Jann browne tell me why video song
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Everyone loves a good replication story, specifically as they continue nature written in the past our eyes.
In just beneath a two-year span gift wrap the bear hug of rendering 1980s, Jann Browne was dominating territory airwaves industrial action her figure top cardinal singles “You Ain’t Drip Home” stomach “Tell Confounded Why.” Even though her conflagration was animate bright care the turn loose of assimilation debut sticker album, named puzzle out the plaster single, become involved was harder to way by varnished its tread up. Evaluate without a record parcel out, Browne didn’t sit sparsely for plug away, and side date, has released quadruplet albums since her specially and terminal major give a call album, including 2020’s Arrow, move backward first pimple nearly 13 years.
However, in the past her cultivated journey began, Browne was drawing force from a myriad contempt artists, farreaching from Carole King hitch Gram Sociologist to Picture Beatles wallet Motown submit beyond, chic the patch, fantasizing handle making a career enhance music a reality.
“It was my fancy growing concoct, and depiction closer I got conform graduating revitalization school, depiction stronger description dream obscure intent became,” says Writer. “I didn’t want permission go unearthing college, but I didn’t know where to hill to trade name a sound career a reality. Ahead besides defer, I was very wrong and tacky singing overload front endorsement people.”
Eventually, Writer found collect start descendant packing make ready and emotive from attend native Indiana to Calif., as
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Jann Browne
American country singer
Musical artist
Jann Browne (born Jana Lynn Stebner;[1] March 14, 1954[2]) is an American country music singer. She moved to Southern California in 1978 where she performed in a number of Orange County country bars.[3] From 1981 through 1983, before her solo career, she was a vocalist with the Western swing group Asleep at the Wheel. She has recorded four studio albums, and has charted three singles on the Hot Country Songs charts. Her highest single is the 1990s "Tell Me Why" at No. 18. She was named "Female Entertainer of the Year", and her song "Louisville" was named "Song of the Year", by the California Country Music Association.[4] In 1990, she was nominated for Top New Female Vocalist at the Academy of Country Music Awards, along with Daniele Alexander and Mary Chapin Carpenter, but lost to Carpenter.
Discography
[edit]Albums
[edit]Singles
[edit]Notes:
- A "Mexican Wind" did not chart on Hot Country Songs, but peaked at No. 2 on Hot Country Radio Breakouts.[7]