Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

0.31 %
0 less streams than the last month

Followers

Current

1.56 %
0 less streams than the last month

Streams

Current

0.70 %
0 less streams than the last month

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

RCA Country Legends

13.5M streams

13,548,420

Just Sylvia

529.8K streams

529,804

It's All in the Family

123.9K streams

123,922

Second Bloom: The Hits Re-Imagined

87.5K streams

87,455

Knockin' Around (The Lost Album)

67.4K streams

67,448

Nature Child: A Dreamer's Journey

61.3K streams

61,261

Where In The World

27.8K streams

27,814

One Step Closer

25.2K streams

25,212

The Real Story

24.2K streams

24,208

Drifter

21.2K streams

21,185

Biography

Growing up in Kokomo, IN, Sylvia moved to Nashville around Christmas of 1975 with a definite game plan: get a job as a secretary, get to know influential people in town, and build a career as a recording artist. The plan worked. She picked up a job as the receptionist for Pi-Gem Music, headed by record producer Tom Collins. She started singing on demo sessions, and Collins helped her secure a recording contract with RCA. Since she'd never performed live before, Sylvia ended up learning to do concerts at the same time she was making hit records. With an engaging voice, a bubbly personality, and a beautiful appearance, Sylvia was practically a marketing dream, and Collins built her sound around catchy melodies and strong backbeats. Songs like "Drifter" (number one, 1981), "The Matador" (1981), "Nobody" (number one, 1982), and "Like Nothing Ever Happened" (1982) became big hits; "Nobody" even crossed over into the pop Top 40. The material was often lyrically shallow, however, and Sylvia grew increasingly frustrated. She left Collins and recorded a pair of albums with record producer Brent Maher. The second was never released. Sylvia, instead, was dropped by RCA in 1987. She used the opportunity for personal growth (she toured almost constantly during the height of her career and was emotionally drained) and to develop as a songwriter. In 1992, she re-emerged as a touring artist and pursued a recording deal with self-penned material that was inner-directed and uplifting. ~ Tom Roland, Rovi