Writer's Blog at Writerswrite.com
Writer's Blog

Homepage
Classifieds
Self-publishing
Technical Writing





Songwriter Marijohn Wilkin Dead at 86

Songwriter Marijohn Wilkin, a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, has died at the age of 86.
Wilkin died Saturday, said S. Reese, director of Woodlawn Roesch-Patton Funeral Home. Wilkin had learned last year that her 2003 triple-bypass heart operation had failed and that she was not a candidate for another procedure. "It's OK," she said. "I have my faith. I am ready to go. Don't be sad for me."

Wilkin was a founder of the Nashville Songwriters Association, a non-profit group that advocates for songwriters, and was dubbed "the den mother of Music Row." She was inducted into Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1975. She is credited with discovering Kris Kristofferson, who released a statement Sunday calling her a "tough, intelligent and funny woman making it in a man's world."

Born Marijohn Melson in Texas, she was the grandchild of a country fiddler and learned to play piano as a child. After graduating from college, she became a schoolteacher in Tulsa, and started writing songs for her choir. She moved to Nashville in 1958 and was signed as a songwriter by Cedarwood Publishing company. She scored her first major hit when she and John D. Loudermilk created Waterloo in 1959. Stonewall Jackson's recording topped the country and pop charts.
Her songs have been recorded by Joan Baez, Johnny Cash, The Band, The Kingston Trio, and many other artists. She is best remembered for writing the classic songs "The Long Black Veil" and "One Day at a Time."

Posted on 2006-10-31




blog comments powered by Disqus













www.writerswrite.com


Copyright © 1997-2012 by Writers Write, Inc. All Rights Reserved.