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If you've turned the radio to a country music station within the last two decades, chances are you have either heard Deborah Allen or a song that she has written. With a suitcase full of local talent contest and performance credits from her hometown Memphis, Deborah headed for Nashville at the age of 18. Always the romantic adventurer at heart, even the faded rented room in a boarding house on Nashville's infamous Music Row seemed full of mystery and charm. She smiles at the recollection, her wide hazel eyes dancing with that childlike nature that even today is one of Deborah's most enduring charms. "Everyone talks about 'payin' your dues' in Nashville. I would come home to my little rented room and think to myself -- 'Man, with all the dues I'm payin' right now, I should be a really big star someday!' There I was with literally nothing, but I had the most important thing of all -- and that was my dream." While working as a waitress to support that dream, a chance encounter with a legend started the wheels of Deborah Allen's success train in motion. Meeting Roy Orbison that day gave Deborah the opportunity to share her dream of a career in music with him. Obviously impressed by the spunk and personality of the young hopeful, he later hired her to sing background vocals on his upcoming session. The $90.00 she was paid might as well been a million. Her incredible voice, beauty, and always handy confidence quickly landed her a job at Opryland as a regular cast member of the theme park's "Showboat". Showcasing her talents regularly at the park led in quick succession to Deborah being invited to join Tennessee Ernie Ford as a part of a cast production he was taking on tour to the Soviet Union. It proved to be an invaluable experience.
When safely
back home in the States, the career momentum was now officially picking up
speed. Veteran songwriting genius Shel Silverstein took Deborah under his
wing, and considering the sea of pretty Shel's friendship, interest and wisdom changed her life immediately and forever. Deborah recalls, "I was so naive, I thought if someone as great as Shel Silverstein thought I could be a songwriter, well, I guess I'm a songwriter now!" While working on an Opryland TV special for Sandy Duncan, Deborah met singer / comedian Jim Stafford, who after seeing Deborah perform, asked her to be a part of his cast on his new summer replacement ABC television series. This opportunity meant a move to Los Angeles where she would spend the next two years working with Stafford on television, as well as performing on his concert dates as an opening act. Even with all the wonderful influences and experience she gained, the seductive lure and often too slick music scene in L.A. couldn't inspire Deborah's soul. Feeling her music had deeper creative roots in her southern heritage, Deborah soon made her way back to Nashville, a climate and place she felt better suited for her artistry to grow. Once re-settled, there was no looking back. Her writing was flourishing by this time. RCA had become aware of her, and felt she was the right voice to overdub tracks recorded by the late country legend, Jim Reeves. Because of a unique, landmark technical innovation, the label was able to update their existing Jim Reeves tracks into brand-new duets with Deborah Allen. The finished tracks that resulted burst Deborah Allen onto the national charts and into the music mainstream. "Don't Let Me Cross Over," "Oh How I Miss You Tonight," and "Take Me In Your Arms And Hold Me" all reached the top 10, proving that Jim Reeves' career on record had not yet ended, and Deborah Allen's was just about to begin.
Signed to Capitol Records, her debut album release, "Trouble In Paradise," received wide critical acclaim. At that crucial time in her still fledgling career, an executive shift at Capitol locked Deborah's next session in the vault of corporate change. Included in that session was a song called, "Baby I Lied," which Deborah had co-written. Impressed with both the singer and the song, RCA Records picked up Deborah's session masters and immediately released "Baby I Lied." In addition to becoming a major country hit, "Baby I Lied" from her first RCA album titled "Cheat The Night," achieved huge success on the pop charts as well. This tremendous recognition in both fields garnered Deborah two Grammy nominations as a singer and a songwriter.
Her next
release for RCA, "Let Me Be The First," lived up to its title! Coming on
the heels During this period, another career highlight for Deborah was a duet with the King of Country Music -- George Jones for his "Ladies' Choice" album for CBS Records. A double treat, because not only did she get to sing with George, but also because the song, "Our Love Was Ahead Of Its Time," was a song she had co-written especially for the two of them. Deborah's next project, "Telepathy," with the title track produced by her new studio acquaintance Prince, the Prince of Pop, (alias Joey Coco at the time) broadened Deborah even further as an artist who defied the normal restraints of putting limitations or labels on herself or her music. While establishing herself as a major recording artist, Deborah's incredible string of successes as a songwriter were fast establishing her as one of the hottest young writers in town. By this time, major cuts had come from artists as diverse as Diana Ross, Loretta Lynn, Sheena Easton, Lee Greenwood, Tammy Wynette, Mac Davis, Janie Frickie, John Conlee, Barbara Mandrell, Marie Osmond, Lorrie Morgan, Mickey Gilley, Tanya Tucker, Kenny Rankin, Isaac Hayes, Millie Jackson and Conway Twitty, to mention only a few.
Her next CD, "All That I Am" on Giant Records, further displayed the passionate intensity of her singing and the lyrical beauty of her songwriting. Here was the heart of Deborah Allen. "I have always said my music was somewhere between Memphis and Nashville," Deborah reflects. "I feel like one town gave me my musical roots, and the other has given me wings to fly creatively." The 90's brought even more successes as a songwriter. In '96, the newly discovered teen sensation LeAnn Rimes' "Blue" album carried two Deborah Allen songs to multi-platinum status with both "Hurt Me" and "My Baby" included. Three more of Deborah's songs, "All The Loving and the Hurting Too," "Undeniable," and "Rock Me (In The Cradle of Love)" appeared on LeAnn's multi-platinum follow-up CD, "Sittin' On Top Of The World". Patty Loveless hit the top of the country charts with "Hurt Me Bad (In A Real Good Way)" and Mindy McCready recorded Deborah's "All That I Am." Country music legend Tanya Tucker re-connected with Deborah's songwriting brilliance and recorded "It Hurts Like Love" around the same time that seminal rock super-group Fleetwood Mac added their artistry to Deborah's songs,"Talkin' To My Heart" and "I've Got It In For You." In the year 2000, the release of her CD, "The Best Of Deborah Allen" on Curb Records, was yet another creatively fulfilling chapter of Deborah's boundless career.
During this
time, her song "We Can Get There" performed by pop diva Mary Griffin on the hit
soundtrack for the box-office blockbuster "Coyote Ugly" moved Deborah into
multi-platinum A world-class singer, songwriter and producer, Deborah's creative skills are second to none. As the consummate performer, her genuine warmth and natural love of performing shine through her high energy, and in her more intimate moments as she wrings emotion into every note she sings. Now in the new millennium, with her talents culminating into international performances with world-renowned symphonies, Deborah remains as current as tomorrow morning's news . She has never stopped growing, never lost that first love feeling for the music that wells up naturally inside her. The result is quite simply the musical genius of a little girl from Memphis who had a dream -- and the faith and talent to make her dream come true. In addition to continuing to expand her musical artistry, Deborah is serving as spokesperson for the Underwater Warriors, which is a charitable and educational non-profit created to provide scuba diving as therapeutic recreation for injured servicemen and women. Armed with adaptive skills, injured soldiers are now defying gravity, liberating bodies confined to wheelchairs, and finding freedom once again in an underwater world. Our Underwater Warriors, brought together by their sacrifice and service, have embarked on a new and exciting mission ~ and their families are joining them!
“I can tell you from my experience on our recent dive trip, which was totally funded by Cayman Brac, that the bonding which took pace between the five soldiers and I forged a lifetime friendship,” Deborah Allen said. “It also brought to light just how brave and real these injured soldiers truly are, and how courageous they continue to be in moving forward in life forever carrying their sacrificial scars of war.”
“There are so many more soldiers who need our love, care and support. Underwater Warriors is a great way to give back to those who have given so much for us. I am honored beyond words to be able to be a part of this immensely worthy cause,” Deborah added.
Click here to see a slide show of Deborah’s recent trip set to her song “Deeper Waters.” To learn more about the Underwater Warriors and how you can help, visit: www.underwaterwarriors.org. Learn more about Deborah at www.DeborahAllen.com and www.myspace.com/deborahallenworld. |
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4th Annual Summer Bash -- When Memphis Comes to Milton for Markell |
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