Kay L. Gale came from Fort Worth, Texas and appears to have
released these tracks sometime in the 70s: my guess would be around 1976/77
when the entire country was undergoing bicentennial fever, although How I
Love That Flag was originally registered in 1971 as How I Love That Flag,
Red White and Blue. Songwriting was clearly only a sideline though; Kay
sold newspapers for a living outside the Fort Worth courthouse, and was a
popular fixture there, always smiling and always happy to sing you a song –
especially if you paid her a couple of bits.
It seems that she had been trying to make it as a songwriter
and singer since the early 1950s: she registered the copyright in her first
songs, Drivin’ Through Texas and You Won a Heart Yesterday in
1951, and in January 1953 she paid for an advert in trade magazine Billboard
advertising her wares as composer and singer and using the Leland Hotel in
Fort Worth as her address. My fellow blogger tells me that she was paying $7 a
week to live at the hotel in 1960: I guess that seven years prior to that the
rent must have been significantly cheaper.

Not a lot happened on the songwriting front for Kay until
1976 when, perhaps in a fit of concern perchance over someone nabbing her work
or possibly because she had just recorded her first single, she suddenly
decided to copyright another seven songs, including several patriotic anthems,
under the name Kay L Millions: Beautiful Are the Roses, The Beautiful
Land of the Free, Grand Old Liberty Bell, Tears In My Heart and What
a Wonderful World Would Be and Your Love Is Sunshine to Me. She also
registered another batch of seven compositions the following year, this time
under her given name: Amigos, Fort Worth, Gold Dust,
It’s Time to Hear Again ‘A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year’, Just
Say ‘I Love You’, The Things That Love Can Do (again), and
That Old-Fashioned Hayride. The fact that Kay chose to re-register The
Things That Love Can Do leads me to speculate that she may well have
recorded this song around the same time as Fort Worth Texas (notice the subtle change of name), which appears as an extra track on the download version
of Irwin Chusid’s Songs In the Key Oz Z Volume Two.
Kay died in November 1983, sadly leaving no relatives. Luckily
she left us a couple of amazing 45s. Here are three of the tracks from Kay’s two
known 45 How I Love That Flag, the Team Song of the Dallas Cowboys and Fort
Worth Texas. If anyone has that missing fourth track (possibly The Things
That Love Can Do) I would be eternally grateful!
Enjoy!
Download Flag HERE
Download Cowboys HERE
How do I contact Kay Gale?
ReplyDeleteOuija board?
DeleteSome more information on Kay:
ReplyDeletehttps://hometownbyhandlebar.com/?p=28773
Yes; I included a link in the first paragraph, but it certainly doesn't hurt to flag it up again
Delete