Reba's Mom responsible for her break
Neil Haislop
When Reba McEntire celebrated her latest Number One hit last week she flew her mother, Jackie, in from Oklahoma, and made a point to introduce her during the party and performance. What some people don't know is just how directly responsible for Reba's big break her mom was on the legendary night she was discovered singing the National Anthem at the rodeo championships in Oklahoma City in 1974. Singer/writer and country poet, Red Steagall, gets credit for discovering Reba that night, but Steagall revealed to us that it was Reba's mother, Jackie, who actually brought them together or he might not have discovered her.
"I was at the National Finals Rodeo and heard her sing (The National Anthem) and I said "Boy what a great voice." But, Red says he didn't seek out who that voice belonged to.
"Then, I'm walking down the hall of the Hilton, and Reba's mom caught me in the hall and said, "Can I bring my little girl up to sing with you tonight (at the nightly guitar pull in Steagall's room). I said 'sure.' And they came to the pull, Jackie sat beside me and Reba sang. I said,'whoa where did that voice come from?!' THEN, I realized it was the same girl who sang the National Anthem. I realized there was something really special about her."
ONE OTHER HISTORICAL NOTE: After Steagall recorded some demos on Reba and offered her a solo record contract, Reba refused the deal because it didn't include the other members of the family act that included brother, Pake, and sister, Susie. Jackie stepped in again and freed Reba to go on alone.
"Reba first refused to go to Nashville without her brother and sister, " Jackie told us. "But we decided it was better one of them got their foot in the door so they could help the others along later," she explains. (Eventually McEntire did help her brother land a recording contract with RCA Records. Between '86 and '88 Pake McEntire collected five top forty hits. Susie McEntire toured briefly with her sister and later started a gospel and country recording career under her married name Susie Luchsinger).
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When Reba McEntire celebrated her latest Number One hit last week she flew her mother, Jackie, in from Oklahoma, and made a point to introduce her during the party and performance. What some people don't know is just how directly responsible for Reba's big break her mom was on the legendary night she was discovered singing the National Anthem at the rodeo championships in Oklahoma City in 1974. Singer/writer and country poet, Red Steagall, gets credit for discovering Reba that night, but Steagall revealed to us that it was Reba's mother, Jackie, who actually brought them together or he might not have discovered her.
"I was at the National Finals Rodeo and heard her sing (The National Anthem) and I said "Boy what a great voice." But, Red says he didn't seek out who that voice belonged to.
"Then, I'm walking down the hall of the Hilton, and Reba's mom caught me in the hall and said, "Can I bring my little girl up to sing with you tonight (at the nightly guitar pull in Steagall's room). I said 'sure.' And they came to the pull, Jackie sat beside me and Reba sang. I said,'whoa where did that voice come from?!' THEN, I realized it was the same girl who sang the National Anthem. I realized there was something really special about her."
ONE OTHER HISTORICAL NOTE: After Steagall recorded some demos on Reba and offered her a solo record contract, Reba refused the deal because it didn't include the other members of the family act that included brother, Pake, and sister, Susie. Jackie stepped in again and freed Reba to go on alone.
"Reba first refused to go to Nashville without her brother and sister, " Jackie told us. "But we decided it was better one of them got their foot in the door so they could help the others along later," she explains. (Eventually McEntire did help her brother land a recording contract with RCA Records. Between '86 and '88 Pake McEntire collected five top forty hits. Susie McEntire toured briefly with her sister and later started a gospel and country recording career under her married name Susie Luchsinger).
CLICK HERE to discuss in our forum.





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