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Mike Reid (singer)

American country music artist (born 1947)


Summary

American country music artist (born 1947)

FieldValue
nameMike Reid
birth_date
birth_placeAltoona, Pennsylvania, U.S.
module{{Infobox musical artist
embedyes
nameMike Reid
landscape
birth_nameMichael Barry Reid
aliasMike Reid
originNashville, Tennessee, U.S.
genreCountry music, rock, musical theatre
occupationSongwriter, musical theatre composer, musician
instrumentVocals
years_active1960s–present
labelColumbia
module2{{Infobox NFL biography
embedyes
nameMike Reid
number74
positionDefensive tackle
height_ft6
height_in3
weight_lb255
high_schoolAltoona Area
collegePenn State (1966, 1968–1969)
draftyear1970
draftround1
draftpick7
statlabel1Sacks
statvalue149
statlabel2Fumble recoveries
statvalue22
pfrR/ReidMi00
CollegeHOF1866
  • Cincinnati Bengals ()
  • First-team All-Pro (1972)
  • Second-team All-Pro (1973)
  • 2× Pro Bowl (1972, 1973)
  • Cincinnati Bengals 40th Anniversary Team
  • Cincinnati Bengals 50th Anniversary Team
  • Maxwell Award (1969)
  • Outland Trophy (1969)
  • Unanimous All-America (1969)
  • Second-team All-America (1968)

Michael Barry Reid (born May 24, 1947) is an American country music artist, composer, and former professional football player. He played as a defensive tackle for five seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals in the National Football League (NFL).

Born and raised in Altoona, Pennsylvania, Reid attended and graduated from Pennsylvania State University, where he played college football for the Penn State Nittany Lions. Selected by the Bengals in the first round of the 1970 NFL draft with the seventh overall pick, he earned trips to the Pro Bowl after the 1972 and 1973 seasons, before retiring after the 1974 season. He subsequently focused on his musical career, co-writing several hit singles for country music artists, including Ronnie Milsap's "Stranger in My House", which won a Grammy Award for Best Country Song in 1984. Reid later began a solo recording career, releasing two studio albums for Columbia Records. He charted seven singles on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart as a singer, including the number one hit "Walk on Faith".

Football career

At college, Reid was a captain on both the Nittany Lions undefeated 1968 and 1969 teams that went 22–0. In his senior year (1969), the tackle spearheaded Penn State on defense with 89 tackles and was a unanimous All-America choice and All-East selection. He won the Outland Trophy as the best College football interior lineman in 1969, and also was awarded the 1969 Maxwell Award and finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy balloting. Reid also wrestled at Penn State and in 1967 he won the Eastern heavyweight wrestling title. In addition to athletics, Reid played Chicago gangster Big Julie in Penn State's production of the musical Guys and Dolls.

Reid was the first-round selection (#7 pick overall) of the Cincinnati Bengals in the 1970 NFL draft. In the team's third season, it won the AFC Central Division and made the playoffs. In 1971, Reid established himself as one of the NFL's best pass rushers by recording 12 sacks, a figure he repeated in 1972. In 1971 Reid was a consensus All-AFC selection and the following year he was consensus All-Pro as well as being voted consensus All-AFC again.

In 1973, he topped those marks by recording 13 sacks. He was named All-Pro by the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) and was second-team All-Pro according to the Associated Press and Pro Football Writers Association. For the third consecutive season Reid was consensus All-AFC.

In 1974, due primarily to injuries, he recorded only seven sacks, bringing his career total to 49. In his final season, Reid was again an All-AFC selection by Pro Football Weekly. Although sacks were an unofficial statistic, the Bengals kept track of them and Reid retired as the leading sacker in the team's short history.

He made two trips to the Pro Bowl (1972 and 1973) before his retirement following the 1974 season due to knee and hand injuries and his desire to focus on a music career. In 1996, he received the NFL Alumni Career Achievement Award for his success in his post-NFL career.

He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987 and received the Walter Camp "Alumnus of the Year" award in 1987. In 1995, he received the NCAA Silver Anniversary Award. Reid was named as part of the Bengals' 40th Anniversary All-Time team in 2007. In 2017, Reid was named as part of the Bengals' 50th Anniversary All-Time Team.

Music career

After receiving his BA in music from Pennsylvania State University in 1969, Reid would perform as a pianist for the Utah Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, and Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.

When he abandoned his football career, he formed a band and began playing at a Holiday Inn location across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, then abandoned the idea of performing in bands and began playing solo at the Blind Lemon, and in the process, beginning to write his own songs. Living in Mount Lookout, he drove Eastern Avenue daily, and slowly "Eastern Avenue River Railway Blues" grew out of that. After a gig in Atlanta, Reid and some other musicians attended Southeastern Music Hall about 3:30 a.m. A cassette tape of that session somehow found its way to Jerry Jeff Walker, who, in 1978, became the first artist to record a Reid song, that being "Eastern Avenue River Railway Blues".

In 1980, Reid moved to Nashville, and quickly became known as an in-demand songwriter for Ronnie Milsap. Larry Gatlin also helped Reid spearhead his songwriting career.

In 1984, Reid won a Grammy Award for Best Country Song with "Stranger in My House", which was recorded by Ronnie Milsap. Reid would also contribute compositions to artists such as Marie Osmond, Tanya Tucker, Collin Raye, Alabama, and Conway Twitty. In the 1980s and 1990s, Reid wrote 12 No. 1 singles including "Forever's as Far as I'll Go", which was recorded in 1990 by Alabama; their 29th number one country hit. He was also featured as a guest vocalist on Milsap's "Old Folks", a No. 2 hit from early 1988. He also co-wrote, with Allen Shamblin, Bonnie Raitt's hit "I Can't Make You Love Me", which reached #18 on the Billboard Pop Charts and has been covered by countless artists.

In 1990, Reid signed to Columbia Records as a recording artist. His debut album Turning for Home produced a No. 1 country hit in its lead-off single "Walk on Faith", although the album's other singles were not as successful. His second album, 1992's Twilight Town, produced two singles which both missed the Top 40.

A third album, New Direction Home, was released two decades later in 2012 by the small Off Row Records label and is available on iTunes and Spotify as well as in an mp3 download from Reid's website.

By 1991, Reid composed the music for the Civil War musical A House Divided. Over the following two decades, he wrote more musicals, including Quilts, Different Fields, Eye of the Blackbird, Tales of Appalachia, In This House, and The Ballad of Little Jo, a 1997 winner of the Academy of Arts and Letters' 'Richard Rodgers Award for Musical Theater'.

In 2019, he again returned to the musical theater stage with The Last Day, a commissioned production co-written with NYU Tisch School of Performing Arts Assistant Dean, Sarah Schlesinger, for Reid's alma mater, Penn State.

Reid was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005.

Reid has written songs for other artists, including country musician Trey Taylor (singer).

Discography

Studio albums

TitleAlbum detailsPeak positionsUS Country
Turning for HomeTwilight TownNew Direction Home
22
59

Singles

YearSinglePeak positionsAlbumUS Country
CAN Country
"Old Folks" (with Ronnie Milsap)"Walk on Faith""Till You Were Gone""As Simple as That""I'll Stop Loving You""I Got a Life""Keep On Walkin'""Call Home"
1988212Heart & Soul
199011Turning for Home
1991178
1411
2311
19925481
4552Twilight Town
4342

Songwriting

For the most notable recordings of songs written by Mike Reid, see :Category:Songs written by Mike Reid (singer).

Music videos

YearVideoDirector"Walk on Faith""I'll Stop Loving You""Keep On Walkin'""Call Home"
1991Deaton-Flanigen Productions
1992
Phil Tuckett
1993Deaton-Flanigen Productions

References

References

  1. [http://gopsusports.cstv.com/auto_pdf/p_hotos/s_chools/psu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/Hall_of_Fame] {{dead link. (November 2021)
  2. Sarah Paez. ""Experience the genuine." Former Penn State football star Mike Reid talks new musical".
  3. "1970 NFL Draft Listing".
  4. "'Experience the genuine.' Former Penn State football star Mike Reid talks new musical". Centre Daily.
  5. "An American Poet" by Roger Naylor, Cincinnati Magazine, October 1988, pages 36-37
  6. "Mike Reid". Nashville Songwriters Foundation.
  7. (16 January 2015). "The NFL's country music hit maker".
  8. "HOME".
  9. "American Academy of Arts and Letters - Award Winners".
  10. "Original Gene Watson Fan Site - Gene Watson's Peers: Quote from Mike Reid: May 2012".
  11. Trey Taylor Music Official™. (2019-11-18). "Trey Taylor "Prisoner of the Highway" from "Ocean in His Eyes" Album".
  12. "Mike Reid - Top Country Albums".
  13. "Mike Reid - Hot Country Songs".
  14. (17 July 2013). "Mike Reid - Country Singles". RPM.
Wikipedia Source

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