Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts - (American Popular Music) by Bobbie Malone & Bill C Malone (Hardcover)
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"About the Book In Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts , authors Bobbie Malone and Bill C. Malone recount how Boudleaux and Felice, married in 1945, began their partnership as itinerant musicians living in a trailer home and writing their first songs together. Book Synopsis ""The story of Felice and Boudleaux Bryant is the story of towering artistic achievement wrapped in a love story so deep and so complete that the two are their own country song. Bobbie and Bill Malone are precisely the right match to tell this tale of love and genius.""-- Ken Burns , Director, Country Music You might not know the names of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, but you know their music. Arriving in Nashville in 1950, the songwriting duo became the first full-time independent songwriters in that musical city. In the course of their long careers, they created classic hits that pushed the boundaries of country music into the realms of pop and rock. Songs like ""Bye Bye Love,"" ""All I Have to Do Is Dream,"" ""Love Hurts,"" and ""Rocky Top"" inspired young musicians everywhere. Here, for the first time, is a complete biography of Nashville's power songwriting couple. In Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts , authors Bobbie Malone and Bill C. Malone recount how Boudleaux and Felice, married in 1945, began their partnership as itinerant musicians living in a trailer home and writing their first songs together. In Nashville the couple had to deal with racism, classism, and in Felice's case, sexism. Yet through hard work and business acumen--and a dose of good luck--they overcame these obstacles and rose to national prominence. By the late 1990s, the Bryants had written as many as 6,000 songs and had sold more than 350 million copies worldwide. They were inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1972, and in 1991 they became members of the Country Music Hall of Fame--a rare occurrence for songwriters who were not also performers. In 1982 their composition ""Rocky Top"" was adopted as one of the official state songs of Tennessee. The Bryants were lucky enough to arrive in the right place at the right time. Their emergence in the early fifties coincided with the rise of Nashville as Music City, USA. And their prolific collaboration with the Everly Brothers, beginning in 1957, sparked a fusion between country and pop music that endures to this day. Review Quotes Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts: The Boudleaux and Felice Bryant Story is a brisk yet in-depth look at a couple who didn't change the country music industry as much as they helped create it together. - Dallas Morning News ""The story of Felice and Boudleaux Bryant is the story of towering artistic achievement wrapped in a love story so deep and so complete that the two are their own country song. Bobbie and Bill Malone are precisely the right match to tell this tale of love and genius.""-- Ken Burns , Director, Country Music ""This book is a treasure. Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts uses the creative and familial partnership of Boudleaux and Felice Bryant to uncover larger transformations in country music and pop culture in the twentieth century. Authors Bobbie and Bill Malone fill every page with the same laughter, heartache, and joy that defines the Bryants' legendary catalog.""-- Charles L. Hughes , author of Country Soul: Making Music and Making Race in the American South"

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