Richard Leigh, who has had hits in the 70`s, 80`s, and 90`s, kicked off

Transcription

Richard Leigh, who has had hits in the 70`s, 80`s, and 90`s, kicked off
Richard Leigh, who has had hits in the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s, kicked off the 21st century with a
top ten hit “Cold Day In July”, recorded by the Dixie Chicks. Most recently his good friend
Billy Dean recorded an entire album of his songs for the “Billy Dean Sings Richard Leigh” CD.
Leigh, who has been writing songs since he was ten years old and professionally since he
was twenty-three, got his first break in 1976 when Crystal Gayle released “I’ll Get Over You”,
and took it to #1 on Billboard’s Country Chart. This was made all the sweeter when “I’ll Get
Over You” garnered Leigh his first of seven Song of the Year nominations, this one from the
Country Music Association (CMA).
Two years later, Richard was back at the CMA’s, this time to take home the Song Of The Year
award for “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue,” which itself has had a phenomenal career:
“Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue” reached the #1 position on both Pop and Country charts
and remained on the charts for more than six months; it was nominated for Grammy Awards
in both the Pop and Country “Best Song” categories (a feat not repeated until 1993); won a
Grammy Award for “Best Country Song”; was a million selling single, and was named one of
the ten most performed “Country Songs Of The Century” by ASCAP. Besides his own three
Grammy Nominations, five of his songs have become vehicles to the Grammy Awards for
other artists in the “Best Performance”, “Record Of The Year”, and “Vocal Event” categories.
To date, Richard has made fourteen trips to the Top Ten and has written or co-written eight #1
singles: the hauntingly beautiful “Somewhere In My Broken Heart” (written with Billy Dean),
voted 1991 Song Of The Year by the Nashville Songwriter’s Association (NSAI), and also by
the Academy Of Country Music (ACM); “The Greatest Man I Never Knew” (written with Layng
Martine, Jr.), nominated at the 1993 Grammy Awards for “Best Country Song); “Come From
The Heart” (written with Susanna Clark and recorded by Kathy Mattea); Don William’s “That’s
The Thing About Love” (written with Gary Nicholson); Steve Wariner’s “Life’s Highway”
(written with Roger Murrah); Mickey Gilley’s “Put Your Dreams Away” (written with Wayland
Holyfield), plus “I’ll Get Over You” and “Don’t It Make My Brown Eyes Blue.”
In 1978, Nashville Mayor Richard Fulton presented Leigh with The Key To The City. In 1988,
he was honored with a space on the NARAS Starwalk. He received one of his greatest honors
in 1994, twenty years and one month after arriving in Nashville, when his peers elected him
into the Nashville Songwriter’s Hall Of Fame.
Other artists who have recorded Richard’s songs include: Anne Murray, Martina McBride,
George Jones, K.T. Oslin, Ronnie Milsap, B.J. Thomas, Bill Medley, Perry Como, Connie Francis,
Debbie Boone, Conway Twitty, Alabama, Shenandoah, Tammy Wynette, The Bellamy Brothers,
Suzy Boguss, Guy Clark, Ricky Scaggs, Lorrie Morgan, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Marie Osmond,
Jerry Jeff Walker, Kitty Wells, Bobby Bare, Ray Charles, and more.
Born in Washington, D.C. and raised in Virginia, Richard is a graduate of Virginia Highlands
Community College and Virginia Commonwealth University. On April 11, Leigh was one of
only four chosen nationally from the American Community College System to win the 2011
Outstanding Alumni Award for excellence in his chosen field, and for service to his community.