Terri Gibbs

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Terri Gibbs bigraphy, stories - Music

Terri Gibbs : biography

15 June 1954 –

Teresa Fay "Terri" Gibbs (born June 15, 1954) is an American country music artist who was born blind. Between 1980 and 1990, she recorded seven studio albums, including four for MCA Records and one for Warner Bros. Records. She also charted thirteen singles on the Billboard country singles charts in that timespan, including her debut single "Somebody’s Knockin’", which reached No. 8 on the country charts, No. 13 on the pop charts and No. 3 on the Adult Contemporary charts. She also entered the country top 20 with "Rich Man", "Mis’ry River", "Ashes to Ashes" and "Anybody Else’s Heart but Mine."

Biography

Teresa Fay Gibbs was born in Miami, Florida but raised in the Augusta, Georgia suburb of Grovetown. Born blind, she learned to play piano at age three. As a child, she sang in the church choir and at talent contests, and at age seventeen, she opened for Bill Anderson. Eventually, she met Chet Atkins, who advised her to move to Nashville, Tennessee to pursue a country music career, which she did at age eighteen. After failing to find a record deal, she returned to Miami and joined a band called Sound Dimension. She continued to perform locally, later forming a band called the Terri Gibbs Trio, which performed at a Steak & Ale in Augusta, Georgia. Gibbs then sent a demo tape to record producer Ed Penney of MCA Records, signing to the label in 1980.

Musical career

Gibbs’ first single release was "Somebody’s Knockin’", which was also the title of her debut album. This song was a crossover hit upon its 1981 release, reaching No. 8 on the U.S. country charts, No. 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 3 on the Adult Contemporary charts. It was followed by "Rich Man", a No. 19 country hit which also entered the pop charts. Her debut album won her the Academy of Country Music’s Top Female Vocalist award. She was also the first winner of the Country Music Association’s Horizon Award (which is awarded to emerging artists), and was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Country Song for "Somebody’s Knockin’." Gibbs performed on the Grand Ole Opry as well.

MCA released her second album, I’m a Lady, later in 1981. This album was less successful, although it produced a No. 12 hit in "Mis’ry River," its second and final single. 1982’s Some Days It Rains All Night Long produced a Top 20 hit in "Ashes to Ashes" and a No. 45 in its title track. Also in 1981 and 1982, Gibbs toured with George Jones and sang duets with him onstage. Her final MCA album, Over Easy, also produced a minor hit in "Anybody Else’s Heart but Mine", and after releasing a compilation called The Best of Terri Gibbs, she left the label.

Gibbs switched to Warner Bros. Records for her fifth album, 1985’s Old Friends. All three of this album’s singles — "A Few Good Men" (which featured Kathy Mattea on backing vocals) "Rockin’ in a Brand New Cradle" and "Someone Must Be Missing You Tonight" — missed the country Top 40.

Gibbs later shifted her focus to Contemporary Christian music, recording Turn Around and Comfort the People in 1987 and 1988, respectively, on Canaan Records. The former gave Gibbs her second Grammy nomination. What a Great Day, her third Christian album, followed in 1990 on the Morning Gate label. Gibbs then retired from the music industry.

Discography

Albums

Year Title Chart Positions Label
US Country US
1981 Somebody’s Knockin’ 6 53 MCA
I’m a Lady 40
1982 Some Days It Rains All Night Long 33
1983 Over Easy 32
1985 The Best of Terri Gibbs
Old Friends 58 Warner Bros.
1987 Turn Around Canaan
1988 Comfort the People
1990 What a Great Day Morning Gate