Dottie Rambo

Dottie Rambo (March 2, 1934 – May 11, 2008) was an American gospel singer and songwriter. She was a Grammy and multiple Dove Award-winning artist. Along with husband Buck and daughter Reba, she formed the award-winning southern Gospel group, The Rambos. She wrote more than 2,500 songs, including her most notable, "He Looked Beyond My Fault and Saw My Need", "We Shall Behold Him", and "I Go To the Rock".

Dottie Rambo
Background information
Birth nameJoyce Reba Luttrell
Born(1934-03-02)March 2, 1934
Madisonville, Kentucky, U.S.
OriginIndianapolis, Indiana
DiedMay 11, 2008(2008-05-11) (aged 74)
Mount Vernon, Missouri
GenresChristian, southern gospel
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
InstrumentsGuitar, voice
Years active1950–2008
LabelsWarner Bros., Heart Warming
Associated actsThe Gospel Echoes/The Rambos, Reba Rambo McGuire
Websitedottierambo.net

In 2000, Rambo was awarded the ASCAP Lifetime Achievement Award. Her music is known for its poetic lyrics and cross genre reaching melodies often dealing with themes such as heaven, Christian sacrifice, hurts, and the born-again Christian experience.[1]

Early life

She was born Joyce Reba Luttrell in Madisonville, Kentucky in 1934 to Jerald Vernon "Chick" and Elizabeth Luttrell. According to personal accounts, she grew up in poverty and developed an early affinity for country music. She learned to play guitar while listening at night to the Grand Ole Opry on WSM radio in Nashville. At age eight, she started writing songs while sitting on a creek bank near her Morganfield, Kentucky home.[2] She had the support of her mother and father, and by age ten she was singing and playing country music cover tunes on a local radio program.

She was raised inside Apostolic Pentecostalism, and at twelve years old, she became a born-again Christian and made a commitment to write and sing Christian music. The decision turned out to be pivotal in more than one way; it did not sit well with her father who gave her an ultimatum give up Christian music or leave. She left home and went on the road, with her first engagement being at a church in Indianapolis, Indiana. She formed a trio called the Gospel Echoes and traveled throughout the midwestern and southern United States.[3] The Gospel Echoes would consist of different members over the years, including Pat Green and Little Joe Hatfield.

In 1950, at age sixteen, she met Buck Rambo at a revival meeting she was holding with evangelist Jimmie Russell. They married shortly thereafter and began traveling and singing together after years of her traveling alone and living with pastors' families. Buck was unfaithful on several occasions during the marriage, and his philandering led her to attempt suicide and file for divorce twice.[4]

Music career

Finally the Rambos created a group, The Gospel Echoes, and later with their daughter Reba as The Singing Rambos and The Rambos. Through an introduction by another gospel group, the Happy Goodman Family, Rambo sang for the then-governor of Louisiana, Jimmie Davis, who was also a popular country and gospel music recording artist. Davis signed her to a writing contract with his publishing company, Jimmie Davis Music (BMI).

She received a signing bonus of around $3,000, the most she had ever earned up to that time.[5] Though Jimmie Davis appears as a co-writer on Rambo's compositions during this time, she publicly stated he did not write any music or lyrics to her compositions but required a writer's share upon the publishing agreement. Jimmie Davis Music is now owned by Peer Music.

Throughout the 1960s her star began to rise, mostly as a songwriter, but also as a soloist. As the leader of The Singing Rambos she traveled internationally, including a 1967 trip to Vietnam to perform for American troops.[6] While there, Rambo ministered in field hospitals, the USS Kitty Hawk, and the USS Ticonderoga. In Vietnam the group was billed as the "Swinging Rambos", as the government feared that a Christian singing group's safety could be at risk. US soldiers presented Rambo with a Viet Cong flag and other personal mementos from the war.

Her songwriting break and Davis' company's promotion of Rambo's songs resulted in a Warner Bros. Records recording contract for her and the Gospel Echoes. After earning as little as $50 a week for years, and often working day jobs to make ends meet, Rambo's fortunes began to improve. Their records were selling and her songs were being noticed within the industry, with other gospel groups beginning to record them.[7] In 1968 she won a Grammy Award for Best Soul Gospel Performance for her album It's The Soul Of Me.[8] Poor record sales for the Gospel Echoes caused the Warner Bros. label to release the group. Warner Bros. saw something special in Rambo as a solo artist and asked her to sign on with a recording contract for R&B music. she signed instead with the Benson Records.

Rambo worked with Billy Graham, Jimmy Swaggart, Oral Roberts, Earl Paulk, Benny Hinn, Kathryn Kuhlman, John Hagee, Jim Bakker, Tammy Faye Bakker-Messner, Paul and Jan Crouch, Paula White, Reinhard Bonnke, Pat Robertson, T. D. Jakes and others.

Her Down By The Creekbank is one of the most successful Christian children's records in history, earning platinum record status.[9] In addition to her solo and trio recordings, Rambo appeared on other artists' recordings including Jimmie Davis, Barbara Mandrell, Dickey Betts, The Dunaways, David Robertson, and Walt Mills.

Discography

Composer

Rambo reportedly composed upwards of 2,500 songs.[10] ASCAP and BMI show only several hundred registered titles attributed to Rambo in its online database.[11] Rambo's best-known songs include "We Shall Behold Him", "Holy Spirit Thou Art Welcome (In This Place)", "I Go to the Rock", "Sheltered in the Arms of God", "I Will Glory in the Cross", "He Looked Beyond My Fault", "Tears Will Never Stain the Streets of That City", "For What Earthly Reason", "If That Isn't Love", and "Too Much to Gain to Lose". She also wrote country music songs recorded by Jimmie Davis, Charlie Louvin, Rhonda Vincent, and Hank Snow, among others.

Rambo's songs have been recorded by a virtual "who's who" in the music world with her biggest songwriting cut being Whitney Houston's version of "I Go to the Rock", which appeared on the motion picture soundtrack for The Preacher's Wife. The recording garnered Rambo and Houston the 1998 GMA Dove Award for Traditional Gospel Song of the Year.

In addition, other secular artists have recorded Dottie Rambo compositions, including Solomon Burke, Johnny Cash, Carol Channing, Barbara Fairchild, Larry Gatlin, Crystal Gayle, Vince Gill, Wanda Jackson, George Jones, Alison Krauss, Jerry Lee Lewis, Barbara Mandrell, Bill Monroe, The Oak Ridge Boys, Dolly Parton, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Jeannie C. Riley, Connie Smith, Hank Snow, Mel Tillis, Rhonda Vincent, Porter Wagoner, and Dottie West.

Numerous Christian/gospel artists have recorded her songs, such as Aaron Jeoffrey, Vanessa Bell Armstrong, The Barrett Sisters, The Blackwood Brothers, The Booth Brothers, Greater Vision, Commissioned, The Crabb Family, Andrae Crouch, Danniebelle Hall, Jimmie Davis, DC Talk, Jeff and Sheri Easter, The Florida Boys, The Happy Goodmans, Steve Green, Larnelle Harris, Jake Hess, The Hoppers, The Isaacs, Bobby Jones, Ron Kenoly, Doyle Lawson, Mark Lowry, Janet Paschal, Sandi Patty, Karen Peck, The Speer Family, Albertina Walker, Vickie Winans, Karen Wheaton, Jimmy Swaggart,and The Collingsworth Family.

Television appearances

Throughout her career, beginning with the 1960s "Gospel Singing Jubilee", Rambo appeared on numerous television programs on virtually every Christian network as well as the TNN, PAX, and GMT Women's Entertainment channels. She had her own series, Dottie Rambo Magazine, in the 1980s on TBN. It was the No. 1 rated program on the network for six years and has rerun on and off since.[6]

Dottie Rambo performed on six of the Gaither Homecoming video series (see her discography). Her last appearance was Nashville Homecoming (2009), in which she performed "I Just Came To Talk With You Lord."

Dottie Rambo has been the subject of many biographic television specials: TBN's Portrait of Grace, INSP's Inspirational Groundbreakers, BBC's White Gospel, and GMC's Faith and Fame (her last interview aired on television).

Later years

In 1987, Rambo suffered a ruptured disk which led to paralysis in her left leg. She underwent a series of surgeries that eventually reinstated limited mobility. In 1992, Dottie and Buck separated after he engaged in an extramarital affair; they divorced in 1994.[12][13]

Although partially disabled, Rambo made major television appearances including The 700 Club, and as a regular guest performer on TBN. In 1994, TBN produced a Tribute Concert special that featured two hours of performances by Ricky Skaggs, Ricky Van Shelton, Vickie Winans, Jeannie C. Riley, Lulu Roman, and many others.

In 2002, Rambo reentered the studio to record her first solo album in eighteen years. The result was the award-winning hit Stand By The River.[2] The title track, a duet with Dolly Parton, went to the number one spot of the Christian Country Radio Chart, as did its follow-up, "I'm Gonna Leave Here Shoutin'".

In 2004, a major live concert DVD/CD project, We Shall Behold Him: A Tribute to Dottie Rambo, was released. The concert was hosted by Barbara Mandrell and included performances by Dolly Parton, Crystal Gayle, Larry Gatlin, The Isaacs, Jessy Dixon, Vestal Goodman, The Speers, The Crabb Family, and Albertina Walker.[14]

In 2007, she performed nationwide and appeared in concert at country singer Dolly Parton's Tennessee theme park, Dollywood.

In November 2007, Rambo completed another studio album with the working title of Sheltered. This album was released posthumously in September 2009 on Daywind Records. The project features 12 tracks, including duets with Porter Wagoner, Mel Tillis, The Whites and Lulu Roman. Upon completing this project, Rambo started another project that was to feature new compositions and music for a 2009 release.

In 2010, a tribute album began the recording process, featuring new tracks by artists from various genres of music, such as George Jones, Little Richard, Dolly Parton, Solomon Burke and other legendary performers. The album was reported to have been produced by her longtime manager (Larry Ferguson) and former assistant (Chris Barnes).

Death

Rambo died on May 11, 2008, as a result of injuries sustained in a bus accident along Interstate 44 just outside Mount Vernon, Missouri. She had just finished a performance at Calvary Life Church in Granite City, Illinois and was en route to a Mother's Day show in Texas when the 1997 Prévost bus she was traveling in ran off the road, struck a guard rail and hit an embankment. Rambo was pronounced dead at the scene. Her manager Larry Ferguson and his family were injured in the crash.

Her funeral was held at Christ Church in Nashville, Tennessee on May 19, 2008. She was interred at the Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Nashville.

Awards and honors

Rambo received numerous awards and other honors over the years, including one Grammy and three GMA Dove Awards. She was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame on two occasions; once with the Rambos and once as a solo artist. In 1994 the Christian Country Music Association awarded her with the Songwriter of the Century Award. She was given the ASCAP Lifetime Achievement Award in 2000, and two Christian Country Music Association (CCMA) awards; the Pioneer Award in 2003, and in 2004, Songwriter of the Year. She was inducted into the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame][15] in 2006.

Her 2002 CD, Stand By The River, won two Christian Music Fan Awards, for Song of The Year and Duo of The Year (with Dolly Parton). The Nashville Songwriter's Hall of Fame inducted Rambo in 2007.[16] She was inducted posthumously into the Christian Music Hall of Fame at the induction award ceremony on June 14, 2008.[17] She was also posthumously inducted into the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. Her manager and granddaughter accepted on her behalf. In 2011, Rambo was honored with a star on Music City's Walk of Fame,[18] which her daughter Reba accepted on her behalf.

gollark: Length comparison is O(1) though.
gollark: I could do that in potatOS, it'd really save a lot of CPU time *wasted* actually comparing them.
gollark: Just define all words of the same length to be equal.
gollark: They are, actually.
gollark: Li nux!

References

  1. I Will Glory In The Cross, John T. Benson Publishing Co. Inc.
  2. Dottie Rambo Bio from myspace.com captured 12 April 2007.
  3. Dottie Rambo Official Bio by Barry Drudge dottierambo.net
  4. Jr, Charles K. Moore (2012-01-22). "THE CHRISTIAN WORLDVIEW: Dottie Rambo: The Gifted Songwriter of the Twentieth Century (Part 14)". THE CHRISTIAN WORLDVIEW. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  5. More Than the Music - Life Story - Dottie Rambo/ The LeFevres, (2003); Word Entertainment ASIN: B0000DC141
  6. Beckie Simons World
  7. "BSA - Southern Gospel's Finest". 14 August 2006. Archived from the original on 14 August 2006.
  8. Best Soul Gospel Performance; The 11th Annual Grammy Awards Archived March 16, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  9. Drudge, Barry. "Dottie Rambo Bio". Retrieved 5 February 2011.
  10. Bill Carpenter; allmusic.com Captured 12 April 2007
  11. "The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers". 29 September 2007. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  12. "Ramblin' Rhodes: Elvis befriended troubled songwriter".
  13. Jr, Charles K. Moore (2012-01-22). "THE CHRISTIAN WORLDVIEW: Dottie Rambo: The Gifted Songwriter of the Twentieth Century (Part 14)". THE CHRISTIAN WORLDVIEW. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  14. "We Shall Behold Him: A Tribute to Dottie Rambo". Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  15. "Kentucky Music Hall of Fame Museum, Renfro Valley, Kentucky". www.kentuckymusicmuseum.com.
  16. Press release; Beckie Simons World
  17. Christian Music Hall of Fame official charity site. Archived May 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  18. "Music City Walk of Fame Inductees - Nashville Walk of Fame - VisitMusicCity.com". www.visitmusiccity.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.