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How Glad I Am is a 1964 studio album by Nancy Wilson. It was one of her most successful albums, reaching #4 on the Billboard 200 and remaining on the chart for 31 weeks. [ 4 ] The title track became her highest-charting single, peaking at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 , [ 5 ] and earned her a Grammy Award for Best R&B Performance .
The discography of American singer, Nancy Wilson, contains 52 studio albums, 27 compilation albums, three live albums, one box set, 57 singles, nine promotional singles and one other charting song. Wilson's debut studio album was issued by Capitol Records in April 1960 called Like in Love .
Wilson, who had been recording since 1960, was afforded her first pop Top 40 hit with ... "How Glad I Am": (Nancy Wilson quote:)"I went into the studio with the idea of recording a Top 40 kind of hit [with '... How Glad I Am']. Actually though I didn't sing any differently..... It's the material itself that did it [along with] the arrangement." [2]
Nancy Wilson, who rose to fame in the mid-1960s as a young jazz singer, enjoyed an incredible decades-long career. Nancy Wilson, Grammy winning ‘How Glad I Am’ singer, dies at 81 Skip to main ...
[4] In 1964 Wilson released what became her most successful hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with "(You Don't Know) How Glad I Am", which peaked at No. 11. From 1963 to 1971 Wilson logged 11 songs on the Hot 100, including two Christmas singles.
Heart — the pioneering band that melds Nancy Wilson’s shredding guitar with her sister Ann’s powerhouse vocals — is hitting the road this spring and fall for a world tour that Nancy Wilson ...
Wilson's parents soon bought Nancy a smaller guitar, but since it would not stay in tune, she began playing Ann's Kent guitar. [18] The Viewpoints' first public show was a folk festival on Vashon Island in 1967. In Wilson's words, "We didn't get paid, but since there were people sitting in folding chairs, we considered it a professional gig."
Nancy Wilson’s moment as a cute blond in a convertible wearing a mohair pink and lavender sweater and a sweet smile in the 1982 classic, Fast Times at Ridgemont High was brief but memorable.