|
Gospel Singer/Songwriter Dottie Rambo Dies
MOUNT VERNON, Mo. (AP) — Gospel singer-songwriter Joyce "Dottie" Rambo died early Sunday when the bus she was in ran off a road in southwest Missouri and struck an embankment.
Rambo, 74, of Nashville, Tenn., died in the crash about two miles east of Mount Vernon on Interstate 44, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said. Seven other people in the bus were injured, and were hospitalized in Springfield with moderate to severe injuries, the patrol said.
It was unclear if the accident, which occurred about 2 a.m., was weather-related, the patrol said. Severe storms and tornadoes hit the region about 6 p.m. Saturday, killing 14 people. Sustained winds and storms swept through the area later in the night, according to the National Weather Service.
"She was a giant in the gospel music industry," said Beckie Simmons, Rambo's agent. "Dolly Parton recorded some of her songs."
She was on her way to a Mother's Day performance in North Richland Hills, Texas, according to her Web site.
Rambo was inducted to the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame in 2006 and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2007.
Rambo has had more than 2,500 published songs, including gospel classics such as "He Looked Beyond My Fault and Saw My Need" and the 1982 Gospel Music Association Song of the Year, "We Shall Behold Him."
John Styll, President of the Gospel Music Assn. says: "Dottie was really a fun person. I don't know anybody who didn't like her. She had a great sense of humor. She was a phenominal artist. A prolific songwriter. She wrote hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of songs.. some of which are the best love songs in Gospel Music ."
Gene Higgins, President of the Christian Country Music Assn. says: "Just a beautiful person. Always smiling. Always hugging you telling you she loved you and good things like that and ou know, she was the queen of Gospel Music and there'll never be another Dottie Rambo."
|