View a video clip of Lucille Starr singing "The French Song." From YouTube.
Watch a video of Lucille Starr performing the song "Crazy Arms." From YouTube.
Starr's other albums include Say You Love Me (A & M SP-4100, reissued as The Canadian Sweethearts, A & M SP-4106, and in 1975 as Lucille Starr with Bob Regan, 2-SP-9015), The Sun Shines Again (Starr Concert SCRA-79, issued in 1981, released after her recovery from vocal cord polyps), Back to You (Cardinal RSP-159, issued in 1988), Sweet Memories (Disky DCD-5149, issued in 1991), and the bilingual Chansons d'Amour/Songs of Love (Intersound 1991). The anthology Side by Side: Pop and Country/Lonely Street (Collector's Choice), collecting her recordings for Epic, appeared in 2004. Starr also co-wrote songs with Bob Regan or others, eg on The Sun Shines Again; Sylvia Tyson recorded "Pépère's Mill." In 1987 Starr became the first woman inducted into the Canadian Country Music Association Hall of Honour, and in 1989 was made a member of the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame. She was also the first woman to earn Europe's Gold Tulip Award; in 2005 she was an honorary inductee into Canada's Aboriginal Music Hall of Fame. A street in Port Coquitlam, BC, is named for her.
Starr's influences as a singer were Hank Snow and Peggy Lee. She is notable for being one of a handful of Canadian popular musicians to record in both English and French. Starr's son, Bob Frederickson, played guitar with a later version of the group Buffalo Springfield.
Author Margaret Daly, Betty Nygaard King
"Lucille Starr ... Setting the record straight," Country Music News, Nov 1984
Delaney, Larry. 'Twinkle Twinkle... Lucille Starr,' Country Music News, vol 8, Jan 1988
Links to Other Sites
Canadian Country Music Association
The Canadian Country Music Association website. Check out the national country music awards, the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame, links to country music stars, and more.
Crazy Arms
Watch a video of Lucille Starr performing the song "Crazy Arms." From YouTube.
The French Song
Listen to a brief audio clip of “The French Song” performed by Lucille Starr. From the website for Shapiro, Bernstein & Co.
Lucille Starr - The French song
View a video clip of Lucille Starr singing "The French Song." From the YouTube website.


The Dominion government's advertisement asked for volunteers "able to read and write either the English or French language" with "good antecedents" who were good horsemen...
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