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Linda Gail Lewis

Linda Gail Lewis is part of a musical royal family -- her older brother was rock & roll icon Jerry Lee Lewis, and country star Mickey Gilley and gospel artist/preacher Jimmy Swaggart were her cousins. While it took Linda Gail a while to gain an audience of her own, over time she proved that she was a gifted pianist and singer in her own right, well-versed in rockabilly and first-era rock & roll, vintage country, boogie woogie, and Southern gospel. Guided by her brother, Linda Gail launched a career as singer in the early '60s, cutting records with him and singing in his road band. It wasn't until 1988 that she truly stepped out on her own and began wowing fans of vintage roots rock with her own piano prowess. After cutting a handful of albums for small labels, Linda Gail stepped into the spotlight with 2000's You Win Again, an album she recorded in collaboration with Van Morrison. Since then, she has been an in-demand act in the U.K. and Europe and has released a steady stream of albums highlighting her rollicking piano and impassioned vocals, including 2018's Wild! Wild! Wild!, a collaboration with alt-country maverick Robbie Fulks, and 2023's A Tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis, in which she interpreted 18 of her brother's best-known songs. The youngest of four siblings, Linda Gail Lewis was born in Ferriday, Louisiana on July 18, 1947. She was ten years old when her older brother Jerry Lee scored the first in a series of hit records with "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On," and having soaked up many of the same country, boogie woogie, and gospel influences as her brother, she too dreamed of having a career in music. Linda Gail loved to sing, citing Patsy Cline, Brenda Lee, and LaVern Baker as influences, and in 1960 she cut a single for Sun Records with her sister Frankie Jean Lewis that went unreleased. Her next attempt to record with one of her siblings went better; after a few years of singing backup with Jerry Lee's road band, they recorded a 45 for Sun, "Teenage Letter" b/w "Seasons of My Heart," that was released in 1963. By the time the disc came out, Linda Gail was already on her second marriage, and she was eager to move forward in her career. She cut a solo single for ABC-Paramount Records, "Break Up the Party," in 1965, and another for Columbia, "Who Will Be the Next One," in 1966, but both proved to be one-offs. She did gain valuable experience when she joined a package tour featuring acts from the rock music TV series Shindig!, and continued to tour with her brother. In 1968, after years away from the charts, Jerry Lee scored a major country hit with "Another Place, Another Time," and with his career back in high gear, he set out to give his sister a hand. At his behest, his label, Smash Records, issued Linda Gail's first solo album, 1969's The Two Sides of Linda Gail Lewis, and later the same year, she and Jerry Lee teamed up for the duet album Together. Their duet on "Don't Let Me Cross Over" was a minor hit in 1969, but while Smash and its affiliated Mercury label released singles by Linda Gail up to 1974, her recordings enjoyed little chart action. She was still touring with her brother's band, opening his shows and singing backup when she developed problems with drugs and alcohol, leading to a hospital stay in 1976 following a nervous breakdown. Eager to lead a quieter life, she dropped out of music in 1977, settled down with her sixth husband, and devoted herself to her family. In 1986, Linda Gail Lewis returned to the public eye, rejoining her brother's touring party, but when Jerry Lee's then-wife Kerrie Lynn McCarver objected to her opening the shows (Kerrie Lynn had performing aspirations of her own), Linda Gail dropped out of the show. Linda Gail had begun playing the piano in the '70s, adopting a style that reflected the sound and influences that also informed her brother's music. Now that she was no longer touring with Jerry Lee, she decided to strike out on her own, and she hit the road with her own piano-pumping band playing a potent fusion of rockabilly, boogie, and vintage country. She became an especially popular attraction in the U.K. and Europe, and in 1990 she struck a deal with the French New Rose label to release her first album in 21 years, International Affair, cut in Memphis with a band of Bluff City musicians. Arriving in 1991, Rockin' with Linda was recorded during a visit to the U.K., with Linda Gail playing a set of rock & roll favorites with her British touring band. The year 1992 saw the release of I'll Take Memphis, a set cut in tandem with Norwegian rocker Stephen Ackles. Ackles was also part of the band for Love Makes the Difference, an album Linda Gail cut in Oslo in 1992 that went unreleased until 1995. While Linda Gail continued to tour regularly, she took a break from recording. She was playing a gig in Wales and found that one of the fans who came out to see her was Van Morrison. Morrison invited her to a recording session a few days later, and they quickly cut 2000's You Win Again, an album featuring Morrison's interpretations of a number of vintage rock and R&B tunes (some made famous by her brother) for which she received co-billing. The album helped raise Linda Gail's public profile as more than just Jerry Lee's sister, and she continued to play for fans in the United States, the U.K., Europe, and the Netherlands on a regular basis while cutting occasional albums for overseas labels, including 2004's Boogie Woogie Country Gal, 2006's Hungry Hill, and 2012's Gas Station Flowers. In 2016, Linda Gail recorded Hard Rockin' Woman! for the rockabilly specialist label Lanark Records; the set included appearances from guitarist Danny B. Harvey and her daughter, Annie Marie. Linda Gail teamed up with songwriter and vocalist Robbie Fulks for a 2018 duo album, Wild! Wild! Wild!, a high-spirited set that included several numbers written to order by Fulks. Wild! Wild! Wild! raised Linda Gail's profile even more as a solo act, and she lent her talents as a guest on albums by Mitch Ryder (2019's Detroit Breakout!), Robert Gordon (2020's Rockabilly for Life), and Dale Watson (2022's Jukebox Fury), while Goldenlane Records released Early Sides: 1963-1973 in 2022, a sampler of rare early recordings including two with Jerry Lee. In October 2022, Jerry Lee died, and shortly afterwards, Linda Gail went into the Sun Studios in Memphis, Tennessee with guitarist and producer Danny B. Harvey (who had worked with her on Hard Rockin' Woman!) to record an album honoring her late brother's life and music. 2023's A Tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis, featuring 18 songs from Jerry Lee's repertoire, also included appearances from Slim Jim Phantom of the Stray Cats and Annie Marie. 2023 also saw the release of Born to Be Wild, an album of classic rock & roll covers from actress, dancer, and vocalist Ann-Margret, with Linda Gail sitting in on piano.
© Mark Deming /TiVo

Discography

43 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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