![]() ![]() Conway Twitty – “After All The Good Is Gone” This perennial Fathers’ Day classic earned him one one of his most endearing hits, and also gave a first hit to songwriter Gary Burr.ġ1. When Twitty returned to MCA in 1987, label head and producer Jimmy Bowen instructed him to find a few songs for each album that he might not have recorded before. The Mississippi native earned his very first hit single with a song that borrowed from Presley’s style, winning over rock and roll fans in the process. In 1958, everyone was being influenced by the music of Elvis Presley. He suggested the spoken intro, and the rest was history!ġ3. Owen Bradley, his producer from 1965-79, knew better. It sounds unthinkable now, but Twitty wrote the song with him singing the opening line. The only thing is - in a career that featured a staggering 75 top ten hits, there were a few other songs that were just as good. That statement might make the average fan chuckle today, but the women in Conway’s crowds were smiling when they heard this one - for an altogether different reason. ![]() But, in Twitty’s hands, the song underwent a change in sound - adapting the slick sound of the original to a song that bordered on Southern Erotica. In anyone else’s hands, the decision to cover a recent hit from the Pointer Sisters might have been career suicide for a country artist. In 1984, as the singer neared his twentieth anniversary as a country artist, he notched yet another number one hit with this decidedly modern-sounding take on heartbreak. Conway Twitty – “Somebody’s Needin’ Somebody” He also tipped the hat to Bob Seger, The Eagles, Lionel Richie, and the Pointer Sisters during his heyday. It wasn’t the last time he would cover a classic. But, Conway Twitty released a cover of one of the Bee Gees songs in the spring of 1981 - and it became the latest in a long line of Conway Twitty songs to top the charts. People seem to think that pop covers by country artists is a new trend. Helping add flavor to the song was the reigning Male Vocalist of the Year from the CMA, Ricky Skaggs.ġ7. In the 1980s, when the format was taking on a more cross-over sound, he released this traditional-flavored number which got plenty of couples on the dance floor in the summer of 1983. One of the most interesting aspects of Twitty’s career was the way that he was known for bucking the current trend. The lyrical content - about a youngster being raised by a single mom who longed for a paternal connection - definitely made an impact with the female demographic.ġ8. Twitty was still writing the bulk of his singles when this brilliantly-written song made it all the way to number one in 1976. Conway Twitty – “The Games That Daddies Play” ![]()
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