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・ Linda White
・ Linda White Mazini Villari
・ Linda Whittington
・ Linda Wikstedt
・ Linda Wild
・ Linda Williams
・ Linda Williams (film scholar)
・ Linda Williams (singer)
・ Linda Willis
・ Linda Winikow
・ Linda Winstead Jones
・ Linda Wolf
・ Linda Wolfe
・ Linda Womack
・ Linda Schuyler
Linda Scott
・ Linda Scott (councillor)
・ Linda Seger
・ Linda Sembrant
・ Linda Septien
・ Linda Shapiro
・ Linda Sharrock
・ Linda Shayne
・ Linda Shear
・ Linda Shearman
・ Linda Sheskey
・ Linda Shider
・ Linda Siegel
・ Linda Siegel (tennis)
・ Linda Sikhakhane


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Linda Scott : ウィキペディア英語版
Linda Scott

Linda Scott (born Linda Joy Sampson, June 1, 1945 (New York City) ) is an American pop singer who was active from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. Her biggest hit was the 1961 million-selling single, "I've Told Every Little Star".〔 She went on to place twelve songs on the charts over the next four years, the last being "Who’s Been Sleeping In My Bed," inspired by the film and written by the songwriting team of Hal David and Burt Bacharach.
==Biography==
Born in Queens, New York, Linda Sampson was 11 years old when she moved with her family to Teaneck, New Jersey. She was still in school (Teaneck High School) when she auditioned to appear on Arthur Godfrey's hit CBS Radio show in 1959.〔Murrells, Joseph. (''Million Selling Records from the 1900s to the 1980s: An Illustrated Directory'' ), p. 156. Batsford (publisher), 1984. ISBN 0-7134-3843-6. Accessed July 23, 2011. "Linda (real name Linda Joy Sampson) was born on 11 June 1945 in Queens, New York and has been performing as a singer since she was four. She moved to Teaneck, New Jersey when 11 and enrolled at the high school there."〕 After having won a place on the show, Scott and other young performers became regular guests on the show. During the show's run, the young singer came to the attention of Epic Records, and Scott made her recording debut (singing as Linda Sampson) with the single, "In-Between Teen".〔Cotten, Lee. (''The Golden Age of American Rock 'n Roll, Volume 3'' ), p. 298. Pierian Press, 2002. ISBN 0-9646588-4-4. Accessed July 23, 2011. "She was a sophomore in high school when she was discovered by talent scouts for Godfrey's nationally aired morning radio show. This led to a lone 1959 single by Linda Sampson, ''In-Between Teen'', on Epic."〕
Though still in high school, in 1961 she signed with Canadian-American Records, which had struck gold with the Santo & Johnny's "Sleep Walk". The label changed her performing name to Linda Scott, producing and releasing the hit "I've Told Every Little Star," a standard written by Oscar Hammerstein II and Jerome Kern for their 1932 production ''Music In The Air.''〔Kleiner, Dick. ("The Record Shop: Zing in Songs in Four Languages" ), ''Altus Times-Democrat'', June 26, 1961. Accessed July 23, 2011. "The next young girl star, in the Connie Francis mold, may well be a high school sophomore from Teaneck, N.J., named Linda Scott. Her recording of ''I've Told Every Little Star'' on the Canadian-American label was a spring seller among the teenage set, and she's looked on as a definite comer."〕 The track sold over one million copies, earning Scott a gold disc.〔
Scott's three biggest hits came in that first year, with "I've Told Every Little Star" (U.S. #3), "I Don't Know Why" (U.S. #12), and "Don't Bet Money, Honey" (U.S. #9). The first two were standards, while the third was one of Scott's own compositions.
Scott was the showcase artist when Canadian-American started a subsidiary label, Congress Records, in 1962, and in fact both labels released new material of hers simultaneously. The following year, she sang her hit "Yessirree" in the Chubby Checker vehicle, ''Don't Knock the Twist''. Scott's final U.S. chart appearance was "Who's Been Sleeping In My Bed," released in January 1964, the same month that The Beatles made their first chart appearance. In 1965, she became a cast member of the TV rock show ''Where the Action Is'', which she co-hosted with singer Steve Alaimo. Her last U.S. recording, "They Don't Know You", was released in 1967 on RCA Records. She continued to record as a backing vocalist (most notably on Lou Christie's 1969 hit, "I'm Gonna Make You Mine") before finally quitting show business in the early 1970s to pursue studies in theology.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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