Who is Michelle Wright?

Who is Michelle Wright? The entertainment and music world knows her as a Canadian country music artist. She is one of the country's most widely recognized and awarded female country singers of the 1990s, winning the Canadian Country Music Association's Fans' Choice Award twice (1993 and 1995). Brian Ferriman of Savannah Records has been her manager for over 20 years.
Wright's primary success has been in her native Canada, where she has charted more than twenty-five singles, including the Number One hits "Take It Like a Man", "One Time Around", "Guitar Talk", "One Good Man", "Nobody's Girl" and "Crank My Tractor". She also had chart success in the United States in the early 1990s, landing in the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts with "New Kind of Love" at #32, "Take It Like a Man" at #10 and "He Would Be Sixteen" at #31.

Career

Early life

Michelle Wright was born on July 1, 1961 in Chatham, Ontario, Canada. Wright grew up in the small Canadian town of Merlin, Ontario where she took after her parents, who were both local performers. By 1980, when Wright was in college studying counseling for the mentally disadvantaged, she joined a local band with whom she performed until 1983 when she started her own band.[1] She would perform with her own band until 1988.[1] In 1985, while performing with her band, Wright signed a record deal with Savannah Records. The next year she released her debut single, "I Want to Count on You", which peaked at #48 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. Wright's debut album, Do Right By Me, was issued in 1988 and produced seven more singles including Wright's cover of the 1974 Andy Kim hit, "Rock Me Gently", which reached #7 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. The album's success in Canada led to a record contract with Arista Nashville, becoming one of the label's flagship artists.[2]

1990 – 1993: Breakthrough success

In April 1990, Wright's first American single, "New Kind of Love", was issued and became her first top five hit in Canada, in addition to peaking at #32 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in the United States. Her second album, Michelle Wright, was released in July 1990. To support the album, Wright was added as an opening act to Kenny Rogers 1991 tour.[3] The album became a success in Canada and led Wright to be awarded Female Artist of the Year by the Canadian Country Music Association in 1990. The following year she was awarded Album of the Year for Michelle Wright, Single of the Year for "New Kind of Love", and Female Artist of the Year again by the Canadian Country Music Association.[4]
The failure of the follow up singles to "New Kind of Love" forced Wright to relocate to Nashville, Tennessee in 1991 to spend more advancing her career.[2] When in Nashville, Wright began to record her third album, Now and Then, released in May 1992. The album's first single, "Take It Like a Man", became an instant hit, reaching #1 in Canada on the RPM Country Tracks chart and #10 in the United States on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. In Canada, the song also crossed over to the adult contemporary charts, peaking at #18. The song received the Single of the Year award from the Canadian Country Music Association in late 1992.
In 1993, the album gave Wright the award for Top New Female Vocalist from the Academy of Country Music and an appearance on the CBS television special, Women of Country, where she performed "Take It Like a Man" and the Mary Chapin Carpenter song "The Hard Way" with several other artists including Carpenter. Now and Then went on to produce six more singles including the Canadian number one hits "One Time Around" and "Guitar Talk". The album also contained the single "He Would Be Sixteen", which reached #31 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart and #3 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart and was awarded Single of the Year by the Canadian Country Music Association in 1993. Also in 1993, Wright won the Fans' Choice Award from Canadian Country Music Association, which she would also win in 1995.

1994 – 1999: Further success

In 1994, Wright released the first single from her upcoming album, "One Good Man", which became her fourth number one single in Canada, however it failed to reach the top 40 in the United States. Wright's fourth album, The Reasons Why, was released in September 1994 in Canada only. The album was also released in Europe after a Wright completed a successful tour in mid-1994.[5] In early 1995, Wright embarked on a 40-city tour in Canada, which at that time the most extensive tour in the history of the country music business in Canada.[2]
In August 1996, Wright released her fifth album, For Me It's You, following the release of the first single "Nobody's Girl", which reached #1 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks and #57 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. The album marked Wright's first album to be released in the American market in four years.[6] The album went on to be successful in Canada, producing three top five singles with "Crank My Tractor", "The Answer Is Yes", and "What Love Looks Like". The album, however, was not a success in the United States and in a 1997 interview with Jam!, Wright admitted that she was "very disappointed" and "not happy with what they [U.S. radio] did with this album".[7]
During 1997, Wright was awarded the C.F. Martin Humanitarian Award by the Canadian Country Music Association for her international work with the Special Olympics, her successful fundraising efforts for St. Joseph's Hospital in Chatham, Ontario, the hospital where she was born, and her support for the Manitoba flood relief fund.[2]
In 1999, U.S. radio welcomed Wright back when her 1997 duet with pianist Jim Brickman was released to radio. The song, "Your Love", failed at country radio, but gave Wright her only American adult contemporary hit when the song peaked at #19 on the Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart.[2] Despite the song's success at AC radio, it would be Wright's last charting single in the United States.
In October 1999, Wright's first greatest hits album, The Greatest Hits Collection, in Canada. The album included two new songs, "I Surrender" and "When I Found You", both of which were top ten hits on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. In 2000, Arista Nashville released the American version of her 1999 greatest hits album in the United States. The album contained a different tracklist than the Canadian version.

2000 – present: Success today

In 2002, Wright was transferred to RCA Records/ViK. Recordings, where she returned after a six year hiatus from releasing a new studio album to release her sixth studio album, Shut Up and Kiss Me, in June 2002. The album took Wright towards a more pop driven direction than her previous work.[8] Wright co-wrote eight of the album's twelve songs and recorded songs by successful songwriters such as Shelly Peiken, who wrote pop singer Christina Aguilera's 1999 hit, "What a Girl Wants".[8] Shut Up and Kiss Me also contained a more pop-oriented version of her 2000 single "I Surrender", this version had been used for the song's music video and pop radio release.
In 2004, Wright started her annual Christmas tour, Dreaming of a Wright Christmas. A year later Wright signed with Icon Records and in October 2005, she released her first Christmas album, A Wright Christmas in Canada. The album featured covers of eleven Christmas song and one new song, "I Know Santa's Been Here", written by Canadian country singer Patricia Conroy. The song was issued as the album's first single in December 2005. A Wright Christmas was released digitally in the United States 2007 and Europe in 2008.
In June 2006, Wright returned to country music by releasing her first new album in four years, Everything and More in Canada. In 2007, Everything and More was made available digitally in United States.

Other work

Wright appeared as a country music star in an episode in Season 4 of the Canadian TV series Due South. The episode, entitled "Mountie Sings the Blues," centres on the Mountie's attempts to protect Wright's character, Tracy Jenkins, from a stalker. She sings "Nobody's Girl" at the conclusion of the episode.

 

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