Country Girl (Dottie West album) explained

Country Girl
Type:studio
Artist:Dottie West
Cover:Dottie West-Country Girl.jpg
Recorded:February 1968
Studio:RCA Studio B (Nashville, Tennessee)
Label:RCA Nashville
Producer:Chet Atkins
Prev Title:What I'm Cut Out to Be
Prev Year:1968
Next Title:Feminine Fancy
Next Year:1968

Country Girl is a studio album by American country music artist Dottie West. It was released in August 1968 on RCA Victor Records and was produced by Chet Atkins. The project was West's ninth studio album and second to be released in 1968. The album consisted of 12 tracks, which contained new recordings and cover versions. The album's title track became a major hit in 1968 and would later be a signature song for West.

Background and content

Country Girl was recorded in February 1968 at RCA Studio B in Nashville, Tennessee. The sessions were produced by Chet Atkins, West's long-time producer on the RCA Victor label.[1] Atkins helped define West's musical style and sound in her early recording career by implementing the Nashville Sound into her recordings. In this style, West's sound was backed by pop-tinged arrangements that could appeal to a wide array of listeners.[2]

Country Girl was a collection of 12 tracks. Country Girl included covers of Bob Wills's "Faded Love" and Willie Nelson's "Little Things".[1] Among the album's new recordings was the title track. West would later be recruited to write and sing jingles for Coca-Cola commercials after an associate of McCann-Erickson Advertising heard the title track. The song and the album would later help define West's early musical persona.[3] West dedicated the album to her daughter, Shelly, whose picture is featured on the album cover. "Shelly, you look like your Daddy, with your blue eyes, blond hair and even the same smile, but today you reminded me of me, for I saw you as a country girl, like I was -- and always will be," West wrote in the liner notes.[1]

Release and chart performance

Country Girl was released in August 1968, becoming West's ninth studio album issued and her second to be issued in 1968. It was first issued as a vinyl LP, containing six songs on each side.[1] In 2018, it was reissued to digital retailers through Sony Music Entertainment.[4] The album peaked at number 18 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart after eight weeks on the list.[5] The title track was the album's only single issued. Released in March 1968, it became a major hit after reaching number 15 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.[6] In Canada, the single also became a major hit, reaching number five on the RPM Country Singles chart. It became West's first song to chart on any Canadian chart and only one of two solo singles to chart within the decade.[7]

Track listing

Digital version

Personnel

All credits are adapted from the liner notes of Country Girl.[1]

Musical personnel

Technical personnel

Release history

RegionDateFormatLabelRef.
North AmericaAugust 1968VinylRCA Victor
June 15, 2018Music downloadSony Music Entertainment

Notes and References

  1. West . Dottie . Country Girl (Album Information/Liner Notes) . . August 1968 . LSP-4004.
  2. Web site: Ankeny . Jason . Dottie West: Biography & History . . 3 May 2020.
  3. Telegraph-Herald August 18, 1976 p.12
  4. Web site: Country Girl by Dottie West on Amazon Music . . 3 May 2020.
  5. Web site: Country Girl chart history . . 3 May 2020.
  6. Web site: "Country Girl" [single] chart history ]. . 3 May 2020.
  7. Web site: Search results for "Country Girl". RPM. 15 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20131214081802/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/rpm/028020-110.01-e.php?PHPSESSID=bvv432dac2l3ggup8rl4f1lq92&q1=Dottie+West+Country+Girl&q2=Country+Singles&interval=20. 14 December 2013. dead.