With a luscious mane of
brunette hair flowing down to her toes, a rich voice that dazzles and charms,
one of eight siblings born to a Paintsville, Kentucky family, Brenda Gail Webb
is uniquely her own person. Thanks
to her older sister, a country western talent by the name of Loretta Lynn,
Brenda got a new identity when she too wanted to take to the stage and perform. Big sis renamed her Crystal Gayle, a
moniker that would serve her well in her illustrious career.
Loretta Lynn knew that her
younger sibling had to find her own path if she was going to succeed. There was already one “Coal Miner’s
Daughter” in the family. Loretta
came up with Crystal’s name when she saw a Krystal hamburger restaurant on the
side of the road and it was a prophetic choice.
Coming from a musical family,
where her mom, one of a twin, sang at socials and church events, Crystal states
“I grew up in a house full of music.
As the baby of the family, I thought I was a mistake, being five years
younger than my youngest sibling but momma exclaimed I wasn’t a mistake
but an accident.” Contrary to the way her mother was
portrayed in the movie about her oldest sibling Loretta, “Coal Miner’s
Daughter,” she says her mom wasn’t dark or down, rather “she wore the reddest
lipstick the better.”
With her debut hit, “I’ve
Cried the Blue Right Out of My Eyes,” a gift from the pen of her sister
Loretta, Crystal Gayle has crossed over all the musical lines, singing gospel,
country western, folk songs, rock ‘n roll and Broadway show tunes. Claiming she
grew up singing everything, she soon looked for her own style which she calls
“MOR, middle of the road” which now has become main stream, so she was clearly
ahead of her time. While she has
never recorded an album with big sister, “When we’re together we laugh a lot.”
The first female artist in
country western music history to earn platinum record album sales with “We Must
Believe in Magic,” she has sung from the Grand Ole Opry to Las Vegas to
Carnegie Hall to the London Palladium, and now she is coming here for two
concerts only, on Saturday, June 23 at 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. to Bridgeport’s
Downtown Cabaret.
Come hear her glorious voice
belt out such gems as “Wrong Road Again,” “I’ll Get Over You,” “If You Ever
Change Your Mind, “It’s Like We Never Said Goodbye,” “Talking in Your Sleep,”
“Cry” and her signature song “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue.” When she’s on tour, her fans start
calling for it by the time she is into the second song of her set.
As for her trademark long
hair, she calls it “easy to take care of, just wash and let dry. It grows quickly, maybe due to my
American Indian blood of Cherokee. My children told me I can’t cut it or I
wouldn’t be Crystal Gayle.” Her son, a recent graduate of Belmont University
with a degree in music business, is an engineer who writes and works in her
studio. They are collaborating
right now on several albums, but he has already given her a wonderful gift in
her first grandchild, a boy who sings with her when they play together.
For tickets ($47 and 67),
call the Downtown Cabaret, 263 Golden Hill Street, Bridgeport at 203-576-1636
or online at www.downtowncabaret.org. Performances are 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. and
remember to bring goodies to eat and drink at your table. The cabaret is
wheelchair accessible and guarded parking is available nearby for a nominal
fee.
The Grand Ole Opry welcomed
Crystal Gayle on Friday, June 15 and Connecticut gets to embrace her musical
greatness on Saturday, June 23. Be
there to celebrate this cool, classy lady who could sing before she could walk!
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