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You are here: Pics  >  Ronnie Milsap Pics (16 pics of Ronnie Milsap)

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Ronnie Milsap
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Ronnie Milsap Snapshot


First Name
Ronnie

Last Name
Milsap

Date of Birth
16 January 1946

Build
Average

Hair Color
Brown - Dark

Place of Birth
Robbinsville, North Carolina, USA

Star Sign
Capricorn

Ethnicity
White

Gender
Male

Nationality
American

Music Genre
Country, Piano

Music Style
Country-Pop, Urban Cowboy, Contemporary Country

Music Mood
Soothing, Earnest, Intimate, Laid-Back/Mellow, Romantic, Amiable/Good-Natured, Poignant, Refined/Mannered, Gentle, Cheerful, Happy, Sweet, Sad, Bittersweet, Sentimental, Smooth

Instrument
Piano, Vocals

Wikipedia Text

Ronnie Lee Milsap (born January 16, 1943) is an American country music singer and pianist. He was one of country’s most popular and influential performers of the 1970s and 1980s. He became country music's first well-known blind singer, and one of the most successful and versatile country "crossover" singers of his time, appealing to both country and pop music music markets with successful songs that incorporated popular, R&B, and rock and roll stylings. Milsap’s biggest crossover hits include "It Was Almost Like a Song," "Smoky Mountain Rain," "(There's) No Gettin' Over Me," "I Wouldn't Have Missed It for the World," "Any Day Now," and "Stranger in My House," among others. He is credited with six Grammy Awards and 40 number one country hits, third to George Strait and Conway Twitty.


Couple Profile
Ronnie Lee Milsap (born January 16, 1943 in Robbinsville, North Carolina) is an American Country/Pop singer and musician.[1] He was one of country music`s most popular singers in the 1970s and 1980s. He became country music`s first blind superstar. He was one of the many crossover country singers at this time, which was also called Countrypolitan or Country Pop. His biggest crossover hits include "(There`s) No Gettin` Over Me", "Smoky Mountain Rain", and "Lost in the Fifties Tonight". He is credited with forty number-one songs in country music, third only to George Strait and Conway Twitty. Ronnie Milsap was one of Country Music`s most influential artists in the 70s and 80s, becoming one of Country`s biggest stars, appealing to both Country and Pop markets. Milsap was born with a congenital defect leaving him blind. [2] Milsap lived with his grandparents until the age of six, when he was placed in the State School for the Blind in Raleigh, North Carolina[3] When Milsap was seven, his instructors noticed his musical talents, and he soon began studying classical music formally. Soon, Milsap became interested in rock and roll music and soon formed a Rock band called "The Apparitions." Milsap was awarded a full college scholarship and attended college briefly in Atlanta, Georgia, until he decided to become a full-time musician. In the early 1960s, he got his first professional gig, as a member of J. J. Cale`s band. He released his first single, "Total Disaster", in 1963. This was followed by several Ashford & Simpson compositions, including the memorable "Let`s Go Get Stoned", which, unfortunately for Milsap, was relegated to a B-side. A few months later, it would become a million-selling single for the more popular blind pianist, Ray Charles. Milsap moved to Memphis, Tennessee to become a session musician. He frequently worked in Memphis for Chips Moman, and can be heard playing the piano on the Elvis Presley hit "Kentucky Rain". He also sang harmony on another Presley hit, "Don`t Cry Daddy." In 1970, Milsap enjoyed brief Pop Music success with "Loving You Is a Natural Thing." Following that success, he released his debut album. In 1973, Milsap moved to Nashville to pursue his dream of Country Music stardom. In 1973, he worked with Charley Pride`s producer, Jack D. Johnson and was signed onto RCA Records that year. He released his first single from RCA that year called "I Hate You", which became his first Country hit and also just breaking the Country Top 10. The next year, 1974 he had two #1 hits. His first was "Pure Love" and then "Please Don`t Tell Me How the Story Ends", along with another Top 20 hit that year. In 1975, he revived the Don Gibson hit "(I`d Be) A Legend In My Time". That year, he scored another #1 hit with "Daydreams About Night Things". Milsap had a handul of Top tens, along with a string of #1 hits that made Milsap a star overnight. The remarkable thing was that he didn`t leave the Country Top Ten for nearly 18 years straight. In 1977, he crossed over to the Pop Music charts with his #1 Country hit "It Was Almost Like a Song". The song became a Top 20 hit on the Pop charts and was also a Top Ten Adult Contemporary hit. However, it was his only crossover hit in the 1970s. He kept gaining hits on the Country Music charts, however, with hits like "Let My Love Be Your Pillow", "Let`s Take the Long Way Around the World" and "Nobody Likes Sad Songs". By late 1979, his material shifted from straight-up Country to Countrypolitan or Country Pop, which gave Milsap the ability to crossover to the Pop Music charts, which he did successfully in the 1980s. In 1980, things changed a lot more for Milsap. He had a string of #1 hits that year with the double-sided songs "Cowboys and Clowns"/"Misery Loves Company," and "My Heart"/"Silent Night (After the Fight)." However, he managed no entries into the Pop charts that year. The next year, 1981 yielded Pop Music crossover success for Milsap. That year, two songs were crossover hits, "There`s No Gettin` Over Me" and "Smoky Mountain Rain". "There`s No Gettin` Over Me" became Milsap`s biggest hit on the Pop charts, making it to the Top 5, as well as being an Adult Contemporary hit for him. The other crossover hit, "Smoky Mountain Rain", didn`t break the Pop Top 20, but did top the Adult Contemporary charts, as well as topping the Country Music charts too. The song also has become one of his signature songs. In 1982, he had other crossover hits, with the songs "He Got You", "Any Day Now", and "I Wouldn`t Have Missed It For the World". These songs were big pop hits, making Milsap one of country music`s most successful crossover singers. He was not the only crossover superstar in country music at the time. It seemed tha

Couple Profile Source
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronnie_Milsap

Official Websites
www.ronniemilsap.com/

Full Name at Birth
Ronnie Lee Milsap

Role ID
Soundtrack, Producer

Has Detailed Data (New)
1

Age
66

Has Detailed Data (Music)
1

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