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Eddy Raven

Eddy Raven
Birth name Edward Garvin Futch
Born (1944-08-19) August 19, 1944 (age 72)
Origin Lafayette, Louisiana, United States
Genres Country
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1962, 1974–present
Labels Cosmos
La Louisianne
Monument
ABC/Dot
Dimension
Elektra
RCA
Capitol
Intersound
K-Tel
RMG
Associated acts The Oak Ridge Boys
Website EddyRaven.com

Edward Garvin Futch (born August 19, 1944, in Lafayette, Louisiana) is an American country music artist known professionally as Eddy Raven. Known for his Cajun-influenced country music, Raven has been a recording artist since 1962. He has charted more than thirty-five singles in his career, including the Number One hits "I Got Mexico", "Shine, Shine, Shine", "I'm Gonna Get You", "Joe Knows How to Live", "In a Letter to You" and "Bayou Boys", as well as several more Top Ten hits, including seventeen consecutive Top Tens between 1984 and 1990.

Edward Garvin Futch was born in Lafayette, Louisiana, on August 19, 1944, as one of 11 children. Influenced by Cajun music, the country music sounds from popular radio broadcasts such as the "Louisiana Hayride", New Orleans blues, and the new sounds of rock and roll, Futch first played in a band at age thirteen. Raven later went to work for a radio station in Georgia, where in 1962 he self-released the single "Once a Fool" under the name Eddy Raven. When his family moved back to Louisiana, Raven worked at a recording studio called La Louisianne Records and its outlet The Music Mart, where he recorded and released his first album, That Cajun Country Sound.

Raven's record was heard by Jimmy C. Newman, who helped him sign to a publishing contract with Acuff-Rose Music. There, he wrote hit tunes for Don Gibson, Connie Smith, Jeannie C. Riley, and many others. He also wrote The Oak Ridge Boys' 1982 single "Thank God for Kids". Eventually, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee where he started recording for himself in 1974, having charted hits on ABC Records, including three albums and the No. 27 single "Good News, Bad News." He later recorded for Monument Records and then Dimension Records, where he released the album Eyes, although none of its chart singles were major hits.


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