Teresa Brewer: Unliberated Woman [Signature, 1975]When your jazz-entrepreneur husband buys you Nashville's finest for your 44th birthday, you might be tempted to think unliberation paid yourself. C-
>>130579823Accurate grade, actually her entire discography deserves that one.
it sounds like what would happen if your entire idea of country music came from watching Westerns
>>130579969Most of Teresa's later (post-50s) career was either being a country or jazz scene tourist.
>>130579823#rekt
>>130579851she really always was a children's singer, wasn't she?
>>130579823For once Cuckgau was not a faggot.
>>130579823>Nashville's finestWhat's that?>unliberation paid yourselfWhat's that mean?
>>130580189tl;dr you have some cojones making an anti-feminist statement when your label owner husband is bankrolling your career
idk anything about Teresa Brewer outside that she was some kind of Pat Boone tier singer
>>130580259That's semi-accurate though Boone was/is a far more malignant person he covers up with that Christfag persona.
>>130580222ok. trying to decipher his gibberish is hard.
>>130579823Beating her up is like winning the Special Olympics though.
>>130580222Ah, ok.
>>130579823>>130579851the industry rule used to be that if your breakout hit was a novelty song, as hers was, you kind of were forever pigeonholed as a novelty act and could never escape it
>>130580023i love how she claimed ah my jazz stuff was my real crowning achievement not those 50s pop hits that stuff was pretty dum>yeah i was totally a serious artist all along you gotta believe me. really.
>>130580222Bob Thiele was mini-me Mitch Miller.
>Brewer was born as Theresa Breur in Toledo, Ohio in 1931. Her mother got her onto the local radio show "Uncle August's Kiddie Hour" at age 3 where she made her performing debut singing "Take Me Out To The Ball Game." By 6 she was on "Major Bowles's Amateur Hour" and became a regular, touring the country until 12 when her mother pulled her from the road to finish school. At 16 an aunt accompanied her to New York City where she performed in nightclubs, it was decided to Anglicize her name at some point during this time. Brewer met her first husband Tom Monahan during a performance in a club and they married soon afterward, eventually becoming the parents of four girls, when she signed with London Records and had her breakout and only #1 hit "Music Music Music" in early 1950. Brewer moved to Decca's Coral Records subsidiary two years later.>After divorcing her husband in the late 60s, she married Bob Thiele a few years later, who had formerly been Coral's music director in the '50s.This is half some proto-Taylor Swift bullshit here.