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Collin Raye

Floyd Elliot Wray (born August 22, 1960), known professionally as Collin Raye and previously as Bubba Wray, is an American country music singer. He initially recorded as a member of the band The Wrays between 1983 and 1987. He made his solo debut in 1991 as Collin Raye with the album All I Can Be, which produced his first Number One hit in "Love, Me". All I Can Be was the first of four consecutive albums released by Raye to achieve platinum certification in the United States for sales of one million copies each. Raye maintained several Top Ten hits throughout the rest of the decade and into 2000. 2001's Can't Back Down was his first album that did not produce a Top 40 country hit, and he was dropped by his record label soon afterward. He did not record another studio album until 2005's Twenty Years and Change, released on an independent label.

Collin Raye
Raye performing in Washington, D.C. in October 2011.
Background information
Birth nameFloyd Elliot Wray[a]
Also known asBubba Wray
Born (1960-08-22) August 22, 1960 (age 63)[1][b]
De Queen, Arkansas, U.S.
OriginNashville, Tennessee, U.S.
GenresCountry
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar, bass guitar
Years active1983–present
Labels
Formerly ofThe Wrays
Websitewww.collinraye.com

Between 1991 and 2007, Raye charted 30 singles on the U.S. country charts; he has also charted twice on the Adult Contemporary format as a duet partner on two Jim Brickman songs. Four of Raye's singles have reached Number One on the Billboard country music charts: 1992's "Love, Me" and "In This Life", 1995's "My Kind of Girl", and 1998's "I Can Still Feel You". He has also recorded a total of 11 studio albums, counting a Christmas album and a compilation of lullabies, in addition to releasing a Greatest Hits compilation, a live album, and a live CD/DVD package.

Early years edit

Floyd Elliot Wray was born in De Queen, Arkansas. His mother, Lois Wray, was a local musician; in the 1950s, she served as an opening act for several Sun Records artists, including Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins.[3] Later, she became a solo musician in her own right; she would occasionally bring both Collin and his brother Scott (known professionally as Scotty Wray, died February 2022) onstage to sing harmony vocals.[4] By the 1980s, the two brothers began a country-rock band called the Wray Brothers Band, in which Collin assumed the stage name Bubba Wray.[4] The Wray Brothers Band performed primarily in the state of Texas; Corvallis, Oregon; and later in Reno, Nevada; eventually releasing singles on independent labels. By 1986, the band (which had shortened its name to The Wrays) signed to Mercury Records, releasing four singles. After the singles performed poorly on the charts, The Wrays disbanded.[4]

Solo career edit

All I Can Be edit

After altering the spelling of his last name to Raye, he was signed to a record deal with Epic Records in 1990.[4] His debut single, "All I Can Be (Is a Sweet Memory)", entered the charts in 1991, reaching a peak of No. 29 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts.[5] Raye's first album, also titled All I Can Be, was released soon afterward.

The follow-up single, a ballad co-written by Skip Ewing and titled "Love, Me," reached number 1 on the country music charts in early 1992, holding the peak position for three weeks. All I Can Be was then certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The album's final single was "Every Second," which peaked at No. 2 on Billboard.[5]

In This Life and Extremes edit

Raye's second album, titled In This Life, was released in 1992. The album's title track, which served as its lead-off single, spent two weeks at number 1 and crossed over to the Adult Contemporary charts with a peak of number 21. In late 1992, Raye made an appearance on the Carl Weathers television drama series "Street Justice", where he gave a live performance of "In This Life". The second-season episode, entitled "Country Justice", was directed by David Winning. The album produced three additional Top Ten country hits in "I Want You Bad (And That Ain't Good)", "Somebody Else's Moon", and "That Was a River",[5] in addition to achieving his second platinum certification.

Extremes, Raye's third album, was released in 1993. It was his first to be produced by Paul Worley and Ed Seay, the latter of whom would serve as Raye's co-producer until 2000. The lead single, "That's My Story", was co-written by Lee Roy Parnell, who recorded for Arista Nashville at the time. Following it was "Little Rock", a song about a recovering alcoholic.[6] The song's accompanying music video also promoted Al-Anon, an international support group for friends and family of alcoholics.[4] Also released from the album were the Top 10 hits "Man of My Word", "My Kind of Girl", and "If I Were You". "My Kind of Girl" became Raye's third number 1 hit, while the other two singles reached Top 10 as well.[5]

Also in 1993, he was nominated by the Academy of Country Music for Top New Male Vocalist, along with Billy Ray Cyrus and Tracy Lawrence, but lost to Tracy.

I Think About You and The Best of Collin Raye: Direct Hits edit

I Think About You was the title of Raye's fourth album. Released in 1995, it produced six singles overall and became Raye's fourth consecutive platinum-certified album.[6] Of the singles, the first three all reached Top 5: "One Boy, One Girl", "Not That Different", and the title track, whose music video won a Video of the Year award from the Academy of Country Music.[7] While "Not That Different" was climbing the charts, the album track "What If Jesus Comes Back Like That" received unsolicited airplay which brought it as high as number 57.[5] After "I Think About You", "Love Remains" peaked at number 12, followed by an official release of "What If Jesus Comes Back Like That" which achieved a peak of number 21. The album's sixth and final single was "On the Verge", at number 2.[5]

In 1996, Raye also released a Christmas album titled Christmas: The Gift. He also appeared on Stars and Stripes Vol. 1, a Beach Boys album featuring lead vocals by country musicians. A year later, his first Greatest Hits package was issued; titled The Best of Collin Raye: Direct Hits, it comprised several of his hit singles from the past five years, as well as four new songs, of which three released as singles. "What the Heart Wants" and "Little Red Rodeo" both reached Top Five on the country music charts, while "The Gift", a collaboration with Jim Brickman and Susan Ashton, was a top 5 hit on the Adult Contemporary charts. The album also included a cover of Journey's "Open Arms", with Raye's version reaching a peak of number 70 from unsolicited airplay.[5] Direct Hits received a gold certification from the RIAA for selling 500,000 copies in the United States.

The Walls Came Down edit

The Walls Came Down was the title of Raye's fifth studio album. Released in 1998, it produced his fourth and final Billboard number 1 single in "I Can Still Feel You".[4] "Someone You Used to Know" and the Radney Foster-penned "Anyone Else" were both Top Five hits as well. "Start Over Georgia", the fourth single (co-written by Raye's brother), peaked at No. 39. Also included on The Walls Came Down was a ballad entitled "The Eleventh Commandment", in which Raye addressed the issue of child abuse. Although not released as a single, "The Eleventh Commandment" was made into a music video, which featured a number for a child abuse hotline at the end.[8] The same year, he appeared on compilation CD Tribute To Tradition (released on Columbia label) with cover versions of "Cold Cold Heart" (country classic recorded by Hank Williams in 1957) and "Honky Tonk Heroes (Like Me)" (a major hit for Waylon Jennings in 1973, written by Billy Joe Shaver). Raye duets with Joe Diffie on the latter song. In late 1999, Raye sang backing vocals on Phil Vassar's debut single "Carlene".[9]

2000–2005 edit

Raye released two albums in 2000: Counting Sheep, an album consisting of lullabies for his children, and Tracks. The first single release from Tracks, "Couldn't Last a Moment", was a top 5 hit on the country charts. "Tired of Loving This Way", which followed, was a duet with singer and actress Bobbie Eakes. Although it was Raye's first single to miss the Top 40 entirely, it provided Eakes with her only appearance on the country music charts.[10] "She's All That" and "You Still Take Me There" were also released, but they failed to make top 40 as well.[5]

Can't Back Down, Raye's last album for Epic, was released in 2001. Neither of the album's two singles entered Top 40 on the country music charts. Because of a conflict with his label, Raye asked out of his contract that year.[11][12] Although he did not have a record label at the time, he entered the Adult Contemporary charts for the third time in 2003, as a duet partner on Jim Brickman's single "Peace (Where the Heart Is)". Raye released a live album, Live at Billy Bob's Texas, in 2004, and a promotional single titled "World History 101" in 2005.[13]

2005–present edit

In 2005, Raye signed to the independent Aspirion label, releasing his Twenty Years and Change album. Two singles were released from the album, although neither single charted. The same year, Raye appeared in television commercials for Fruit of the Loom underwear, in which he sang the jingle "You Can't Over-Love Your Underwear".[11] Another studio album, Fearless, was released in 2006 on Country Roads Records, although it did not produce any singles.

In 2007, a CD/DVD combination titled The Power in You was released, followed by an EP titled Selected Hits. The latter includes "That's My Story", "Little Rock", "I Think About You", and "Love, Me", as well as two new tracks: "A Soldier's Prayer" and "Quitters", the latter of which was co-written by Canadian country singer George Canyon. Both of the new tracks were released as singles in 2007, and the former peaked at No. 59 on Hot Country Songs.[5]

Raye's next album, Never Going Back, was released on April 28, 2009, on the Saguaro Road label. Its first single is "Mid-Life Chrysler". It also includes the track "She's With Me," which is a tribute to Raye's granddaughter, Haley, who died from a severe but undiagnosed brain disorder.[14]

Raye released his autobiography A Voice Undefeated in 2014.[1]

Musical stylings edit

Raye is known primarily for his country pop ballads, such as "Love, Me" (a popular choice at funerals)[4] and "In This Life" (one of the most popular wedding songs of the 1990s).[4]

Raye is also known for dealing with social issues in his material. "Little Rock", for example, tells of a recovering alcoholic; its music video included the number for Al-Anon, as a means of public service announcement. "What If Jesus Comes Back Like That", from his I Think About You album, is a power ballad that poses questions about the return of Jesus Christ in the modern world.[6] In "The Eleventh Commandment", a track from The Walls Came Down, Raye addresses child abuse, suggesting "honor thy children" as an eleventh commandment to accompany the Ten Commandments.[15] In the song's music video, a telephone number for the child abuse hotline ChildHelp USA was included.[8]

Religious conversion edit

Raye was raised as a Southern Baptist but became a Catholic when he was 23 years old. On February 17, 2016, Raye performed at the "Two Nations, One Faith" celebration at Sun Bowl Stadium in El Paso, Texas, prior to the stadium's simulcast of the Mass celebrated by Pope Francis just across the Mexican border in Ciudad Juarez.

Personal life edit

Raye married a woman named Connie in 1980; they later got divorced. They have a daughter, Brittany (born February 10, 1983), and a son, Jacob (born March 31, 1985).[16] Raye lives in Nashville with his daughter and granddaughter.[1]

Social activism edit

In 2011, Raye became the national spokesperson for the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network.[17]

Discography edit

Billboard number-one hits edit

Awards and nominations edit

Academy of Country Music Awards edit

Year Nominee / work Award Result
1993 Collin Raye Top New Male Vocalist Nominated
"Love, Me" Single Record of the Year Nominated
1996 "Not That Different" Video of the Year Nominated
1997 "I Think About You" Won
Collin Raye Top Male Vocalist of the Year Nominated
1998 Nominated
1999 Nominated
2000 Nominated

Country Music Association Awards edit

Year Nominee / work Award Result
1992 "Love, Me" Single of the Year Nominated
1996 Collin Raye Male Vocalist of the Year Nominated
1997 Nominated
1998 Nominated

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d . Collin Raye official website. Archived from the original on 2012-08-25. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  2. ^ "Search results for Wray, Floyd Elliot". Broadcast Music Incorporated. Retrieved April 30, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Collin Raye: Biography". CMT.com. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Huey, Steve. "allmusic ((( Collin Raye > Biography)))". Allmusic. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Whitburn, Joel (2008). Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008. Record Research, Inc. p. 341. ISBN 978-0-89820-177-2.
  6. ^ a b c "Collin Raye Biography". Oldies.com. Retrieved 2007-11-02. From Larkin, Colin, The Encyclopedia of Popular Music.
  7. ^ Taylor, Jim (2003-05-09). . Arkansas Media Room. Archived from the original on 2007-11-13. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  8. ^ a b "Raye Makes A Difference". CMT.com. 1998-09-11. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  9. ^ Phil Vassar (CD booklet). Phil Vassar. Arista Nashville. 2000. 18891.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  10. ^ "Collin Raye Makes "Tracks" to Turn Over a New Leaf". CMT.com. 2000-05-08. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  11. ^ a b "20 Questions with Collin Raye". CMT.com. 2005-12-07. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  12. ^ "Raye, Epic Parting Ways". CMT.com. 2001-12-19. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  13. ^ Thunell, Peter (2004-08-24). "Collin Raye delights Orem audience". Deseret News. FindArticles.com. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  14. ^ Conaway, Alanna (2010-04-06). "Collin Raye's Young Granddaughter Passes Away". The Boot. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  15. ^ "Thou Shalt Listen To Collin". CMT.com. 1998-07-22. Retrieved 2007-11-02.
  16. ^ "Collin Raye". NNDB. Soylent Communications. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
  17. ^ "New Voice for Life: Collin Raye". National Catholic Register.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ While many sources give Raye's middle name as Collin, Broadcast Music Incorporated and the singer's official website both list it as Elliot.[1][2]
  2. ^ Some sources give Raye's date of birth as 1959, but his official website gives it as 1960.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Collin Raye at AllMusic
  • Collin Raye at IMDb

collin, raye, baseball, player, colin, floyd, elliot, wray, born, august, 1960, known, professionally, previously, bubba, wray, american, country, music, singer, initially, recorded, member, band, wrays, between, 1983, 1987, made, solo, debut, 1991, with, albu. For the baseball player see Colin Rea Floyd Elliot Wray born August 22 1960 known professionally as Collin Raye and previously as Bubba Wray is an American country music singer He initially recorded as a member of the band The Wrays between 1983 and 1987 He made his solo debut in 1991 as Collin Raye with the album All I Can Be which produced his first Number One hit in Love Me All I Can Be was the first of four consecutive albums released by Raye to achieve platinum certification in the United States for sales of one million copies each Raye maintained several Top Ten hits throughout the rest of the decade and into 2000 2001 s Can t Back Down was his first album that did not produce a Top 40 country hit and he was dropped by his record label soon afterward He did not record another studio album until 2005 s Twenty Years and Change released on an independent label Collin RayeRaye performing in Washington D C in October 2011 Background informationBirth nameFloyd Elliot Wray a Also known asBubba WrayBorn 1960 08 22 August 22 1960 age 63 1 b De Queen Arkansas U S OriginNashville Tennessee U S GenresCountryInstrument s Vocals guitar bass guitarYears active1983 presentLabelsEpic NashvilleAspirionCountry RoadsStarpointeSaguaro RoadFormerly ofThe WraysWebsitewww wbr collinraye wbr com Between 1991 and 2007 Raye charted 30 singles on the U S country charts he has also charted twice on the Adult Contemporary format as a duet partner on two Jim Brickman songs Four of Raye s singles have reached Number One on the Billboard country music charts 1992 s Love Me and In This Life 1995 s My Kind of Girl and 1998 s I Can Still Feel You He has also recorded a total of 11 studio albums counting a Christmas album and a compilation of lullabies in addition to releasing a Greatest Hits compilation a live album and a live CD DVD package Contents 1 Early years 2 Solo career 2 1 All I Can Be 2 2 In This Life and Extremes 2 3 I Think About You and The Best of Collin Raye Direct Hits 2 4 The Walls Came Down 2 5 2000 2005 2 6 2005 present 3 Musical stylings 4 Religious conversion 5 Personal life 6 Social activism 7 Discography 7 1 Billboard number one hits 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 Academy of Country Music Awards 8 2 Country Music Association Awards 9 References 10 Footnotes 11 External linksEarly years editFloyd Elliot Wray was born in De Queen Arkansas His mother Lois Wray was a local musician in the 1950s she served as an opening act for several Sun Records artists including Jerry Lee Lewis Elvis Presley Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins 3 Later she became a solo musician in her own right she would occasionally bring both Collin and his brother Scott known professionally as Scotty Wray died February 2022 onstage to sing harmony vocals 4 By the 1980s the two brothers began a country rock band called the Wray Brothers Band in which Collin assumed the stage name Bubba Wray 4 The Wray Brothers Band performed primarily in the state of Texas Corvallis Oregon and later in Reno Nevada eventually releasing singles on independent labels By 1986 the band which had shortened its name to The Wrays signed to Mercury Records releasing four singles After the singles performed poorly on the charts The Wrays disbanded 4 Solo career editAll I Can Be edit After altering the spelling of his last name to Raye he was signed to a record deal with Epic Records in 1990 4 His debut single All I Can Be Is a Sweet Memory entered the charts in 1991 reaching a peak of No 29 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles amp Tracks charts 5 Raye s first album also titled All I Can Be was released soon afterward The follow up single a ballad co written by Skip Ewing and titled Love Me reached number 1 on the country music charts in early 1992 holding the peak position for three weeks All I Can Be was then certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA The album s final single was Every Second which peaked at No 2 on Billboard 5 In This Life and Extremes edit Raye s second album titled In This Life was released in 1992 The album s title track which served as its lead off single spent two weeks at number 1 and crossed over to the Adult Contemporary charts with a peak of number 21 In late 1992 Raye made an appearance on the Carl Weathers television drama series Street Justice where he gave a live performance of In This Life The second season episode entitled Country Justice was directed by David Winning The album produced three additional Top Ten country hits in I Want You Bad And That Ain t Good Somebody Else s Moon and That Was a River 5 in addition to achieving his second platinum certification Extremes Raye s third album was released in 1993 It was his first to be produced by Paul Worley and Ed Seay the latter of whom would serve as Raye s co producer until 2000 The lead single That s My Story was co written by Lee Roy Parnell who recorded for Arista Nashville at the time Following it was Little Rock a song about a recovering alcoholic 6 The song s accompanying music video also promoted Al Anon an international support group for friends and family of alcoholics 4 Also released from the album were the Top 10 hits Man of My Word My Kind of Girl and If I Were You My Kind of Girl became Raye s third number 1 hit while the other two singles reached Top 10 as well 5 Also in 1993 he was nominated by the Academy of Country Music for Top New Male Vocalist along with Billy Ray Cyrus and Tracy Lawrence but lost to Tracy I Think About You and The Best of Collin Raye Direct Hits edit I Think About You was the title of Raye s fourth album Released in 1995 it produced six singles overall and became Raye s fourth consecutive platinum certified album 6 Of the singles the first three all reached Top 5 One Boy One Girl Not That Different and the title track whose music video won a Video of the Year award from the Academy of Country Music 7 While Not That Different was climbing the charts the album track What If Jesus Comes Back Like That received unsolicited airplay which brought it as high as number 57 5 After I Think About You Love Remains peaked at number 12 followed by an official release of What If Jesus Comes Back Like That which achieved a peak of number 21 The album s sixth and final single was On the Verge at number 2 5 In 1996 Raye also released a Christmas album titled Christmas The Gift He also appeared on Stars and Stripes Vol 1 a Beach Boys album featuring lead vocals by country musicians A year later his first Greatest Hits package was issued titled The Best of Collin Raye Direct Hits it comprised several of his hit singles from the past five years as well as four new songs of which three released as singles What the Heart Wants and Little Red Rodeo both reached Top Five on the country music charts while The Gift a collaboration with Jim Brickman and Susan Ashton was a top 5 hit on the Adult Contemporary charts The album also included a cover of Journey s Open Arms with Raye s version reaching a peak of number 70 from unsolicited airplay 5 Direct Hits received a gold certification from the RIAA for selling 500 000 copies in the United States The Walls Came Down edit The Walls Came Down was the title of Raye s fifth studio album Released in 1998 it produced his fourth and final Billboard number 1 single in I Can Still Feel You 4 Someone You Used to Know and the Radney Foster penned Anyone Else were both Top Five hits as well Start Over Georgia the fourth single co written by Raye s brother peaked at No 39 Also included on The Walls Came Down was a ballad entitled The Eleventh Commandment in which Raye addressed the issue of child abuse Although not released as a single The Eleventh Commandment was made into a music video which featured a number for a child abuse hotline at the end 8 The same year he appeared on compilation CD Tribute To Tradition released on Columbia label with cover versions of Cold Cold Heart country classic recorded by Hank Williams in 1957 and Honky Tonk Heroes Like Me a major hit for Waylon Jennings in 1973 written by Billy Joe Shaver Raye duets with Joe Diffie on the latter song In late 1999 Raye sang backing vocals on Phil Vassar s debut single Carlene 9 2000 2005 edit Raye released two albums in 2000 Counting Sheep an album consisting of lullabies for his children and Tracks The first single release from Tracks Couldn t Last a Moment was a top 5 hit on the country charts Tired of Loving This Way which followed was a duet with singer and actress Bobbie Eakes Although it was Raye s first single to miss the Top 40 entirely it provided Eakes with her only appearance on the country music charts 10 She s All That and You Still Take Me There were also released but they failed to make top 40 as well 5 Can t Back Down Raye s last album for Epic was released in 2001 Neither of the album s two singles entered Top 40 on the country music charts Because of a conflict with his label Raye asked out of his contract that year 11 12 Although he did not have a record label at the time he entered the Adult Contemporary charts for the third time in 2003 as a duet partner on Jim Brickman s single Peace Where the Heart Is Raye released a live album Live at Billy Bob s Texas in 2004 and a promotional single titled World History 101 in 2005 13 2005 present edit In 2005 Raye signed to the independent Aspirion label releasing his Twenty Years and Change album Two singles were released from the album although neither single charted The same year Raye appeared in television commercials for Fruit of the Loom underwear in which he sang the jingle You Can t Over Love Your Underwear 11 Another studio album Fearless was released in 2006 on Country Roads Records although it did not produce any singles In 2007 a CD DVD combination titled The Power in You was released followed by an EP titled Selected Hits The latter includes That s My Story Little Rock I Think About You and Love Me as well as two new tracks A Soldier s Prayer and Quitters the latter of which was co written by Canadian country singer George Canyon Both of the new tracks were released as singles in 2007 and the former peaked at No 59 on Hot Country Songs 5 Raye s next album Never Going Back was released on April 28 2009 on the Saguaro Road label Its first single is Mid Life Chrysler It also includes the track She s With Me which is a tribute to Raye s granddaughter Haley who died from a severe but undiagnosed brain disorder 14 Raye released his autobiography A Voice Undefeated in 2014 1 Musical stylings editRaye is known primarily for his country pop ballads such as Love Me a popular choice at funerals 4 and In This Life one of the most popular wedding songs of the 1990s 4 Raye is also known for dealing with social issues in his material Little Rock for example tells of a recovering alcoholic its music video included the number for Al Anon as a means of public service announcement What If Jesus Comes Back Like That from his I Think About You album is a power ballad that poses questions about the return of Jesus Christ in the modern world 6 In The Eleventh Commandment a track from The Walls Came Down Raye addresses child abuse suggesting honor thy children as an eleventh commandment to accompany the Ten Commandments 15 In the song s music video a telephone number for the child abuse hotline ChildHelp USA was included 8 Religious conversion editRaye was raised as a Southern Baptist but became a Catholic when he was 23 years old On February 17 2016 Raye performed at the Two Nations One Faith celebration at Sun Bowl Stadium in El Paso Texas prior to the stadium s simulcast of the Mass celebrated by Pope Francis just across the Mexican border in Ciudad Juarez Personal life editRaye married a woman named Connie in 1980 they later got divorced They have a daughter Brittany born February 10 1983 and a son Jacob born March 31 1985 16 Raye lives in Nashville with his daughter and granddaughter 1 Social activism editIn 2011 Raye became the national spokesperson for the Terri Schiavo Life amp Hope Network 17 Discography editMain article Collin Raye discography All I Can Be 1991 In This Life 1992 Extremes 1994 I Think About You 1995 Christmas The Gift 1996 The Walls Came Down 1998 Tracks 2000 Can t Back Down 2001 Twenty Years and Change 2005 Fearless 2006 Never Going Back 2009 His Love Remains 2011 Still on the Line The Songs of Glen Campbell 2013 Everlasting 2014 Scars 2020 Billboard number one hits edit Love Me 3 weeks 1992 In This Life 2 weeks 1992 My Kind of Girl 1 week 1995 I Can Still Feel You 2 weeks 1998 Awards and nominations editAcademy of Country Music Awards edit Year Nominee work Award Result1993 Collin Raye Top New Male Vocalist Nominated Love Me Single Record of the Year Nominated1996 Not That Different Video of the Year Nominated1997 I Think About You WonCollin Raye Top Male Vocalist of the Year Nominated1998 Nominated1999 Nominated2000 NominatedCountry Music Association Awards edit Year Nominee work Award Result1992 Love Me Single of the Year Nominated1996 Collin Raye Male Vocalist of the Year Nominated1997 Nominated1998 NominatedReferences edit a b c d About Collin Raye official website Archived from the original on 2012 08 25 Retrieved 29 June 2012 Search results for Wray Floyd Elliot Broadcast Music Incorporated Retrieved April 30 2020 permanent dead link Collin Raye Biography CMT com Retrieved 2007 11 02 a b c d e f g h Huey Steve allmusic Collin Raye gt Biography Allmusic Retrieved 2007 11 02 a b c d e f g h i Whitburn Joel 2008 Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008 Record Research Inc p 341 ISBN 978 0 89820 177 2 a b c Collin Raye Biography Oldies com Retrieved 2007 11 02 From Larkin Colin The Encyclopedia of Popular Music Taylor Jim 2003 05 09 Collin Raye Homecoming Concert Slated for June 20 in DeQueen Arkansas Media Room Archived from the original on 2007 11 13 Retrieved 2007 11 02 a b Raye Makes A Difference CMT com 1998 09 11 Retrieved 2007 11 02 Phil Vassar CD booklet Phil Vassar Arista Nashville 2000 18891 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Collin Raye Makes Tracks to Turn Over a New Leaf CMT com 2000 05 08 Retrieved 2007 11 02 a b 20 Questions with Collin Raye CMT com 2005 12 07 Retrieved 2007 11 02 Raye Epic Parting Ways CMT com 2001 12 19 Retrieved 2007 11 02 Thunell Peter 2004 08 24 Collin Raye delights Orem audience Deseret News FindArticles com Retrieved 2007 11 02 Conaway Alanna 2010 04 06 Collin Raye s Young Granddaughter Passes Away The Boot Retrieved 2010 09 30 Thou Shalt Listen To Collin CMT com 1998 07 22 Retrieved 2007 11 02 Collin Raye NNDB Soylent Communications Retrieved September 7 2017 New Voice for Life Collin Raye National Catholic Register Footnotes edit While many sources give Raye s middle name as Collin Broadcast Music Incorporated and the singer s official website both list it as Elliot 1 2 Some sources give Raye s date of birth as 1959 but his official website gives it as 1960 External links editOfficial website Collin Raye at AllMusic Collin Raye at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Collin Raye amp oldid 1184969392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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