in 1993, and their son Elijah Judd was born on December 23, 1994 in Nashville by C-section. In response to feedback from conservative fans, she married Kelley on 21 January 1996 when she was four months pregnant with their second child [2]. Their daughter Grace Pauline was born June 21, 1996. Kelley was an observer rather than a participant in his wife's fame and felt out of place in her world. He settled into the role of househusband on her 500-acre farm outside of Nashville. She divorced in 1998.

Wynonna's second husband was her former bodyguard, D. R. Roach, whom she married on November 22, 2003 in Tennessee. On March 22, 2007 Roach was arrested for sexual assault of a child under the age of 13 [14]. On March 27, 2007 Judd filed for divorce after his indictment on three counts of aggravated sexual battery against a minor.

In November 2003 just two weeks before her DUI arrest Wynonna taped an appearance of an episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show discussing what she described as a "severe" dependency on food [15]. The episode aired in February 2004. Judd had been working with the show in an effort to lose a significant amount of weight and get to the root of her dependency. In September 2005 Wynonna made a second appearance on the show, discussing how she had lost some weight, had patched up relationships with her mother and with the man she considered "her dad", Michael Ciminella, from whom she had been estranged for almost a decade.

Wynonna was also a judge for the 6th annual Independent Music Awards to support independent artists' careers.[16]

Discography

Studio albums

Notes

  1. ^ "Fast Facts". Wynonna official website. http://www.wynonna.com/?content=fastfacts. Retrieved 2008-04-13. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Huey, Steve. "Wynonna Judd biography". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:kjfixql5ldte~T1. Retrieved 2008-04-12. 
  3. ^ a b "Wynonna: Bio". Wynonna official website. http://www.wynonna.com/?content=bio. Retrieved 2009-04-06. 
  4. ^ "Wynonna-Review of Wynonna's first self-titled album". About.com. http://countrymusic.about.com/od/cdreviewsal/fr/Wynonna.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-08. 
  5. ^ Buttars, Lon (1993-09-25). ""Black & Wy" give 2 great shows in 1". Salt Lake Tribune. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=SLTB&p_theme=sltb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=1011390E32EF660F&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2009-04-24. 
  6. ^ "Billboard Music Charts". http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/esearch/chart_display.jsp?cfi=348&cfgn=Singles&cfn=Hot+Dance+Airplay&ci=3056802&cdi=8261401&cid=01%2F15%2F2005. 
  7. ^ "Wynonna Guest Starring on Kath & Kim". http://www.firstcoastnews.com/life/entertainment/news-article.aspx?storyid=129664&provider=rss. 
  8. ^ "Walk of Fame: Inductees". Music City Walk of Fame. http://www.visitmusiccity.com/walkoffame/inductees.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-06. 
  9. ^ "CNN Transcripts". http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0701/19/lkl.01.html. 
  10. ^ "Youth Aids Ambassadors". http://projects.psi.org/site/PageServer?pagename=YouthAmbassadors_nr. 
  11. ^ "Wynonna: Stickam blog". Stickam Blog. http://blog.stickam.com/index.php/2009/02/10/wynonna-judd-live-exclusive-fan-chat-on-stickamcom/. Retrieved 2009-04-06. 
  12. ^ "Wynonna: Timeline". Wynonna official website. http://www.wynonna.com/?em877=190444_-1__0_~0_-1_3_2009_0_0&content=timeline. Retrieved 2009-04-06. 
  13. ^ ""Wynonna Judd: an alli weight loss success story."". http://www.myalli.com/mystorymyalli/MyMusic.aspx. 
  14. ^ "Wynonna Judd: Biography". Netglimpse. http://www.netglimse.com/celebs/pages/wynonna_judd/index.shtml. Retrieved 2009-04-06. 
  15. ^ ""Wynonna Judd: Oprah"". http://www.oprah.com/slideshow/oprahshow/slideshow1_ss_weight_20040211. 
  16. ^ Independent Music Awards - 6th Annual Judges

External links


 
 
Learn More
Wynonna Judd: Her Story - Scenes from a Lifetime (Music Film)
No Time to Kill (1993 Album by Clint Black)
The Associate (1996 Album by Original Soundtrack)

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