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  1. 24. Sept. 2014 · Here Is Barbara Lynn By the time she got around to recording 1968’s Here is Barbara Lynn, set for reissue October 28 by Light in the Attic Records, young Barbara Lynn was already a hitmaker. Born in Beaumont, Texas in 1942, Lynn was drawn to the guitar, in her case a left-handed model, and she set to learning it, developing a singular style of picking.

  2. バーバラ・リンのHere Is Barbara LynnをApple Musicで聴く。1968年年。12曲。時間:30分。 アルバム・1968年・12曲. 今すぐ聴く; 見つける; ラジオ; 検索 「ミュージック」で開く. Here Is Barbara Lynn . バー� ...

  3. Get all the lyrics to songs by Barbara Lynn and join the Genius community of music scholars to learn the meaning behind the lyrics. ... Here Is Barbara Lynn. 1968 The Barbara Lynn Story . 1967 You ...

  4. 4. Aug. 2012 · Barbara Lynn is a great singer/artist ... and her voice is soulful and melodic. And the arrangements are amazing ... again, she is one of these artists who gets very little recognition or media hype - which is a shame. Like Bettye Lavette - she is a true artist with a great voice and I found this LP/CD to be very good.

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  5. She signed for Atlantic the following year, and recorded another album, Here Is Barbara Lynn, in 1968. She married for the first time at age 28, in 1970 and had three children. This, together with dissatisfaction with poor promotion by the record company, contributed to her decision to largely retire from the music business for most of the 1970s and 1980s. However, while living in Los Angeles ...

  6. Singer/guitarist Barbara Lynn was a rare commodity during her heyday. Not only was she a female instrumentalist (one of the very first to hit the charts), but she also played left-handed -- quite well at that -- and even wrote some of her own material. Lynn's music often straddled the line between blues and Southern R&B, and since much of her early work -- including the number one R&B hit "You ...

  7. Barbara Lynn Ozen. Profile: Barbara Lynn (born Barbara Lynn Ozen, later Barbara Lynn Cumby, January 16, 1942) is an American rhythm and blues and electric blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. She is best known for her R&B chart-topping hit, "You'll Lose A Good Thing" (1962).