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Official Website: Dottie
Rambo
The matriarch of the influential southern gospel trio the
Singing Rambos, Dottie Rambo looms as one of the most prolific
songwriters in the postwar spiritual music canon, composing
thousands of ballads and hymns recorded by acts spanning from
Elvis Presley to Dolly Parton to Whitney Houston. Born Joyce
Reba Luttrell in Madisonville, Kentucky on March 2, 1934,
she learned to play guitar by imitating her favorite "Grand
Ole Opry" headliners, and at age eight composed her first
original songs--two years later, she was a fixture on local
country radio broadcasts, but at 12 she became a born-again
Christian and denounced secular music. Dottie's decision to
embrace Christianity caused an irreparable rift with her father,
and the teen soon left home to tour the Midwest and southern
U.S. as a member of the trio the Gospel Echoes. At 16 she
met and married Buck Rambo, and later, with daughter Reba,
the family recorded and toured as the Singing Rambos, forging
a distinctive approach embracing elements of traditional country
and black gospel--in time, fellow southern gospel act the
Happy Goodman Family introduced Dottie to country singer and
then-Louisiana governor Jimmie Davis, who signed her to his
Jimmie Davis Music publishing firm. By her own estimation,
Rambo composed more than 2,500 songs during the course of
her career, among them "He Looked Beyond My Fault and Saw
My Need," "I Go to the Rock," "Sheltered in the Arms of God"
and "Mama's Teaching Angels How to Sing"--Elvis recorded her
"If That Isn't Love," and secular country and bluegrass artists
including Bill Monroe, Porter Wagoner, Mel Tillis and Vince
Gill covered her material as well.
In 1967 the Singing Rambos mounted their first overseas tour,
including stops to perform for U.S. troops in Vietnam, where
Dottie also ministered in a series of field hospitals. (According
to legend, the trio was forced to appear credited as "the
Swinging Rambos" due to government concerns the Vietcong might
attack a Christian group.) The Vietnam dates vaulted the Rambos
to new prominence, and in 1968 they signed to Warner Bros.,
with Dottie winning a Grammy Award for her solo effort It's
the Soul of Me, one of the first recordings by a white gospel
artist to employ black backup singers. During the decade to
follow the Singing Rambos recorded extensively for the Heartwarming
Records imprint, issuing a series of bestsellers including
1971's Reflections, 1975's These Three Are One and 1978's
Down by the Creek Bank. For "We Shall Behold Him," Rambo scored
the 1982 Gospel Music Association Song of the Year award,
and for six years she hosted her own series on the Trinity
Broadcasting Network. However, in 1989 Rambo suffered a ruptured
disk that left her left leg paralyzed--she spent the decade
to follow undergoing a series of surgeries that ultimately
reinstated limited mobility but sidelined her music career.
She and Buck divorced in April 1994, and weeks later he married
her secretary--she was also the victim of financial wrongdoing
by ministry employees. Rambo returned to touring in 2002,
and a year later released the comeback LP Stand by the River--another
new album, Sheltered, was completed in late 2007. Rambo died
May 11, 2008 of injuries sustained in a tour bus accident
en route to a scheduled Mother's Day performance in Mount
Vernon, Missouri. She was 74.
Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Dottie Rambo
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