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Twyla Herbert

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Name
  
Twyla Herbert


Role
  
Songwriter

Twyla Herbert Twyla Herbert Pittsburgh Music History


Died
  
July 11, 2009, Phoenix, Arizona, United States

Similar People
  
Lou Christie, The Tammys, Jessica James and the Outla, Peggy Santiglia, Charles Calello

Lou Christie - Lightnin' Strikes


Twyla Herbert (July 27, 1921 – July 11, 2009) was an American songwriter known for her long songwriting partnership with the singer Lou Christie.

Contents

Beginnings

Herbert was born in Riverside, California. Christie was 15 years old when he met Herbert, a "bohemian gypsy, psychic, and former concert pianist," at an audition in a church basement in his hometown, Glenwillard, Pennsylvania. Over 20 years older than he was, with flaming red hair, she was a self-described clairvoyant and mystic who allegedly predicted which of their songs would become hits.

Collaboration

The pair co-wrote the great majority of Christie's hits, including "The Gypsy Cried", "Two Faces Have I", "Rhapsody in the Rain", "She Sold Me Magic", and most famously, "Lightnin' Strikes", a song later covered by such artists as Del Shannon and Klaus Nomi. Christie discussed their songwriting relationship: "Twyla is a genius. She was going to be a concert pianist but we started writing rock 'n' roll. The hardest part was that we had too many ideas. If we wanted to write a song, it would never stop."

Herbert and Christie also composed for his backup singers, a girl group named the Tammys, a handful of songs, including the eccentric single, "Egyptian Shumba," which with its over-the-top, savage vocals and faux-Middle Eastern melody, has become a cult classic.

Herbert died in Phoenix, Arizona in 2009, at the age of 87.

References

Twyla Herbert Wikipedia