Big Dog 92-7 Music Guide

Becky Hobbs

Piano-pounding honky-tonker Becky Hobbs was an Oklahoma native and violinist's daughter who began playing and making up tunes at age nine. When she was 14, Hobbs began writing Bob Dylan-influenced protest songs and singing in a folk duo with her pal Beth Morrison. The following year she started the Four Faces of Eve, an all-girl band. While attending Tulsa University, she played in Sir Prize Package. In 1971 she was performing with Swampfox. Three years later she moved to Los Angeles, where she had some success as a songwriter for Helen Reddy and Jane Olivor before eventually moving to Nashville. In 1974, Hobbs released her self-titled debut album. The following year, she released From the Heartland, followed two years later by Everyday. In 1978, Hobbs recorded "The More I Get the More I Want," her first minor hit. Her next single, "I Can't Say Goodbye to You," made it to the Top 50, and led to three more minor hits. Meanwhile, she continued writing; during the '80s, performers including Lacy J. Dalton and the Tennessee Valley Boys had success with her songs.