Country singer Lynn Anderson has died at the age of 67.
Anderson enjoyed a long career both as a country singer and cross-over artist. She had her first solo hit in 1967, while signed as an artist with Chart Records. The song was Ride, Ride, Ride, an upbeat song written by Anderson’s mother Liz Anderson.
Though Ride, Ride, Ride was a popular tune, Anderson experienced worldwide success with her 1970 mega-hit Rose Garden, which eventually became her signature song.
Rose Garden as a phenomenon that almost didn’t happen. Anderson had just signed with Columbia Records when Rose Garden was presented to her. Glenn Sutton, her husband at the time, along with the producer of the album she was recording, disagreed with her recording Rose Garden, as the song, written by Joe South, was written from a man’s
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The country singer continued making and releasing albums over the years, and branched out into different generes. Her album The Bluegrass Sessions snagged her a Grammy nomination for Best Bluegrass Album of 2005.
Anderson continued her musical evolution with the June release of Bridges, Lynn Anderson’s premier gospel album.
Lynn Anderson will forever be linked to her iconic song with the flowery title, but she was much more than just a country singer.
Lynn Anderson took the fame that Rose Garden provided and made the music that she loved for more than forty years. She was a regular performer on the Lawrence Welk Show, and she performed on the Grand Ole Opry. She even had a small recurring role in the 1970s television drama Starsky and Hutch.
She was a wife, a mother, and a grandmother. She was a country music icon, and accomplished things that women in the industry had never done before. Lynn Anderson’s album Rose Garden was the best-selling country album by a female artist from 1971 to