SHE WAS A HOUSEWIFE FROM OHIO WHEN BILL ANDERSON HEARD HER SING IN A TALENT CONTEST. ONE YEAR LATER, CONNIE SMITH HAD A DEBUT SINGLE NO WOMAN IN COUNTRY HAD EVER MATCHED. Connie Smith did not walk into Nashville like someone already chosen. She had grown up hard, moving through West Virginia and Ohio in a family with more children than money. Her parents had worked as migrant farm laborers. She sang because the radio gave her a place to go when life did not. Kitty Wells. Jean Shepard. The Grand Ole Opry coming through the speaker like a faraway room she was not supposed to enter. By 1963, she was married, living in Ohio, and not sitting inside a Nashville office waiting for a deal. Then she entered a talent contest near Columbus. Bill Anderson was there. Connie sang Jean Shepard’s “I Thought of You,” and Anderson heard something clean, huge, and dangerous in her voice. He helped get her to Nashville, helped RCA hear her, and gave her the song that would change everything. On July 16, 1964, Connie Smith walked into RCA Studio B and recorded “Once a Day.” It was released that August. By November, it was No. 1. Then it stayed there for eight weeks. Not just a hit. A record. The first debut single by a female country artist to top the Billboard country chart, and one of the longest No. 1 runs by a woman country singer for nearly half a century. Connie Smith did not need a long climb to prove the voice was real. One contest, one witness, one song — and Nashville had to open the door wider than it planned.
Introduction “Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” CONNIE SMITH WAS A HOUSEWIFE IN OHIO WHEN BILL ANDERSON HEARD HER SING — ONE YEAR LATER,…