The Kendalls
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The Kendalls | |
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Origin | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
Genres | Country, urban cowboy |
Years active | 1969–1998 |
Labels | Stop Dot United Artists Ovation Mercury MCA Step One Epic Lonesome Dove |
Past members | Royce Kendall Jeannie Kendall |
The Kendalls were an American
Career
Royce Kendall and his brother Floyce Kendall were raised in Missouri, with family roots in the Arkansas Ozarks. As young men, the brothers formed a duo and moved to California, where they recorded and performed on regional West Coast country television shows as The Austin Brothers. When they broke up, Royce and his wife Melba moved back to Missouri.
Royce and Melba Kendall's daughter Jeannie proved to be musically talented from an early age, and as a teenager, she became her father's duet partner.
On June 27, 1970, Jeannie provided vocals for the duet "I Wouldn't Have You Any Other Way" on Ringo Starr's country album Beaucoups of Blues.
The duo signed with Dot Records in 1972, and released an album and two singles, "Two Divided By Love", (a cover version of The Grass Roots' pop hit) and "Everything I Own", a cover of Bread's 1972 hit.[2]
The Kendalls parted with Dot before signing with the independent Ovation label in 1977.[2] Their first single for the label, a cover of the Kitty Wells hit "Making Believe," made the lower regions of the charts, but was largely overlooked because Emmylou Harris' version of "Making Believe" hit the U.S. country chart around the same time.
The Kendalls' second single on Ovation, a "cheating" song called "Heaven's Just a Sin Away", proved to be their breakthrough.
Subsequent hits included "Just Like Real People", "It Don't Feel Like Sinnin' to Me", "Sweet Desire", "You'd Make an Angel Want to Cheat", and a cover of Dolly Parton's "Put It Off Until Tomorrow".[2] (Jeannie Kendall's powerful soprano has often been compared to Parton's.)[3] In 1981, after Ovation Records closed their doors, the duo signed with Mercury Records, and continued to have hits with the "Teach Me To Cheat" and "If You're Waitin' On Me (You're Backin' Up)", which both made the country top 10.[2] More hits followed with "Movin' Train" and "Precious Love", which made the top 20.
Their last number-one country hit, 1984's "Thank God for the Radio", was also their last single to reach the top 10.[2] Their last top-20 hits came in 1984 and 1985 with "My Baby's Gone" and "I'll Dance Every Dance With You". In 1986, they signed with MCA Records, where they scored three midlevel hits. In 1987, they signed with Step One Records, where they scored several minor hits. In 1989, they signed with Epic Records, where their last chart single, "Blue, Blue Day", made the top 70.
Jeannie Kendall was married to Mack Watkins.[2] In the early 1990s, the Kendalls built a supper club in Gulf Shores, Alabama, which featured nightly performances by them; the club closed down two years later. Afterward, they began performing in Branson, Missouri, where the two families had built homes next door to each other. The Kendalls continued to tour and perform and released several CDs, until May 22, 1998, when Royce Kendall died from a stroke while on tour in Marquette, Iowa.[1] Jeannie Kendall, one of the original founding members of the Kendalls continues to tour and sing today with Carl Acuff Jr. They appear monthly at the Nashville Roadhouse Live, The Branson Star Theater in Branson Missouri. Jeannie Kendall is currently signed with Leaping Hawk Records, in the Ozarks. Jeannie and Carl tour as The Kendalls performing past hits and new.
Jeannie Kendall's solo career
In the years since her father's death, Jeannie has pursued a solo career, recording two solo albums, including a self-titled acoustic/bluegrass CD on the Rounder label that featured two songs recorded with Royce and several guest artists.[1] These guest artists included Alan Jackson, Ricky Skaggs, Alison Krauss, Rhonda Vincent, and Johnny Long, who had been the Kendalls' backup singer on the road. The second was All The Girls I Am, a much harder-edged pop/country CD released in 2005 on Golden. In 2022 she released an album with Carl Acuff Jr. entitled “You Got Me” recorded on The Leaping Hawk Records label.
Jeannie continues to tour and perform as The Kendalls, teaming up with Carl Acuff Jr. on harmony and lead vocals. The Kendalls released a new single “Island in The Kitchen” on CDX on the Leaping Hawk Records label, working with Bonnie and Rune Trulove, in 2022. The Kendalls are managed by the Truloves. www.jeanniekendall.com www.leapinghawkrecords.com
Discography
References
- ^ a b c d e Mansfield, Brian (13 March 2003). "Jeannie Kendall, rekindled". USA Today. Retrieved 2009-08-02.
- ^ ISBN 0-85112-726-6.
- ^ [1][dead link]
External links
- Biography at allmusic
- Royce Kendall at Find a Grave