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The Essential Connie Smith

14.4M streams

14,361,389

The Song We Fell In Love To

9.5M streams

9,524,668

The Lost Tapes

1.6M streams

1,626,014

The Best Of Connie Smith

769.2K streams

769,175

Connie Smith

644.8K streams

644,823

Young Love

442.4K streams

442,440

The Cry of the Heart

425.5K streams

425,549

Connie Smith

378.7K streams

378,742

CONNIE SMITH: GREATEST HITS ON MONUMEN...

307.7K streams

307,711

RCA Sessions (1965-1972)

254.6K streams

254,576

Biography

Thanks to her powerful voice and the lonely desperation she so effortlessly manages to express, Connie Smith is considered one of the most influential vocalists in country music history. She moved from being a small-town Ohio housewife to country stardom thanks to her 1964 hit single "Once a Day," which topped the country chart for eight consecutive weeks and earned a Grammy nomination. While her commercial peak in the late-'60s yielded a string of Top Ten singles, she remained popular into the '70s. Smith more or less retired at the end of that decade, but in 1998 she made a bold comeback with a critically acclaimed self-titled LP. She continued to perform well into the 21st century, returning every now and then to record a well-received new set of songs with husband and producer Marty Stuart, including 2011's Long Line of Heartaches, 2021's The Cry of the Heart, and 2024's Love, Prison, Wisdom and Heartaches. Smith was born Constance Meadows on August 14, 1941, in Elkhart, Indiana, but spent her early life first in West Virginia and later in Ohio. She married and became a housewife in the early '60s, singing occasionally on local TV shows around her home in Marietta, Ohio. She was singing near Columbus in August 1963 when country star Bill Anderson heard her and offered his help in getting a contract. She signed to RCA after a few months and recorded several selections in July 1964 with Chet Atkins at the helm. "Once a Day" -- written especially for her by Anderson -- was released as a single in September and hit the top of the country charts, reigning as number one for eight weeks. Smith's follow-up, "Then and Only Then," hit number four (even the flipside reached the Top 25), and her Top Ten streak continued unabated until late 1968, including the big hits "If I Talk to Him," "Ain't Had No Lovin'," and "The Hurtin's All Over." Meanwhile, her success began to take a toll; constant appearances on the road, in films, and on The Lawrence Welk Show caused Smith to reconsider her path in the music industry and devote herself to family and religion. Though she didn't quit music entirely, she began to balance her life with a lighter professional schedule. Though her country hits were rarer than in her mid-'60s heyday, Smith still managed the Top Tens "You and Your Sweet Love" in 1969, "I Never Once Stopped Loving You" the following year, and "Just One Time" in 1971. Her most successful year during the '70s was 1972. She recorded three big hits: the number five "Just What I Am," the number seven "If It Ain't Love (Let's Leave It Alone)," and the number eight "Love Is the Look You're Looking For." In the front half of '70s, Smith began to incorporate more gospel into her act. With the help of her third husband, evangelist Marshall Haynes, she turned her live appearances into traveling gospel road shows and signed with Columbia, which permitted her to record more straight gospel material. Though these songs didn't score as well on the charts as her secular singles had, she managed to stay in the Top 20 during much of the '70s. After she signed with Monument in 1977, most of her singles dropped out of the Top 40. Although she went into semi-retirement during the '80s and early-'90s, Smith continued to perform occasionally with the Grand Ole Opry and in 1998 resumed her recording career with her first LP in nearly 20 years, a self-titled effort issued on Warner Bros. Produced by Marty Stuart, whom she married in 1997, the album garnered critical accolades and Smith next returned with Love Never Fails, a collaborative gospel album recorded with Barbara Fairchild and Sharon White and released by Daywind Records in 2003. Beginning in 2008, Smith began appearing alongside Stuart on his weekly television series The Marty Stuart Show, performing every Saturday night. The two continued to write music together and several of those songs appeared on Smith's next studio outing, Long Line of Heartaches, which appeared from Sugar Hill Records in 2011. While her late-period output wasn't prolific, she made up for it in quality and the release once again received critical acclaim. Ten years later, Smith joined the roaster of Fat Possum Records to released 2021's spirited The Cry of the Heart. At 80 years old, it was the 54th album of her career and was again produced by Stuart. Smith paid tribute to some of her heroes and peers with the 2024 album Love, Prison, Wisdom and Heartaches, a collection of covers that included songs originally recorded by Loretta Lynn, Merle Haggard, George Jones, Dottie West, and the Glaser Brothers. Once again, Marty Stuart was at the controls for the sessions, and Smith was backed by Stuart's band the Fabulous Superlatives, joined by several legendary Nashville studio musicians, including pianist Hargus "Pig" Robbins in what proved to be one of his final recording sessions before his passing in 2022. ~ John Bush, Rovi