BROKEN CELEBRITY RECORDS - Los Angeles Times

BROKEN CELEBRITY RECORDS - Los Angeles Times


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I found Brown’s article on stars who “sing” entertaining, but I think he did a real disservice to Sissy Spacek and her album, “Hangin’ Up My Heart,” by dismissing it as one of what he termed


the “ego disc--albums that rely on songs written by the stars for themselves. Spacek not only got her start in show business as a singer, but she later won the Academy Award for best


actress for her acting and _ singing_ as country music queen Loretta Lynn in 1980’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” Spacek’s vocals were not dubbed. In fact, “Hangin’ Up My Heart” came as a result


of the praise she earned for her singing in that film. Though the album was hardly a hit, it did receive far more positive reviews than negative. As further proof of its legitimacy as a


“real album” versus your typical vanity effort, it was produced by Rodney Crowell, one of the top producers (and performers) in progressive country music. He is not the kind of man or


producer who wastes his time on vanity music. BILL ROYCE Los Angeles FO MORE TO READ