- Connie Eaton
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Connie Eaton Born March 1, 1950 Origin Nashville, Tennessee Died September 30, 1999 (aged 49)Genres Country Occupations Singer Years active 1970–1975 Labels Chart, ABC Connie Eaton (March 1, 1950 - September 30, 1999) was a country music singer. Eaton was a native of Nashville, Tennessee and began her recording career as a teenager in the late 1960s, recording for Chart Records. Chart was the label that established Lynn Anderson as a major country singer and Eaton was considered by the country music press as the label's "next" Anderson. Prior to beginning her recording career, Eaton had been a runnerup in a "Miss Nashville" beauty contest. Her first record, "Too Many Dollars, Not Enough Sense", a Liz Anderson song, was released in 1968.
Eaton had a top 40 country hit with a cover of Merrilee Rush's pop record Angel of the Morning in 1970 which earned her a Billboard "Most Promising Female Vocalist" nomination but this proved to be Eaton's only hit record during her years on the Chart label although a duet with Dave Peel, a cover of Ray Charles' "Hit the Road Jack" came within a few spots of cracking the Top 40 also in 1970. Eaton released three albums and numerous singles for Chart Records and later recorded for on a few minor labels. In 1975, she returned to the major labels with an ABC Records contract and had her biggest hit, "Lonely Men, Lonely Women", which peaked at #23. Her album for ABC, however, did not chart and the follow-up singles were not successful. By the late 1970s, Eaton was out of the music industry. She died from cancer in 1999 at age 49.
Connie Eaton's daughter Cortney Tidwell is a recording artist in her own right.
Contents
Discography
Albums
Year Album Label 1969 I've Got a Life to Live Chart 1970 Hit the Road Jack (with Dave Peel) 1971 Something Special 1975 Connie Eaton ABC Singles
Year Single Chart Positions Album US Country CAN Country 1970 "Angel of the Morning" 34 11 Something Special "Hit the Road Jack" (with Dave Peel) 44 — Hit the Road Jack "It Takes Two" (with Dave Peel) 56 — 1971 "Sing a Happy Song" 74 — Something Special "Don't Hang No Halos on Me" 56 — single only 1975 "Lonely Men, Lonely Women" 23 37 Connie Eaton "If I Knew Enough to Come Out of the Rain" 93 — External links
- Connie Eaton at Chart Records
Categories:- 1950 births
- 1999 deaths
- American country singers
- American female singers
- People from Nashville, Tennessee
- Musicians from Tennessee
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