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  1. April – 1967 Your Good Girl’s Gonna Go Bad is the debut album by American country music singer, Tammy Wynette, released in 1967. It reached number 7 on the Billboard Country Albums chart. “Apartment No. 9” had been issued as a single in late 1966 (prior to the album’s release), and it reached #44; “Your Good Girl’s Gonna Go Bad” ...

  2. 1 de dic. de 2023 · Your Good Girl’s Gonna Go Bad” is a classic country song by Tammy Wynette, released in 1967. The song, written by Billy Sherrill and Glenn Sutton, tells the story of a woman who, tired of ...

  3. Tammy Wynette-Walk Through This World With Me. 2:46. Tammy Wynette-I'm Not Mine To Give. 2:17. Tammy Wynette-I Wound Easy (But I Heal Fast) 2:27. Tammy Wynette-Almost Persuaded. 2:57. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1967 Vinyl release of "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad" on Discogs.

  4. Background and reception. "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad" was first recorded in January 1967 in the Columbia Recording Studio in Nashville, Tennessee. Seven additional tracks were recorded during this session, which would ultimately become part of Wynette's debut studio album. The session was produced by Billy Sherrill and the song was issued ...

  5. Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad was originally released by Epic Records in May 1967. It marked the debut studio album of Wynette's recording career. Epic distributed the album as a vinyl LP, containing five songs on each side. In 1995, it was re-released as a compact disc via Legacy Recordings and digitally years later. In its initial release, the album reached number seven on the American ...

  6. Tammy Wynette performed "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad" on The Bill Anderson Show in... Tammy Wynette - You And Me (Live) Tammy Wynette performed "You And Me" live at the Country Music Hit Parade in... Tammy Wynette - Woman To Woman (Live) Tammy Wynette performed "Woman To Woman" live on Pop! Goes The Country in 1974.

  7. Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad From the beginning, Tammy Wynette projected a vision of femininity that felt different. It wasn’t that she gave up love songs or declared her independence from men—if anything, few female country singers did more to reinforce the messages of monogamy and marital fidelity that give country its conservative sheen.