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I remember when I was 6 we lived in Oakland, Calif. in a big old
house. It seemed like a mansion to me, but I'm sure it probably
wasn't. My dad was a mechanic ... and there were five of us girls
plus mom and dad in this big old house.
I was the youngest - the baby.
When my sister Pat was 14 yrs old and I was 6, we spent a lot of
time together. She was very talented. In fact the whole family was.
Dad played the fiddle, even built them from the tree in the yard.
Anyway, Pat and I would sing together. She taught me how to
harmonize, and I picked it up real quick. I still love to harmonize.
I loved how the music just flowed together. She had a guitar ...
I don't know where she got it ... but she told me about the strings
and how they harmonized together and what would happen when you
applied pressure to the strings.
She opened a whole new world of music to me.
Even though music was the center of our family ... up until then
all I could do was dance to the music ... when she opened the door
to me by singing with me and showing me the guitar, she allowed
music to come into my very being.
I started singing then at about the age of 7, and that's when mom
and dad entered me in countless Amatuer Contests.
When I was a little older, I was sent back to Blanchard
(Oklahoma) to live with Grandma. It was there that someone gave me
one of those toy pianos. My sister Carol still talks about my being
able to play real songs on that little thing!
I never saw a real piano before! And this one was red!
I remember Grandma played the fiddle sitting in her rocking
chair. She was 78 when I came to live with her and I was 8. One day
I discovered Mario Lanza singing "La Donna Mobile." That to this day
was the greatest song and singing I had ever heard. I played the
record over and over, learning every word phonetically. That is when
I first realized that I would be a singer. I was bitten.
Back at Blanchard High I joined the Chorus and a couple of my
friends formed a trio and sang all the McGuire Sisters hits. My
teachers in school were a great support, always reassuring me that I
was gonna be a big star ...
A friend from California sent me a ukulele and I learned to play
it and graduated to a Tenor Guitar. Now I own a Martin Tenor, I
bought it in Los Angeles in '63 and still have it. I use it on
nearly every show.
I love all kinds of music, and it's hard for me to find a
favorite style or a favorite song. I especially like to listen to
classical music because the music is so beautiful and the singers
have such incredible voices. I think to myself, "How'd they do
that?" then I try to do it. So everytime I listen to classical
music, it turns into a clinic for me. Fortunately, in Gospel music,
the fans are appreciative of good voices, holding notes, things like
that, so I get to use that classical training when I sing Gospel.
I also like to hear good harmonies like Doyle Lawson and
Quicksilver. They're the best.
When I do the dishes at home no telling what'll pop into my head.
My cat Zero, now deceased, used to love to hear me sing "On The
Street Where You Live." Come to think of it, who else would she have
heard sing that song?
Music is so important to me. It's hard for me to imagine anyone
not putting music into their everyday life because it connects with
your soul.
Have you ever noticed someone cry when they hear a good singer
sing the National Anthem? Music affects your emotions and it makes
your body react through tears. That's how music has affected my
life.
When some bad stuff happened in our family in the latter 1940's,
music was what bailed me out. Well, music and basketball bailed me
out!
Celebrity has not changed my life much. I guess money changed my
life more than anything, which celebrity is why I made money, so I
guess it did change my life.
I was able to see and feel and touch the 'best of everything'
during my career. I am able to live in a house on a hill in the
country. It's a bungalow. Nothing fancy, very comfortable. But even
with the comfort that my career has brought me, I'm still ME. Even
though I experienced some outstandingly different situations and
'moments of grandeur,' I'm still Myrna Miller from Blanchard,
Oklahoma.
I may be 'looked up to' by others in some ways ... and this does
give power ... but the only power I possess is from God. He has
given me a powerful testimony to influence others to practice His
principles in their lives so that they may experience Heaven on
Earth.
My favorite musicians and people in the business to work with
were the ones with the great attitudes. We were all there because we
all had a gift, so what's the big deal? We tried to steer clear of
the ones who treated it like a big deal. The people I liked to work
with were the ones who were fun to be around.
Of course, of everyone, Billy Sherrill was my most favorite
producer because he himself was so very talented and creative. I
don't write music or lyrics, but he sure could and did.
When I think of my favorite kinds of music, I guess I would have
to say that I love the songs of the 50's. Someday I'd like to record
some of those songs. I guess the reason why I love that music so
much is because those songs were playing on the radio when I was
growing up. Or maybe it's because the lyrics are so romantic and the
melodies so beautiful. I'm sure it's the music itself that inspires
me and makes me want to sing and record them.
I've been in this industry since the 1960s. I've seen a lot and
done a lot. And I think if I could start over again, I would hope to
try to do the very same thing.
If I couldn't be a musician, I'd have to do something that
required me to be creative ... like writing or Interior Decorating
or a hairdresser.
This career has been hard. Road life was hard, especially being
away from the family -- not getting to do your dishes and sing to
your cat.
My recording of "Queen of the House" thrust me
into country music. I won a Grammy® for that song in the Country
category, and all of a sudden my producer at Capitol, Steve Douglas,
started thinking "Country." I don't know what he was thinking before
... maybe he didn't know HOW to produce me. Let's face it, if he was
producing Loretta Lynn he'd know just what to do ... right? I didn't
fit the mold then and I feel I still don't. I'm singing gospel music
in a quartet world!
But I don't mind that I don't fit a mold! If we don't sing what
is in our hearts and minds, what do we sing? Didn't the first
singers get their start because newspapers weren't even invented
yet?
Because I sing what is in my heart, I think the most important
song I sing is "The American Trilogy." I'm told I sing it better
than any song I sing. I know it's the best written song I sing. It
has a terrific message and it's the song I like most to perform
mostly because of those things. But I gotta be honest, that song
lets me use my voice and show off a little too. |