“A door would open up and I would just go through it- and I just kept doing that for all my life.” — Mimi Roman - - “A door would open and I would just go through it. . . .” That is how Mimi Roman at 87 tells us of her life including her time as a successful country singer in the 1950s and early 60s. But it took talent and a strong beautifully distinctive voice for those doors to open and to go far once on the other side. It also took guts and plenty of stamina for a 20-year-old Jewish cowgirl from Brooklyn in the 1950s to make her way to country music fame albeit too briefly before taking herself out of the game at the ripe old age of 28. - - Although many country stars from the 50s and 60s have long faded into obscurity Mimi Roman for more than 60 years has gently persisted in the hearts and minds of pure country honky-tonk and rockabilly fans around the world. But what makes Mimi different from many country stars from that “Golden Age” who now reside somewhere in anonymity? For many the answer will be found in this special double album The First Of The Brooklyn Cowgirls which features newly released and restored personal acetates publishing demos and radio and television transcriptions recorded during Mimi Roman's career. Mimi's story like her voice is remarkable. — Joe Hopkins (music historian) - - First Of The Brooklyn Cowgirls almost exclusively features unissued material. The double LP is sourced from one of a kind reels and acetates taken from Mimi’s personal collection. These tracks are almost as rare as a Jewish