Background
Goldsboro was born in Marianna, Florida.
Goldsboro was born in Marianna, Florida.
He graduated from Dothan High School in 1959 and later enrolled at Auburn University.
He had a string of popular and country hits in the 1960s and 1970s, including his signature Number. 1 hit "Honey", which sold over one million copies in the United States. In 1941, his family moved 35 miles north from Marianna to Dothan, Alabama.
Goldsboro left college after his second year to pursue a musical career.
He played guitar for Roy Orbison from 1962 to 1964. Goldsboro"s solo career picked up steam with the top ten hit "See the Funny Little Clown".
The single, written by Goldsboro, reached Number. 9 on the United States. national charts in early 1964.
lieutenant sold over one million copies and was awarded a gold disc.
lieutenant was to be the first of a string of similar awards. Goldsboro would go on to have 16 Top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 and 12 on the country chart. In 1966 he recorded "lieutenant"s Too Late" with "Too Many People" on the B-side.
Although Goldsboro was not a prolific performer of dance music, both of these songs were huge hits on the Northern soul scene in Great Britain and were played extensively.
His biggest hit was 1968"s "Honey", a tearjerker about the death of a man"s lover. The song, written by Bobby Russell, was recorded in one take.
lieutenant became the largest-selling record in the world for 1968 and topped the Hot 100 for five weeks, reached number two in the United Kingdom Chart on two separate occasions (1968 and 1975), and was a number one single in Australia. lieutenant also became his first country hit.
One of Goldsboro"s compositions, "With Pen in Hand", was recorded by several artists, including a Grammy-nominated popular version by Vikki Carr that reached the Hot 100"s top 40 in 1969.
Johnny Darrell had taken the song to Number. 3 on the United States country chart a year earlier. In 1970 Della Reese included a cover on her album Black Is Beautiful.
Goldsboro"s "The Cowboy and the Lady" became a "Top 10" country hit as "The Cowgirl and the Dandy" for Brenda Lee in 1980.
Dolly Parton had also covered it in 1977, and John Denver had a hit with the song in 1981. "Summer (The First Time)", a 1973 reminiscence about a 17-year-old boy"s first sexual experience with a 31-year-old woman, was a Top 25 hit in the United States. and reached number 9 in the United Kingdom. lieutenant was voted the all-time greatest "summer" song in England"s history.
Using a repeating piano riff, 12-string guitar, and an orchestral string arrangement, the song was suggestive enough to spark some controversy. A follow-up, "Hello Summertime", was written by Roger Cook and Roger Greenaway and hit Number.
14 in the United Kingdom in late 1974.
From 1973 to 1975, Goldsboro hosted the successful syndicated television variety series The Bobby Goldsboro Show. In the 1990s, he composed the music for the Columbia Broadcasting System situation comedy Evening Shade. In 1995, he created the fifty-two episode children"s television series The Swamp Critters of Lost Lagoon.
Goldsboro voiced all the characters, wrote all the scripts, and played all the musical instruments.