Visitation Today For Late Nashville Vocal Legend Millie Kirkham

Museum celebrates vocalist Millie Kirkham with Nashville Cats program The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum recently (9/29) honored soprano Millie Kirkham in its quarterly series Nashville Cats: A Celebration of Music City Musicians. Kirkham entertained the audience with tales from her recording sessions with George Jones, Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley, Leon Russell and many others. Pictured, left to right, (back row) Program Host Bill Lloyd, Ray Walker, Jimmy Capps, Millie Kirkham, Weldon Myrick, D.J. Fontana, David Briggs, Curtis Young and Joe Johnson. (front row) Gordon Stoker and Wayne Moss.     Photo: Donn Jones

In 2012 the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum honored Millie Kirkham in its quarterly series Nashville Cats: A Celebration of Music City Musicians. Pictured here, Kirkham entertained the audience with tales from her recording sessions with George Jones, Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley, Leon Russell and many others. Photo: Donn Jones


The ethereal soprano vocal backing Elvis Presley on the classic “Blue Christmas” is being heard throughout the world this season.
The woman who owned that voice died Sunday in Nashville. Millie Kirkham, the legendary Music Row backup vocalist, passed away in her hometown at age 91.
Kirkham began her career on Nashville radio in 1946 by singing on various programs on WSM. In 1954, she began to concentrate on recording-studio work. She was at times a member of the Anita Kerr Singers as well as an adjunct member of The Jordanaires. Between them, those two vocal groups backed virtually every singer who ever recorded in Nashville in the 1950s, ‘60s, ‘70s and 1980s.
Her soaring soprano voice embellished such iconic hits as George Jones’s “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” Ferlin Husky’s “Gone,” Bobby Vinton’s “Blue Velvet,” Brenda Lee’s “I’m Sorry” and Kris Kristofferson’s “Why Me,” in addition to “Blue Christmas” and many other Presley hits.
She can be heard on the recordings of at least 30 members of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Patsy Cline, Johnny Cash, Charley Pride, Bobby Bare, Mac Wiseman, Hank Snow, Chet Atkins, Porter Wagoner, Connie Smith, Jim Reeves, Reba McEntire, Roger Miller, Willie Nelson, Tom T. Hall, Eddy Arnold, Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn are just a few of the greats whose records feature Kirkham’s vocal support.
Pop stars including Paul Anka, Little Richard, Bob Dylan, Perry Como, Gordon Lightfoot, Rosemary Clooney, Roy Orbison, Brook Benton, Andy Griffith, Carl Perkins, Duane Eddy and Leon Russell all released records containing Millie Kirkham vocal harmonies. So did Jerry Lee Lewis, Dottie West, Bobby Darin, Burl Ives and The Browns.
The widely beloved recording-session stalwart displayed her gracious good humor during a memorable “Nashville Cats” tribute event at the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2012.
Millie Kirkham was married to a fellow musician, drummer Doug Kirkham. He died in 1986.
She is survived by her daughter, Shelley Richardson (Walter), three grandsons, four great-grandchildren, sister Marilyn Ezell and numerous nieces and nephews.
A visitation will be held 3-7 p.m. today (Tuesday, Dec. 16) at Woodlawn Roesch-Patton Funeral Home. Millie Kirkham’s Celebration of Life Service will be held there at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 17, with a visitation held one hour prior.

LifeNotes: Country Artist Manager Neil Reshen

Pictured (L-R): Neil Reshen with clients Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson.

Pictured (L-R): Neil Reshen with clients Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson.


Neil Reshen, one-time manager for “Outlaw” country artists Willie Nelson and the late Waylon Jennings, died Saturday, Dec. 6 after a battle with Alzheimer’s disease. He was 75.
Reshen, born March 3, 1939, is known for managing Jennings and Nelson, and urging record companies to give the two entertainers artistic control over their music. The negotiations led to signature albums such as Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger and Stardust albums, Jennings’ I’ve Always Been Crazy, and the collaboration project Waylon and Willie. During his career, Reshen also managed musicians including Miles Davis, Frank Zappa, Linda Ronstadt, Jessi Colter, and others.
Later in his career, Reshen founded Benay Enterprises and managed corporations and individuals with his partner and daughter, Dawn Reshen-Doty, who is currently president of Benay Enterprises.
He is survived by his daughters Dawn Reshen-Doty of Danbury, Conn., and Amber Bezahler of Los Angeles, grandson Justin Slaughter Doty of Danbury, Conn., godson Olufemi Adedeji and former wife Barrie Adedeji, both of New York. He also leaves behind two brothers, Bruce Reshen of Fairfield, Conn., and Mark Reshen, of Hollywood, Fla. He was predeceased by former wife Patricia Reshen.
A memorial service to celebrate his life will be held on Jan. 7, 2015 at 3 p.m. at the Plaza Jewish Community Chapel, 603 Amsterdam Ave., New York City.

LifeNotes: The Time Jumpers' Dawn Sears

Dawn Sears

Dawn Sears


Dawn Sears, 53, vocalist and member of Rounder Record’s four-time Grammy-nominated band The Time Jumpers, died Thursday night, Dec. 11. Diagnosed with lung cancer in February 2012, Sears fought the disease and championed efforts for lung cancer research.
In addition to having been a Time Jumper,  she was also a long-time member of Vince Gill’s touring band. She contributed vocals to several of Gill’s albums, including I Still Believe in You and Next Big Thing. In the mid-’90s, Sears became the first act signed to Decca Records’ relaunched country outpost. Prior to that, Sears released three singles with Warner Bros. Records, after signing with the label in 1991.
She is survived by her husband, the fiddler and fellow Time Jumper Kenny Sears and daughter Tess. Funeral arrangements are pending.
Recently, the Dawn Sears & Friends Benefit for Lung Cancer Research, held Nov. 30 in Gallatin, Tenn., raised more than $100,000 for the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center. Reba, Riders in the Sky and The Time Jumpers were among the performers at the event.

LifeNotes: Bob Montgomery

Bob Montgomery in 1988.

Bob Montgomery in 1988. Photo: Alan Mayor


MUSIC-INDUSTRY GREAT BOB MONTGOMERY PASSES
By Robert K. Oermann
Bob Montgomery, one of the key figures in Nashville’s evolution into Music City USA, has died at age 77.
During his six-decade career, he made major contributions as a songwriter, record producer, music publisher and label executive. Bob Montgomery’s song catalog includes such standards as “Misty Blue” and “Love’s Made a Fool of You.” He produced records that boosted the careers of Vern Gosdin, Janie Fricke, Bobby Goldsboro and Joe Diffie. He published such iconic songs as “Behind Closed Doors” and “The Wind Beneath My Wings.” He created hit-making rosters for the record labels United Artists, Epic and Columbia.
Born in West Texas in 1937, he first made his mark as the 1949-1955 duet partner of future Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame member Buddy Holly. “Buddy & Bob” became local radio stars in Lubbock, TX and opened the concert there by Elvis Presley. Montgomery subsequently wrote or co-wrote such 1950s Holly evergreens as “Heartbeat,” “Love’s Made a Fool of You” and “Wishing.”
He became a recording engineer in the Clovis, NM studio of producer Norman Petty, working with such artists as Holly, The Crickets, Waylon Jennings, Jimmy Gilmer & The Fireballs, Buddy Knox and Roy Orbison. Montgomery also played rhythm guitar on recordings at the facility.
He moved to Nashville in late 1959 and became a staff songwriter for Acuff-Rose Publishing. His early successes there included Sue Thompson’s 1962 pop hit “Two of a Kind,” as well as songs for The Everly Brothers, Jim Reeves and Bob Luman.
Montgomery formed Talmont Music as his own publishing company in 1963. Among the company’s key copyrights was Montgomery’s “Back in Baby’s Arms.” It was originally sung by Patsy Cline and later revived by Connie Smith, Sissy Spacek, Emmylou Harris and many others. He also struck gold with “Misty Blue.” This Montgomery song has been a hit for Wilma Burgess (1966), Eddy Arnold (1967), Joe Simon (1972), Dorothy Moore (1976) and Billie Jo Spears (1976) and has been recorded by hundreds more.
Montgomery sold Talmont in 1967 and next became the head of the United Artists Records country division. He hit his stride as a record producer by guiding hits for the label’s Del Reeves (1969’s “Good Time Charlie’s”), Johnny Darrell (1968’s “With Pen in Hand”) and Buddy Knox (1968’s “Gypsy Man”), among others. His most notable UA client was Bobby Goldsboro, for whom Montgomery produced the massive 1968 pop and country smash “Honey,” as well as “Watching Scotty Grow,” “The Straight Life,” “Summer (The First Time)” and Goldsboro’s other hits of that era.
Pictured (L-R): Vern Gosdin and Bob Montgomery in 1989. Photo: Alan Mayor

Pictured (L-R): Vern Gosdin and Bob Montgomery in 1989. Photo: Alan Mayor


In late 1969, Montgomery and Goldsboro formed the publishing company House of Gold. Within five years, it was one of the top song firms on Music Row. Staff writers included future Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame members Kenny O’Dell and Larry Henley, plus Steve Pippin, Danny Morrison, Sam Lorber, Bobby Springfield and Van Stephenson.
In addition to “Behind Closed Doors” (Charlie Rich) and “The Wind Beneath My Wings” (Gary Morris, Bette Midler), the company’s hits included John Conlee’s “Rose Colored Glasses,” Tammy Wynette’s “Til I Get it Right,” Alabama’s “Love in the First Degree,” The Oak Ridge Boys’ “Bobbie Sue” and Tanya Tucker’s “Lizzie and the Rainman.” Others who scored big hits with House of Gold songs included Brenda Lee, Dave & Sugar, Eddy Arnold, Cristy Lane, Crystal Gayle, Jack Greene and Bobby Bare.
House of Gold singer-songwriter Razzy Bailey had a long string of hit singles that Montgomery produced. The company also competed in the pop field with songs recorded by Dr. Hook, Sister Sledge, Player, Millie Jackson, Exile, Lobo, Gladys Knight, The Pointer Sisters, Sheena Easton and others.
During the 1970s, House of Gold was ranked second to Tree International as the most successful independent publisher in Nashville. Warner Bros. Music bought the company in 1982 for a reported $3.5 million. Montgomery moved to Tree as its Director of Creative Services.
Razzy Bailey 1978 RCA w Bob Montgomery & Jerry Bradley. Photo: Alan Mayor

Razzy Bailey 1978 RCA w Bob Montgomery & Jerry Bradley. Photo: Alan Mayor


When Sony bought Tree in 1988, Montgomery became a vice president at CBS Records. He signed Joe Diffie, Doug Stone and Collin Raye to the company’s imprints, Columbia and Epic.
He also continued to produce records. Montgomery’s name is on 1980s discs by B.J. Thomas, Waylon Jennings, Shelby Lynne and Merle Haggard, among others. “Rocky” by Austin Roberts (1975), “It Ain’t Easy Bein’ Easy” by Janie Fricke (1982), “Prop Me Up Beside the Jukebox” by Joe Diffie (1993) and “Some Memories Just Won’t Die” by Marty Robbins (1982) are among the many hits with Montgomery’s production touch. So are such iconic Vern Gosdin performances as 1988-89’s “Chiseled in Stone,” “Set ‘Em Up Joe” and “Who You Gonna Blame it on This Time.”
With Bob Montgomery’s support, his wife Cathy Montgomery established another publishing company, Noosa Heads Music, in 1992. Its successful songs to date include the Tim McGraw hits “Down on the Farm” (1994) and “Maybe We Should Just Sleep on It” (1996).
The couple moved to Australia in 2005 and lived there for seven years. The Montgomerys returned to Nashville 18 months ago. Bob Montgomery had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease. He died quietly at home around 1:30 p.m. on Thursday afternoon, Dec. 4.
He is the father of pop singer-songwriter Kevin Montgomery, who has recorded for A&M Records and achieved particular success in the U.K.
Bob Montgomery is also survived by his wife and business partner Cathy Montgomery and by daughters Echo Annette Garrett and Dee Dee Dawn Cooley.
Arrangements are being handled by Woodlawn Funeral Home on Thompson Lane. Visitation is scheduled there for Monday evening, 5-8 p.m., and the funeral will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 9.

LifeNotes: Tony Harley

Tony Harley

Tony Harley

Anthony “Tony” Ray Harley, a longtime member of the Nashville music community, passed away at home on Nov. 21, 2014. He was 66.

According to his obituary, Harley met songwriters Danny Morrison and Johnny Slate in 1987 and soon after launched Affiliated Publishers, Inc. and Image Management. Harley worked as a Principal and CFO at the company, and handled management and publicity for artists Joe Diffie, Tim McGraw and Ty Herndon. In 1992, Harley and McGraw started a management company, TMR2, focusing on McGraw’s career.

In 1999, Harley was instrumental in forming Tanasi Music Group and became CEO, working alongside Ed Arnold and artist Chalee Tennison. Since 2003, Harley worked as an independent business consultant.

Harley was born and raised in Cookeville, Tenn. He served in the U.S. Army in Nuremberg, Germany and went on to graduate from Tennessee Tech University.

A celebration of life memorial service will be held at a later date. Arrangements are being handled by Nashville Funeral and Cremation Service.

LifeNotes: Singer Priscilla Mitchell Passes

PriscillaMitchellPriscilla Mitchell, best known for her hit duets with Grand Ole Opry star Roy Drusky (1930-2004), has died at the age of 73.
According to Butch Baker of HoriPro, the singer passed away around 2 a.m. on Sept. 24, surrounded by family and friends. Mitchell was the widow of country star Jerry Reed (1937-2008), a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Priscilla Mitchell was born in Marietta, GA on Sept. 18, 1941. She was four years old when she made her debut on Marietta’s WFOM radio singing “Pistol Packin’ Mama.” She married Jerry Hubbard in Georgia in 1959. He took the stage name of Jerry Reed, and both pursued careers as singers and songwriters.
Mitchell got a recording contract with Mercury Records in Nashville. In 1965, she and Drusky scored a No. 1 country hit with the “cheating” song “Yes, Mr. Peters.” It was the biggest hit that both vocalists ever had. Other Drusky/Mitchell charting duets included “Slippin’ Around” (1966) and “I’ll Never Tell on You” (1967). They released three albums as a team, Love’s Eternal Triangle, Together Again and We Belong Together.
Her country solo singles for Mercury included 1967’s “He’s Not for Real,” written by Jerry Reed, and 1968’s “Your Old Handy Man,” written by Dolly Parton. Reed also wrote and arranged her uptempo 1968 single “Natch-illy Ain’t No Good.”
Priscilla Mitchell also recorded pop music. Billed as “Sadina,” she released singles such as 1965’s “I Want That Boy” on Mercury’s Smash Records subsidiary. Husband Jerry Reed began having big hits in the late 1960s. In the 1970s, he crossed over to the pop charts and became a movie star. During the same time period, Priscilla Mitchell Hubbard became a highly successful backup vocalist in Nashville recording studios.
Their daughters, Seidina and Lottie also became singers. Seidina was her father’s duet partner on 1977’s “You Know What,” and Lottie performed on one of his TV specials. Priscilla Mitchell appeared in her husband’s 1985 movie What Comes Around and later toured with him as a backing vocalist and keyboard player.
Her funeral service was at Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home on Saturday, Sept. 26. Priscilla Ann Hubbard is survived by her daughters Lottie Zavala (Robert) and Seidina Hubbard, by sister Sandra Tomlin, by grandchildren Lainey Stewart and Jerry Rorick, by niece Ryn Sledge and by nephew Raegan Echols. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Willowbrook Hospice, 381 Riverside Dr., Suite 440, Franklin, TN 37064.

LifeNotes: Marion R. Ross, Mother of ‘MusicRow’ Founder David Ross, Passes

marionmarty1

Pictured (L-R): Marion R. Ross and Martin J. Ross.


Condolences to MusicRow founder David M. Ross and family whose mother Marion R. Ross passed away Aug. 20 in Palm Beach, Fla. at age 92. Marion and Martin J. Ross, who passed away on Jan. 31, were married for over 70 years.
A celebration of two lives memorial service will be held in Boston on Sept. 18. Marion was a courageous woman who worked tirelessly for her husband and family and was a mentor and friend to countless others throughout her lifetime.
The couple is survived by sons David and Lawrence; David’s wife Susana; and granddaughters Michelle Ross Stephens and Isabel Ross Martin.

LifeNotes: Music Business Vet Jimmy Key Passes

1969 BMI Country Awards. Pictured (L-R): Jimmy C. Newman, Ed Cramer, Tom T. Hall, Jimmy Key, and Bob Jennings (Photo by Bill Preston: Property of the BMI Archives)

1969 BMI Country Awards. Pictured (L-R): Jimmy C. Newman, Ed Cramer, Tom T. Hall, Jimmy Key, and Bob Jennings (Photo by Bill Preston: Property of the BMI Archives)


Veteran country song publisher and talent agency executive Jimmy Key died on Friday, Aug. 1.
His Newkeys Music — a partnership with the late singers Jimmy C. Newman and Dave Dudley — discovered Country Music Hall of Fame member Tom T. Hall. The company published songs recorded by Bobby Bare, Johnny Wright, Faron Young, Flatt & Scruggs, George Jones and Burl Ives, as well as Newman, Dudley and Hall.
Among Newkeys’ most famous copyrights was Hall’s “Harper Valley P.T.A.,” a pop and country smash for Jeannie C. Riley in 1968.  “I can’t help thinking – if there had been a lot more guys like Key around, more writers and performers might have made it through the rough, crazy years,” an appreciative Tom T. Hall wrote in his autobiography. Key, who published Hall’s songs in 1963-70, also got the songwriter the Mercury Records contract that made him a singing star. Key also arranged for Hall to become a Grand Ole Opry member.
In addition to Hall, the company’s staff songwriters included Kim Morrison, Roy Beham, Ronnie Rogers, Jeff Young, Hillman Hall, Chuck Wells, Jeff Elliott and Mike Morgan.
Key was the president of the publishing company. He also owned Jimmy Key Talent, which booked concerts by Newman, Dudley, Hall, Bare, Porter Wagoner & Dolly Parton, Merle Kilgore, Claude King and Shirlee Hunter, among others. Key Talent was the first agency in Nashville to open an office in Las Vegas.
In 1967, he formed Rice Records. Among those who were signed to the label were Billy Grammer, Helen Carter, Al Terry, Linda Manning and Chase Webster.
Born Emmit Martin Key in Cullman Country, Alabama in 1927, Jimmy Key started his career as a member of Big Jim Folsom’s Strawberry Pickers band in his home state. After several years as an entertainer and radio personality, he moved to Nashville.
He learned the live-performance business while working for the J. Hal Smith Artist Bureau. Then he formed his own Jimmy Key Talent agency in 1963.
Jimmy Key worked in the Country music business for more than 50 years. He died at age 87.
He is survived by sons Rick and Jack, daughter Gail Levine, six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Nashville Funeral and Cremation handled the arrangements.

LifeNotes: Velma Smith

Steve Wariner and Velma Smith at the 2014 Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum Induction Ceremony  in January 2014. Photo courtesy of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.

Steve Wariner and Velma Smith at the 2014 Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum Induction. Ceremony in January 2014. Photo courtesy of the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.


Velma Smith, one of Nashville’s first female session musicians, died Thursday (July 31) in Madison, Tenn. She was 87.
She was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame by Steve Wariner in January 2014, alongside Peter Frampton, Buddy Guy, Barbara Mandrell, Stevie Ray Vaughn, and a host of others.
According to the Musicians Hall of Fame, Smith was the first rhythm guitar player to record on albums in Nashville. In 1942, she joined Roy Acuff’s Smokey Mountain Boys as a bass player. She later played in bands for Carl Smith and Ernest Tubb.
She performed on records including Hank Locklin’s “Please Help Me, I’m Falling,” Connie Smith’s Connie In The Country, and recordings by Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Ray Price, and Porter Wagoner, among others.
In 1948, she married fiddle player Hal Smith, a fellow member of Acuff’s band and a music industry entrepreneur, who co-founded Pamper Music with Ray Price, among other ventures. Hal Smith died in 2008.
Funeral services for Velma Smith were held Saturday, Aug. 2 at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens in Goodlettsville, Tenn.

LifeNotes: Top Song Scout Don Lanier Passes

Don Lanier

Don Lanier


During his 1980s tenure as Director of A&R for MCA Records in Nashville, Don Lanier found the songs that helped turn George Strait and Reba McEntire into country superstars. He was also a hit songwriter, himself. Lanier died on Wednesday, July 23, at age 78.
Raised in West Texas, he became friends with future producer/executive Jimmy Bowen when both were in junior high school. Lanier was nicknamed “Dirt” at this time, and the moniker remained with him.
With Lanier on lead guitar and Bowen on bass, they became key members of the band The Rhythm Orchids. In 1957, they backed Bowen and bandleader Buddy Knox on their co-written hits “I’m Stickin’ With You” and the Knox No. 1 smash “Party Doll.” Other Lanier/Bowen/Knox songs included “Hula Love” and “Rock Your Little Baby to Sleep.”
Both Bowen and Knox recorded for Roulette Records. So did Lanier, who created teen singles for that company, as well as for Dot, Gee and Apt in 1957-62.
Bowen subsequently moved to Los Angeles and became a record producer. In 1964, he brought Lanier to L.A. to become a contractor for his recording sessions. After arranging musicians for Bowen’s sessions as Dean Martin’s producer, Lanier became in-demand as a musician contractor throughout the West Coast recording scene.
Lanier also continued to write songs. His “Here We Go Again” became a hit for Ray Charles in 1967 and for Nancy Sinatra in 1969. His songs have also been recorded by Hank Snow, Glen Campbell, Bobby Vee and Norah Jones, among others.
Among Lanier’s songwriting collaborators were Tommy Overstreet, Tom Thacker, Joe Bob Barnhill and Red Steagall. He also continued to play lead guitar, contributing to records by Lee Hazelwood, Phil Everly, Bill Haley, Dean Martin and more.
Bowen brought Lanier to Nashville when he took over MCA Records in 1984. Lanier became renowned and respected in Music City for his “ears,” that is, his ability to hear future hit songs. In addition to Strait and McEntire, he found tunes for Patty Loveless, Loretta Lynn and many of the other MCA artists of the 1980s.
Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home is handling arrangements. A memorial celebration was held there on Sunday, July 27 at 1 p.m., with the funeral service at 2 p.m. The funeral home is located at 660 Thompson Lane.