Leona later teamed up with Merle
Haggard for a top ten duet called
“The Bull and the Beaver” and a duet
album followed called HEART TO
HEART. Leona and Merle married in
1978. During this time, she would
write some of Merle’s biggest hits
including “You Take Me For Granted”
and “Someday When Things Are Good.”
You can hear her harmony vocals on
some of Merle's hits such as “The
Way I Am” “The Roots Of My Raising”
and “Big City.” Merle and Leona
were divorced in 1984.
Leona married songwriter Dave Kirby
and moved back to Vienna, Missouri.
She continued to work the road and
released three successful
independent projects on her own
Loveshine label. Leona made
frequent guest appearances on
Nashville Now and various other
syndicated Country Music programs.
She also headlined a daily Country
Music show at the Texas Troubadour
Theater in Nashville with Johnny
Russell.
In
1999, Country Music legend Jean
Shepard persuaded Leona to become
part of the “Grand Ladies of Country
Music” show at the 76 Music Mall
Theater in Branson. Leona worked
three years on this show and then
moved to the Jim Stafford Theater as
part of “Us Girls.” She then
headlined the “Fall Creek Opry Show”
in Branson, while still being a
constant draw in concerts across the
nation. She even worked with "The
Rajun Cajun" Doug Kershaw in Branson
in the 2004 season.
Leona also headlined a very
successful tour of Ireland, playing
to some of the most receptive
audiences of her career in October
of 2004. She received six encores
on her last night in Ireland with
fans lining up for over an hour to
meet and get her autograph.
During the last few years, Leona has
enjoyed recording duets with several
in the Country Music industry
including George Jones, Jimmy
Martin, Floyd Tillman, Justin
Trevino, Johnny Bush and Joe Paul
Nichols among others.
Leona, a Missouri native, was inducted
into the Country Music Association
of Texas Hall of Fame in 1999. She
was also honored with the
prestigious George D. Hay Award in
2002. She was most recently
inducted into the Missouri Country
Music Hall of Fame.
 |
Leona's songs have been recorded by
many artists including Tammy
Wynette, Randy Travis, Moe Bandy,
Ray Price, Loretta Lynn, Johnny
Bush, George Jones, Forester
Sisters, Connie Smith and Merle
Haggard.
Leona signed with Heart of Texas
Records in 2004, and began preparing
her first new album in nearly a
decade.
“I always wanted to
go to Texas and record an album with
a lot of the real Texas Country
Music sound,” Leona said. “I
wanted an album with lots of steel
guitar and great fiddle. This is
the sound that I wanted to capture
and I truly believe that is what we
did.” |
“Leona Williams-Honorary Texan” is
the first all new Leona country
album in over ten years. The
project, recorded at Justin Trevino
studio in San Marcos, incorporates
Leona’s powerful voice with some of
the best musicians in Texas
including Bobby Flores on fiddle,
Ron Huckabee on keyboard, Dave Kirby
on guitar, Dickie Overby on steel,
Justin Trevino on bass, Smiley
Reynolds on drums and Levi Mullen on
rhythm guitar.
The
fourteen songs on the project
include three standards from Leona’s
career including “Yes Mam, He Found
Me In A Honky Tonk” “Goodbyes Come
Hard For Me” and “You’d Be Home By
Now.”
“Honorary Texan” is highlighted by
six songs unrecorded until this
project including “Dance Till The
Cows Come Home” “Don’t Leave The
Leaving Up to Me” “I’ve Called To
Say I Love You (One More Time)”
“Don’t Sing Me No Songs About Texas”
“Things I Almost Had With You” and
“I Walked From Dallas.”
“I
actually wrote “Don’t Sing Me No
Songs About Texas” in the late
1970’s,” Leona said. “I had written
several songs about Texas. Ernest
Tubb was looking for some songs to
record for a new album. Ernest sent
word to me to send him some songs.
He said ‘tell Leona to send me some
songs, but tell her not to send me
no songs about Texas.’ I thought
that was a great idea for a song!”
Leona
added five of her favorite Country
Music standards including “Arms of A
Fool” “I Never Go Around Mirrors”
“Memories To Burn” “Nobody’s Darlin
But Mine” and “Misery.”
“We are so honored that Leona was
willing to record this album on
Heart of Texas Records,” label
president Tracy Pitcox said. “We
have been overwhelmed with the
positive response with the project
from disc jockeys and record
reviewers throughout the country.
The album is definitely not the
“cookie cutter” country album that
is being mass produced from
Nashville studios. This project has
tremendous depth and feeling.”
Heart of Texas Records also reissued
Leona's album "San Quentin's First
Lady" in 2005. This project
recorded live at San Quentin State
Prison on January 1, 1976, features
Leona performing ten songs with
Merle Haggard's Strangers live
before a prison audience.
"San Quentin's First Lady" was the
very first album ever recorded by a
lady inside a prison. It is also
the first time this project was made
available on compact disc.
Leona went back into the studio in
February 2005, to begin work on a
new studio album. It was also
recorded at Justin Trevino's studio
in San Marcos, Texas. Heart of
Texas released "I Love You Because"
in 2005, and it has received rave
reviews. The album features nine
songs that Leona wrote or co-wrote
and Country Music entertainer Junior
Brown even played guitar on the
project.
Leona's greatest treasures are her
family. She is especially proud of
her daughter Cathy Lee and her sons
Ron and Brady Williams. Cathy works
in a Hendersonville bank and still
sings harmony with her mother from
time to time. Ron is living in
Nashville and pursuing a full time
career as a Country Music
entertainer. Brady is a very
successful finance manager for a
large auto company in Ozark,
Missouri.
Whether in a recording studio,
dance or concert hall or on stage at
the Grand Ole Opry, Leona Williams
always gives her very best to her
fans and her music. She definitely
presents a special class to the
world of Country Music.