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 B.J. Thomas
 
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B.J. Thomas (born Billy Joe Thomas) straddled the line between pop/rock and country, achieving success in both genres in the late '60s and '70s. At the beginning of his career, he leaned more heavily on rock & roll, but by the mid-'70s, he had turned to country music, becoming one of the most successful country-pop stars of the decade.[br][br]Thomas began singing while he was a child, performing in church. In his teens, he joined the Houston-based band the Triumphs, who released a number of independent singles that failed to gain any attention. For the group's last single, Thomas and fellow Triumph member Mark Charron wrote "Billy and Sue," which was another flop. After "Billy and Sue," Thomas began a solo career, recording a version of Hank Williams' standard "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" with producer Huey P. Meaux. Released by Scepter Records in early 1966, the single became an immediate hit, catapulting to number eight on the pop charts. Although he had a series of moderate follow-up hits, including a re-release of "Billy and Sue," Thomas failed to reenter the Top Ten until 1968, when "Hooked on a Feeling" became a number-five, gold single. The following year, he scored his biggest hit with Burt Bacharach and Hal David's "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head," taken from the hit film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. It was followed by a string of soft rock hits in the next two years, including "Everybody's Out of Town," "I Just Can't Help Believing," "No Love at All," and "Rock and Roll Lullaby," which featured guitarist Duane Eddy and the vocal group the Blossoms.[br][br]After "Rock and Roll Lullaby," Scepter Records went out of business and B.J. Thomas headed to Paramount Records. At Paramount, Thomas had no hits, prompting the singer to pursue a new country-pop direction at ABC Records. "(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song," his first single for ABC, became his second number-one record on the pop charts, as well as establishing a country career for the vocalist. For the next decade, he continued to have hits on the country charts, with a couple of songs -- most notably "Don't Worry Baby" -- crossing over into the pop charts. During this period, he switched record companies at a rapid pace, but it did nothing to slow the pace of his hits. Thomas hit his country peak in 1983 and 1984, when he had the number-one hits "Whatever Happened to Old Fashioned Love" and "New Looks From an Old Lover," as well as the Top Ten hits "The Whole World's in Love When You're Lonely" and "Two Car Garage." Throughout the '80s, B.J. Thomas recorded a number of hit gospel records for Myrrh concurrently with his country hits. [br][br]At the end of the '80s, the hits began to dry up for Thomas, but he continued to tour, and put out the occasional country and gospel record in the '90s.
 
 
 :: Albums :: B.J. Thomas
 
Album
Year
Lyrics
Amazing Grace
1981
10
B.J. Thomas
1977
11
B.J. Thomas Country
1972
12
Billy Joe Thomas
1972
12
Christmas Is Coming Home
1997
11
Everybody's Out of Town
1970
10
Happy Man
1979
10
Help Me Make It (To My Rockin' Chair)
1975
10
Hey Won't You Play Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song
1987
8
Home Where I Belong
1977
10
Hooked on a Feeling: The Best of B.J. Thomas [Dualdisc]
2005
19
I'm So Lonely I Could Cry
1966
12
I Believe
1997
10
Jesus Hearted People
1991
9
Longhorn & London Bridges
1974
10
Love Shines
1983
10
Most of All
1970
9
New Looks
1983
10
On My Way
1968
10
Peace in the Valley
1982
10
Precious Memories
1995
10
Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head [Scepter]
1969
10
Reunion
1975
10
Scenes of Christmas
1995
12
Shining
1984
9
Some Love Songs Never Die
1981
10
Songs
1973
11
Sounds of Christmas
1998
12
That Christmas Feeling
2005
34
The Great American Dream
1983
10
Throwin' Rocks at the Moon
1985
10
You Call That a Mountain
2000
11
You Gave Me Love (When Nobody Gave Me a Prayer)
1979
10
Young and in Love
1969
10
Other songs
Unknown
37



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