Complete your The Gospel Echoes collection.
The Rambos were an American Southern gospel music group that was formed in the 1960s. They were one of the most successful Gospel trios of the 20th century. The group consisted of Buck and Dottie Rambo at first along with several various people singing with them and they were joined by their daughter, Reba, in 1965. They were a successful singring trio born out of the United Pentecostal Church. They were inducted into the Gospel Music Association's Hall of Fame in 2001.
Southern Gospel legend Dottie Rambo died on Mother's Day 2008 when her tour bus ran off the highway and struck an embankment in Missouri. By the 1950s she had married Buck Rambo and had her daughter, Reba. Dottie and Buck traveled across the region singing her songs in small churches. Other gospel groups, like the Happy Goodman Family, heard her songs and started singing them. The then-governor of Louisiana, Jimmy Davis, heard her music and flew her and her family to the governor's mansion so that she could sing her songs for him. Governor Davis paid Dottie to publish her songs and soon after, Warner Brothers Records signed Dottie and her group, The Gospel Echoes, to a two-record deal. When they wanted Dottie and her group.
Presents the gospel echoes 1964. Cross country concert 1965. Dottie, buck & joe 1965. Those singing rambos 1965. THERE'S NOTHING MY GOD CAN'T DO Reissue of Warner Bros. Presents The Gospel Echoes 1967. The soul singing rambos 1968. PRESENTING THE SINGING RAMBOS Reissue of Jim Wetherington Album 1968. An evening with the singing rambos 1968. This is my valley 1969.
Dottie Luttrell Rambo got her start in Southern Gospel by writing songs and performing at revivals. She was eight years old when she first became interested in writing songs. By the age of 12, she had left home to sing full time. Governor Jimmie Davis of Louisiana heard her music and signed her to a writing contract when she was still in her teens. In 1950 Dottie Rambo was sixteen and met Buck Rambo who she shortly married. Throughout the 1960s she was starting to become more well known as she travelled internationally with Buck and their daughter Reba calling themselves The Singing Rambos. Dottie Luttrell Rambo got her start in Southern Gospel by writing songs and performing at revivals.
The Gospel Echoes news stories. Buck Rambo 1931-2016 Southern gospel patriarch Buck Rambo dies aged 84. Dottie Rambo 1934-2008 Gospel matriarch Dottie Rambo dies in road accident. The Gospel Echoes contact/database details. Artists database Artist ID: 23835. Style: Gospel Approach: Ministry Country: United States.
Dottie Rambo (March 2, 1934 – May 11, 2008) was an American gospel singer and songwriter. She was a Grammy and multiple Dove Award-winning artist. Along with husband Buck and daughter Reba, she formed the award-winning southern Gospel group, The Rambos. She wrote more than 2,500 songs, including her most notable, "He Looked Beyond My Fault and Saw My Need", "We Shall Behold Him", and "I Go To the Rock". In 2000, Rambo was awarded the ASCAP Lifetime Achievement Award.