Jeannie Seely Biography
Jeannie Seely was a mid-'60s country singer popular for her sultry original compositions and her association with husband/writing
partner Hank Cochran. Pennsylvania-born Seely made the leap to glamorous Beverly Hills in 1961 when she was 21 and eventually
landed a job as secretary for Liberty Records where she met Cochran. By 1964, Seely was composing her own songs and recording
for independents Challenge Records. With Cochran's prodding, the couple uprooted from L.A. and moved to Nashville to make
in-roads on the country scene, striking gold the first time out of the gate. While Cochran wrote and produced, Seely put the
sexy vocals on his "Don't Touch Me," a 1966 Grammy award-winning hit single, and several chart toppers followed over the next
few years. Somewhat an outsider within the Nashville establishment because of her unabashedly sexy image, Seely all but sealed
the deal by forming an alliance with country artist Willie Nelson and his burgeoning early-'70s outlaw movement. More hits
followed, getting racier and racier and culminating with "Take Me to Bed" before Seely eventually dropped from the public
radar in the '80s. ~ Steve Kurutz, All Music Guide
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