Showing posts with label Waylon Jennings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waylon Jennings. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Anita Carter~ "All My Trials"





Uploaded on Dec 12, 2007
 Anita Carter recorded this traditional folk song in 1962. Anita was known as "The Appalachian Angel" and this tribute to her is a reminder to all of us that she truly possessed the voice of an angel.

Here's a bit of info from Wikipedia about this song:

"All My Trials" was an important folk song during the social protest movements of the 1950s and 1960s. It is based on a Bahamian lullaby that tells the story of a mother on her death bed, comforting her children, "Hush little baby, don't you cry./You know your mama's bound to die," because, as she explains, "All my trials, Lord,/Soon be over." 

The message - that no matter how bleak the situation seemed, the struggle would "soon be over" - propelled the song to the status of an anthem, recorded by many of the leading artists of the era.

The song is usually classified as a Spiritual because of its biblical and religious imagery.


Ina Anita Carter (March 31, 1933 – July 29, 1999), the youngest daughter of Ezra and Mother Maybelle Carter, was a versatile American singer who experimented with several different types of music and played upright bass with her sisters Helen Carter and June Carter Cash as The Carter Sisters.

The trio joined the Grand Ole Opry radio show in 1950 (Anita was 17 years old at the time), opened shows for Elvis Presley, and joined The Johnny Cash Show in 1971. 

As a solo artist, and with her family, Carter recorded for a number of labels including RCA Victor, Cadence, Columbia, Audiograph, United Artists, Liberty and Capitol.


Anita Carter
Anita Carter.jpg
Background information
Birth name Ina Anita Carter
Born March 31, 1933
Maces Spring, Virginia
Died July 29, 1999 (aged 66)
Hendersonville, Tennessee
Genres country, folk
Occupations singer-songwriter
Instruments Bass, vocals
Labels RCA Victor, Cadence, Columbia, Audiograph, United Artists, Liberty, Capitol
Associated acts Carter Family
The Carter Sisters
Johnny Cash
Hank Snow
Waylon Jennings

 

Biography

Born in Maces Spring, Virginia, she scored two Top Ten hits in 1951 with "Down The Trail of Achin' Hearts" with Hank Snow at No. 2 and "Blue Bird Island" at No. 4

She reached the Top Ten again in 1968 with "I Got You" with Waylon Jennings at No. 4

Other solo releases charted as well. Carter recorded two folk albums in the 1960s. In 1962, she recorded a song co-written by her sister June and Merle Kilgore called "Love's Ring Of Fire".

After hearing the record, her future brother-in-law, Johnny Cash, reportedly dreamed of hearing Mexican horns on the record and told Anita that if her song did not hit in five or six months he would record it "the way I feel about it." 

After the song failed to make the charts, Cash recorded it as "Ring Of Fire" in March 1963 with the horns and the Carter Sisters (along with Mother Maybelle). 

The revised song went on to gain wide international popularity and became one of the biggest hits of his career. She appears in a video clip, currently on YouTube, in a duet with Hank Williams, of his song 'I Can't Help It'.

 Marriages


Carter married fiddler Dale Potter in 1950 (they later divorced), session musician Don Davis in 1953 (divorced and then re-married), and Bob Wootton (lead guitarist for Johnny Cash's band The Tennessee Three) in 1974 (divorced). She had two children, Lorrie Frances and Jay Davis.

Death

Carter suffered from rheumatoid arthritis for many years, and the drugs used to treat it severely damaged her pancreas, kidneys, and liver.

She died on July 29, 1999, at the age of 66,[1] a year after eldest sister Helen and four years before middle sister June. 

She was under hospice care at the home of Johnny and June Carter Cash in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

Source:Wikipedia


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Donnie/ Sinbad the Sailor Man

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Buddy Holly~ "Everyday" excerpt [The Day That The Music Died]


Charles Hardin Holley (September 7, 1936 – February 3, 1959), known professionally as Buddy Holly, was an American singer-songwriter and a pioneer of rock and roll.

Although his success lasted only a year and a half before his death in an airplane crash, Holly is described by critic Bruce Eder as "the single most influential creative force in early rock and roll."[1]

His works and innovations inspired and influenced contemporary and later musicians, notably The Beatles, Elvis Costello, The Rolling Stones, Don McLean, Bob Dylan, and Eric Clapton, and exerted a profound influence on popular music.[2]

Holly was among the first group of inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986.[3]

In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked Holly #13 among "The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time".[4]

Biography

Buddy Holly

Buddy Holly in 1957
Background information
Birth name Charles Hardin Holley
Born September 7, 1936
Lubbock, Texas, U.S.
Died February 3, 1959 (aged 22)
Grant Township, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa, U.S.
Genres Rock and roll, rockabilly, Lubbock sound
Occupations Singer-songwriter, musician
Instruments Vocals, guitar, piano, violin
Years active 1955–1959
Labels Decca, Brunswick, Coral
Associated acts The Crickets, The Picks
Notable instruments
Fender Stratocaster

Early life

Charles Hardin Holley was born on September 7, 1936, in Lubbock, Texas, to Lawrence Odell and Ella Pauline (Drake) Holley.

In Philip Norman's biography it is stated that his mother's family claimed to be descended from the English navigator Francis Drake.

Holly was always called "Buddy" by his family.

Buddy was the youngest of three siblings, and brothers Larry and Travis taught him to play a variety of instruments, including the guitar, four-string banjo and lap steel guitar.

At the age of five, his young voice and exuberance won him a talent contest singing a then-popular song, "Have You Ever Gone Sailing (Down the River of Memories)."[5]

 In 1949, still retaining his soprano, he recorded a bluesy solo rendering of Hank Snow's "My Two Timin' Woman" on a wire recorder borrowed by a friend who worked in a music shop.[6]

In 1952, he met Bob Montgomery at Hutchinson Junior High School.

They shared an interest in music, and teamed up as "Buddy and Bob".

Initially influenced by bluegrass, they sang harmony duets at local clubs and high school talent shows.

The duo performed on a local radio station KDAV Sunday broadcast that made them a top local act.

Hutchinson Junior High School now has a mural honoring Holly, and Lubbock High School, where he sang in the school choir, also honors the late musician.[7]

Death

Holly was offered a spot in the Winter Dance Party, a three-week tour across the Midwest opening on January 23, 1959, by the GAC agency,[citation needed] with other notable performers such as Dion and the Belmonts, Ritchie Valens, and J. P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson.

He assembled a backing band consisting of Tommy Allsup (guitar), Waylon Jennings (bass) and Carl Bunch (drums), and billed them as The Crickets.[citation needed]

Following a performance at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa, on February 2, 1959, Holly chartered a small airplane to take him to the next stop on the tour.

Holly, Valens, Richardson and the pilot were killed en route to Moorhead, Minnesota, when their plane crashed soon after taking off from nearby Mason City in the early morning hours of February 3.[21]

There was a snowstorm, and the pilot was not qualified to fly by instruments only. Bandmate Waylon Jennings had given up his seat on the plane, causing Holly to jokingly tell Jennings, "I hope your ol' bus freezes up!"

Jennings shot back facetiously, "Well, I hope your ol' plane crashes!"

It was a statement that would haunt Jennings for decades.[22]

"Although the plane came down only five miles northwest of the airport, no one saw or heard the crash", wrote rock performer, archivist and music historian, Harry Hepcat, in his article about Buddy Holly.

"The bodies lay in the blowing snow through the night...... February indeed made us shiver, but it was more than the cold of February that third day of the month in 1959.

It was the shiver of a greater, sometimes senseless, reality invading our sheltered, partying, teenaged life of the 50s."[23]

Holly's funeral was held on February 7, 1959, at the Tabernacle Baptist Church in Lubbock.[24]

The service was officiated by Ben D. Johnson, who had presided at the Hollys' wedding just months earlier. The pallbearers were Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin, Niki Sullivan, Bob Montgomery, Sonny Curtis and Phil Everly.[25]

Waylon Jennings was unable to attend due to his commitment to the still-touring Winter Dance Party. Holly's body was interred in the City of Lubbock Cemetery in the eastern part of the city.

His headstone carries the correct spelling of his surname (Holley) and a carving of his Fender Stratocaster guitar.

Holly's pregnant wife, a widow after barely six months of marriage, miscarried soon after, ending that part of the Holly family tree.

The miscarriage was reportedly due to “psychological trauma”.[26]

Because of this incident, authorities found it necessary, in the months following, to implement a policy against announcing victims’ names until after families had first been informed.[26]

María Elena Holly did not attend the funeral, and has never visited the gravesite.

She later told the Avalanche-Journal:
In a way, I blame myself. I was not feeling well when he left. I was two weeks pregnant, and I wanted Buddy to stay with me, but he had scheduled that tour. It was the only time I wasn't with him. And I blame myself because I know that, if only I had gone along, Buddy never would have gotten into that airplane.[19]
The first song to commemorate the musicians was “Three Stars” by Eddie Cochran.

This song was recorded just one day after the disaster occurred.[26]

Twelve years later, in 1971, Don McLean released his single, "American Pie”, to commemorate Buddy Holly’s death and further accentuate the loss of the United States’ innocence.[26]

Don McLean’s song began the reference to the tragedy as "The Day the Music Died".



Holly's headstone in the City of Lubbock Cemetery

 Source: Wikipedia.org

Much more info at Wikipedia on Holly and the day that the Music died.

 


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