
#BIG NOTE STUDIO ABILENE FULL#
Following close behind is her newly released full album project titled “SING”, produced by grammy award winning musician and arranger, Bobby Flores of BAM Recording Studios of San Antonio, Texas. This combination made for an epic first solo outing. In addition to her own original song, Face My Way, hit song writers the likes of Phil Madeira, Cindy Morgan and Elliott Park graced the project with their phenomenal tunes. Her very own solo standout project was EP, “Beautiful Scars”, produced/engineered by award winning Todd Robbins of TX3 Productions “The Workshop”, Franklin TN.
#BIG NOTE STUDIO ABILENE MOVIE#
Recording lead & background vocals on 1000’s of recording artists album projects, songwriter demos, jingles, videos & movie soundtrack. Twyla’s years of vocal experience includes television, stage & studio. Her soulful, edgy vocal stylings can be compared to those distinctive earthy sounds of Bonnie Raitt, Nora Jones, Eva Cassidy & Susan Tedeschi. The vocal range & diversity of this artist along with her natural ability allows Twyla to do & blend her many styles of music….Blues, Jazz, Pop, Country, R&B & Gospel. He was the youngest of four children of Tom Edenton, a sawmill operator, and Laura (Quarles) Edenton, a homemaker.This talented Texan is an accomplished singer/songwriter with a natural ability to do it ALL when it comes to vocal performance. 3, 1926, in Mineral, Va., a gold-mining town about 50 miles northwest of Richmond. Edenton, who played mandolin, ukulele and banjo as well as guitar, was inducted with the rest of the A-Team into the Musicians Hall of Fame. “You might do a pop session in the morning and bluegrass in the afternoon and rock ’n’ roll at night.” Edenton said of Nashville’s studios in his Country Music Hall of Fame interview. “Everybody in the world came here, and we recorded with all of them,” Mr. He also took part in the Nashville sessions that produced the album “Tennessee Firebird,” a pioneering fusion of country and jazz released by the vibraphonist Gary Burton in 1967. Young’s acclaimed 1978 album, “Comes a Time.” as well as rock acts like Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and the Sir Douglas Quintet. Edenton’s work as a session musician reached beyond country music, with singers like Julie Andrews, Rosemary Clooney, Sammy Davis Jr. Edenton, who retired in 1991 at age 65, said in looking back on his years as a studio musician during an interview at an event held in his honor at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville in 2007.



“I did 22 sessions in five days one week,” Mr. Cline’s “Sweet Dreams,” Webb Pierce’s “There Stands the Glass,” Kenny Rogers’s “The Gambler,” Roger Miller’s “King of the Road” and Loretta Lynn’s “You Ain’t Woman Enough” were among the blockbuster country singles, many of them also pop crossover successes, that featured his guitar work. His name was less known than his musicianship, but generations of listeners knew the records he helped make famous, a body of work estimated to exceed 10,000 sessions. Edenton contributed discreet, empathetic rhythm guitar to myriad hits in a career that spanned four decades. His death was confirmed by his daughter, Ronda Hardcastle.Ī longtime member of Nashville’s so-called A-Team of first-call studio professionals, Mr. NASHVILLE - Ray Edenton, a versatile session guitarist who played on thousands of recordings by artists like the Everly Brothers, Charley Pride, Neil Young and Patsy Cline, died on Sept.
