Showing posts with label Country Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Country Music. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Eddy Arnold~ "Make The World Go Away"



Richard Edward "Eddy" Arnold (May 15, 1918 – May 8, 2008) was an American country music singer who performed for six decades.

He was a so-called Nashville sound (country/popular music) innovator of the late 1950s, and scored 147 songs on the Billboard country music charts, second only to George Jones.

He sold more than 85 million records. A member of the Grand Ole Opry (beginning 1943) and the Country Music Hall of Fame (beginning 1966), Arnold ranked 22nd on Country Music Television's 2003 list of "The 40 Greatest Men of Country Music."


Eddy Arnold
Eddie Arnold 1969.JPG
Arnold in 1969.
Background information
Birth name Richard Edward Arnold
Also known as The Tennessee Plowboy
Born May 15, 1918
Origin Henderson, Tennessee, United States
Died May 8, 2008 (aged 89)
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Genres country music, gospel music, pop music
Occupation(s) singer, songwriter, TV host, actor
Instruments guitar, banjo
Years active 1937–1998; 2005
Labels RCA Victor (1944–1972; 1976–2008)
MGM Records (1973–1976)

 

 

Early years

Arnold was born on May 15, 1918 on a farm near Henderson, Tennessee.

His father, a sharecropper, played the fiddle, while his mother played guitar.

As a boy Arnold helped on the farm, which later gained him his nickname—the Tennessee Plowboy.

Arnold attended Pinson High School in Pinson, Tennessee, where he played guitar for school functions and events.

He quit before graduation to help with the farm work, but continued performing, often arriving on a mule with his guitar hung on his back. Arnold also worked part-time as an assistant at a mortuary.[1]



Downtown Henderson, Tennessee, the city near which Arnold was born.
In 1934 at age 16, Arnold debuted musically on WTJS-AM in Jackson, Tennessee and obtained a job there during 1937.

He performed at local nightclubs and was a permanent performer for the station. During 1938, he was hired by WMPS-AM in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was one of its most popular performers.

He soon quit for KWK-AM in St. Louis, Missouri,[2] followed by a brief stint at WHAS-AM in Louisville, Kentucky.

He performed for WSM-AM on the Grand Ole Opry during 1943 as a solo artist.[1]

In 1944, Arnold signed a contract with RCA Victor, with manager Colonel Tom Parker, who later managed Elvis Presley.

Arnold's first single was little noticed,[3] but the next, "Each Minute Seems a Million Years", scored No. 5 on the country charts during 1945.[1]

Its success began a decade of unprecedented chart performance; Arnold's next 57 singles all scored the Top Ten, including 19 number one scoring successes.[4]

In 1946, Arnold scored his first major success with "That's How Much I Love You".

In 1948, he had five successful songs on the charts simultaneously. That year he had nine songs score the top 10; five of these scored No. 1 and scored No. 1 for 40 of the year's 52 weeks. With Parker's management, Arnold continued to dominate, with 13 of the 20 best-scoring country music songs of 1947–1948.[1]

He became the host of Mutual Radio's Purina-sponsored segment of the Opry and of Mutual’s Checkerboard Jamboree, a midday program shared with Ernest Tubb that was broadcast from a Nashville theater.[5]

Recorded radio programs increased Arnold’s popularity, as did the CBS Radio series Hometown Reunion with the Duke of Paducah.

Arnold quit the Opry during 1948, and his Hometown Reunion briefly broadcast in competition with the Opry on Saturday nights. In 1949 and 1950, he performed in the Columbia movies Feudin’ Rhythm and Hoedown.

Arnold began working for television in the early 1950s, hosting The Eddy Arnold Show. The summer program was broadcast successively by all three television networks, replacing the Perry Como and Dinah Shore programs.[6]

He also performed as a guest and a guest host on the ABC-TV show Ozark Jubilee from 1955–60.[7] Arnold featured in the syndicated Eddy Arnold Time from 1955 to 1957.[2] From 1960 to 1961, he hosted NBC-TV's Today on the Farm.[8]

In 1955 he asked songwriter Cindy Walker to write a song for him based on the idea of unrequited love, with the title "You Don't Know Me". They share co-credit for writing the song.

Second career: The Nashville sound

 

With the rise of rock and roll in the 1950s, Arnold's record sales declined, though he and fellow RCA Victor recording artist Jim Reeves had a greater audience with popular-sounding string-laced arrangements.

Arnold annoyed many people of the country music establishment by recording with the Hugo Winterhalter Orchestra at RCA's studios in New York. The pop-oriented arrangements of "The Cattle Call" and "The Richest Man (in the World)", however, helped to expand his appeal beyond its country music base.[9]

This style, pioneered by Reeves and Arnold, became known as the "Nashville Sound".[9]

 During 1953, Arnold and Tom Parker had a dispute, and Arnold dismissed him. From 1954 to 1963, Arnold's performances were managed by Joe Csida; during 1964 Csida was replaced by Jerry Purcell.[10]

Arnold embarked on a second career that brought his music to a more diverse audience. In the summer of 1965, he had his first Number One country song in ten years, What's He Doing in My World and struck gold again six months later with the song that would become his most well-known Make the World Go Away accompanied by pianist Floyd Cramer on piano and featuring the Anita Kerr Singers.

As a result, Arnold's rendition became an international success.[9]

Bill Walker's orchestra arrangements provided the lush background for 16 continuous successes sung by Arnold in the late 1960s.

Arnold performed with symphony orchestras in New York City, Las Vegas and Hollywood. He performed in Carnegie Hall for two concerts, and in the Coconut Grove in Las Vegas.[9]

 During 1966, Arnold was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, the youngest performer to receive the honor.[11]

The following year Arnold was voted the first-ever awarded Country Music Association's Entertainer Of The Year.[12]
Two years later, Arnold released an autobiography named It's A Long Way From Chester County.[13]

Having been with RCA Victor since 1944, Arnold left the label in 1973 for MGM Records, where he recorded four albums, which included several top 40 successes. He returned to RCA in 1976.[1]

Later years and death

 

During the 1980s, Arnold declared himself semi-retired; however, he continued recording. In 1984, the Academy of Country Music awarded Arnold its Pioneer Award. His next album, You Don't Miss A Thing wasn't released until 1991.[1]

Arnold performed road tours for several more years.[14]

By 1992, he had sold nearly 85 million records, and had a total of 145 weeks of No. 1 songs, more than any other singer.[1]

In 1996, RCA issued an album of Arnold's main successes since 1944 as part of its 'Essential' series.[1]

Arnold, then 76 years old, retired from active singing, though he still performed occasionally.[9]

On May 16, 1998, the day after his 80th birthday, he announced his final retirement during a concert at the Hotel Orleans in Las Vegas.[15]

That same year, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences inducted the recording of "Make The World Go Away" into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

In 2000, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts.[16]

In 2005, Arnold received a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy,[17] and later that year, released a final album for RCA entitled After All These Years.[18]

Arnold died from natural causes on May 8, 2008 in a nursing home in Nashville, exactly one week before his 90th birthday.

His wife of 66 years, Sally Gayhart Arnold, had preceded him in death by two months.

They were survived by two children (Richard E. Arnold, Jr., and JoAnn Arnold Pollard), two grandchildren (K. Michelle Pollard and R. Shannon Pollard, Jr.), and four great-grandchildren (Katie E. Pollard, Sophie Pollard, Rowan Pollard and Ben Johns).[19]

On May 31, 2008, RCA released "To Life", as a single from the album After All These Years.

It debuted at No. 49 on the Hot Country Songs charts, Arnold's first entry in 25 years and the recording by the oldest person to chart in Billboard magazine.

It set the record for the longest span between a first chart single and a last: 62 years and 11 months ("Each Minute Seems Like a Million Years" debuted on June 30, 1945), and extended Arnold's career chart history to seven decades.[20]

Source: Wikipedia.org


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Sunday, March 22, 2015

Charley Pride~ "A Mansion on the Hill"



Charley Frank Pride (born March 18, 1938) is an American country music singer, musician/guitarist, recording artist, performer, and business owner.

His greatest musical success came in the early to mid-1970s when he became the best-selling performer for RCA Records since Elvis Presley.[2] In total, he has garnered 39 No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts.

Pride is one of the few African-Americans to have had considerable success in the country music industry and one of only three African-Americans to have been inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
In 2010, Pride became a special investor and minority owner of the Texas Rangers Major League Baseball club.[3]



Charley Pride
Charley-Pride 1981.JPEG
Pride performing at the Capital Centre on the 1981 Inauguration Day
Background information
Birth name Charley Frank Pride
Born March 18, 1938 (age 77)[1]
Sledge, Mississippi, US
Genres Country music
Occupation(s) Singer, musician, recording artist, performer, business owner
Instruments Voice, guitar
Years active 1966‒present
Labels RCA
16th Avenue
Music City
Website charleypride.com





Early life and career

Pride was born in Sledge, Mississippi, one of eleven children of poor sharecroppers. His father intended to name him Charl Frank Pride, but owing to a clerical error on his birth certificate, his legal name is Charley Frank Pride.[4]

In his early teens, Pride began playing guitar. Though he also loved music, one of Pride's lifelong dreams was to become a professional baseball player. In 1952, he pitched for the Memphis Red Sox of the Negro American League.

He pitched well, and in 1953, he signed a contract with the Boise Yankees, the Class C farm team of the New York Yankees.

During that season, an injury caused him to lose the "mustard" on his fastball, and he was sent to the Yankees' Class D team in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.

Later that season, while in the Negro leagues with the Louisville Clippers, he and another player (Jesse Mitchell) were traded to the Birmingham Black Barons for a team bus. "Jesse and I may have the distinction of being the only players in history to be traded for a used motor vehicle," Pride mused in his 1994 autobiography.[5]

He pitched for several other minor league teams, his hopes of making it to the big leagues still alive, but the Army derailed this.

After serving two years in the military, he tried to return to baseball.[5] Though hindered by an injury to his throwing arm, Pride briefly played for the Missoula Timberjacks of the Pioneer League (a farm club of the Cincinnati Reds) in 1960,[6] and had tryouts with the California Angels (1961) and the New York Mets (1962) organizations, but was not picked up by either team.

 He worked construction in Helena, Montana during this time.[6][7] When it became apparent that he was not destined for greatness on the baseball diamond, Pride pursued a music career.[5]

On June 5, 2008, Pride and his brother Mack "The Knife" Pride and 28 other living former Negro league players were "drafted" by each of the 30 Major League Baseball teams in a recognition of the on-field achievements and historical relevance of 30 mostly-forgotten Negro-league stars. Pride was picked by the Texas Rangers, with whom he has had a long affiliation, and the Colorado Rockies took his brother.[8][9]


Rise to music fame

While he was active in baseball, Pride had been encouraged to join the music business by country stars such as Red Sovine and Red Foley, and was working towards this career. In 1958, in Memphis, Tennessee, Pride visited Sun Studios and recorded some songs.[10]

 One song has survived on tape, and was released in the United Kingdom as part of a box set. The song is a slow stroll in walking tempo called "Walkin' (the Stroll)."[11]

Nashville manager and agent Jack D. Johnson signed Pride and landed him a contract with a record label, and he caught the ear of record producer Chet Atkins.

Atkins was the longtime producer at RCA Victor who had made stars out of country singers such as Jim Reeves, Skeeter Davis and others. Pride was signed to RCA in 1965. In January 1966, he released his first single with RCA, "The Snakes Crawl at Night", which did not chart.

On the records of this song submitted to radio stations for airplay, the singer was listed as "Country Charley Pride". At this time, country music was a white medium. Jack made sure that there were no pictures of Pride distributed for the first two years of his career, in order to avoid the effects of Jim Crowism.

Soon after the release of "The Snakes Crawl at Night", Pride released another single called "Before I Met You", which also did not chart. Soon after, Pride's third single, "Just Between You and Me", was released. This song was the one that finally brought Pride success on the Country charts.

The song reached No. 9 on US Country chart.

Height of his career


The success of "Just Between You and Me" was enormous. He was nominated for a Grammy Award for the song the next year.

In 1967, he became the first black performer to appear at the Grand Ole Opry since harmonica player DeFord Bailey,[12] who was a regular cast member of the Opry from 1925 through 1941, and made a final appearance in 1974.[13]

Pride also appeared in 1967 on the American Broadcasting Company's "The Lawrence Welk Show".[14]

Between 1969 and 1971, Pride had eight single records that simultaneously reached No. 1 on the US Country Hit Parade and also charted on the Billboard Hot 100:

"All I Have to Offer You (Is Me)", "(I'm So) Afraid of Losing You Again", "I Can't Believe That You've Stopped Loving Me", "I'd Rather Love You", "Is Anybody Goin' to San Antone", "Wonder Could I Live There Anymore?", "I'm Just Me", and "Kiss an Angel Good Mornin'".

The pop success of these songs reflected the country/pop crossover sound that was reaching Country music in the 1960s and early 1970s, known as "Countrypolitan".

In 1969 his compilation album, The Best of Charley Pride sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[15]

Pride sang the Paul Newman directed film Sometimes a Great Notion's main soundtrack song "All His Children" in 1970.[16]

The film starred Newman and Henry Fonda and received two Oscar nominations in 1972, one being for the song that Pride sang.[17]

 

Personal life


Pride met his wife Rozene while he was playing baseball in the southern states. They married in 1956 and have two sons, Kraig and Dion, and a daughter, Angela.
 hey currently reside in Dallas, Texas.[21] Kraig now goes by the name Carlton and has somewhat followed in his father's footsteps as a performing artist. His band, Carlton Pride and Zion started in San Marcos, Texas in 1995 and they perform a variety of reggae, funk, and soul music throughout the United States.

Dion Pride played lead guitar for his father, and entertained troops on USO tours in Panama, Honduras, Guantanamo Bay and the island of Antigua. Dion Pride co-wrote a song on Charley Pride's 2010 album "Choices" titled "I Miss My Home".

In 1994 Pride co-wrote (with Jim Henderson) his autobiography, Pride: The Charley Pride Story.[25] In this book he reveals that he has struggled for years with manic depression.

Pride had a tumor removed from his right vocal cord in 1997 at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. He returned to the site in February 2009 for a routine checkup and surprised the Arkansas Senate with an unplanned performance of five songs.

He was joined by Governor Mike Beebe during the show.[26] Pride is an avid fan and part owner[27] of the Texas Rangers. He sang the national anthem before game 5 of the 2010 World Series, played between the Texas Rangers and San Francisco Giants.[28]

Pride sang the national anthem before game 2 of the 2011 ALCS between the Detroit Tigers & Texas Rangers.

On January 20, 2014 he sang the national anthem and performed at halftime for the Memphis Grizzlies who hosted their 12th Annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration Day. He also, was interviewed during a break in the game that was televised nationally on NBA TV & SportSouth.

Source: Wikipedia.org

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

Johnny Paycheck~ "She's All I Got"



Johnny Paycheck~ "She's All I Got"

 

Johnny Paycheck was the stage name of Donald Eugene Lytle (May 31, 1938 – February 19, 2003), a country music singer and Grand Ole Opry member most famous for recording the David Allan Coe song "Take This Job and Shove It". 

He achieved his greatest success in the 1970s as a major force in country music's "Outlaw Movement" popularized by artists such as David Allan Coe, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Billy Joe Shaver and Merle Haggard.

In the 1980s, his music career suffered from his problems with drugs, alcohol, and legal difficulties.

He served a prison sentence in the early 1990s but his declining health effectively ended his career in early 2000.
 
Johnny Paycheck

From left to right Johnny Lee, Johnny Paycheck and Mickey Gilley at Gilley's Nightclub.
Background information
Birth name Donald Eugene Lytle
Born May 31, 1938
Origin Greenfield, Ohio, USA
Died February 19, 2003 (aged 64)
Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Genres Country Music
Outlaw Country
Honky tonk
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocalist
Electric Guitar
Acoustic Guitar
Bass Guitar
Steel Guitar
Years active 19532003
Labels Sony
Website www.johnnypaycheckmusic.com

Early career

 Born in Greenfield, Ohio, Donald Lytle was playing in talent contests by the age of 9 years old.

He took a job with country music legend George Jones for whom he played bass and steel guitar.

He later co-wrote Jones' hit song "Once You've Had the Best."

PayCheck was a tenor harmony singer with numerous hard country performers in the late 1950s and early 1960s including Ray Price.

Lytle, along with Willie Nelson, worked in Price's band the Cherokee Cowboys.

He is featured as a tenor singer on recordings by Faron Young, Roger Miller, and Skeets McDonald.[citation needed]

All of these recordings are recognizable by their honky tonk purism.

The recordings shun vocal choruses and strings that became known as the "Countrypolitan" sound in favor of steel guitar, twin fiddles, shuffle beats, high harmony and self-consciously miserable lyrics.

As George Jones' tenor singer, PayCheck has been credited with the development of Jones' unique vocal phrasing.[citation needed]

In 1960, he reached Top 35 status in Cashbox magazine's country charts as Donny Young with the tune "Miracle Of Love".

From the early to mid-1960s, he also enjoyed some success as a songwriter for others, with his biggest songwriting hit being "Apartment No. 9", which served as Tammy Wynette's first chart hit in December 1966.

 Johnny Paycheck

In 1964, he changed his name legally to Johnny Paycheck, taking the name from Johnny Paychek, a top ranked boxer from Chicago who once fought Joe Louis for the heavyweight title.[1]

(The name was often seen as a pun on the name of the popular country singer Johnny Cash.)

 He first charted under his new name with "A-11" in 1965.

His best-selling single from this period was "She's All I Got" which reached No. 2 on the U.S. country singles charts in 1971 and made it onto the Billboard Hot 100.

His "Mr. Lovemaker" also reached No. 2 on the U.S. country singles chart in 1973.

But with the popularity of Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings in the mid 1970s, Paycheck changed his image to that of outlaw, where he was to have his largest financial success.

It was his producer Bill Sherrill who helped revive his career by significantly changing his sound and image.

Sherrill was best known for carefully choreographing his records and infusing them with considerable pop feel.

The Paycheck records were clearly based on Sherrill's take on the bands backing Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson on records.

"Colorado Kool-Aid", "Me and the IRS", "Friend, Lover, Wife", "Slide Off of Your Satin Sheets", and "I'm the Only Hell (Mama Ever Raised)" were hits for Paycheck during this period.

He received a Academy of Country Music Career Achievement award in 1977.

To me, an outlaw is a man that did things his own way,
whether you liked him or not. I did things my own way."
—Johnny Paycheck[citation needed]



 Later life and death

 

In 1981 he appeared on the television show, The Dukes of Hazzard, as himself.[2]

 The scene had him playing "Take This Job and Shove It" and arguing with Boss Hogg when the sheriff tried to give him a citation over the content of the song.

In December 1985, Paycheck was convicted and sentenced to 7 years in jail for shooting a man at the North High Lounge in Hillsboro, Ohio after he fired a .22 pistol, grazing the man's head with a bullet.

Paycheck claimed the act was self-defense.

After several years spent fighting the sentence, in 1989 he began his sentence, spending 22 months in prison before he was pardoned by the Governor of Ohio, Richard Celeste.[3]

I heard from fans constantly throughout the entire two years. The letters never stopped, from throughout the world. I looked forward to mail call every day.

The most successful of his later singles, released during his appeal, was "Old Violin" which reached # 21 on the country chart in 1986.

His last album to chart was "Modern Times" in 1987.

He continued to release albums, the last of which, Remembering appeared in 2002.

In 1990, he filed for bankruptcy after tax problems with the IRS.[citation needed]

Although Paycheck suffered from drug and alcohol addiction during his career, he later was said to have "put his life in order" [4] after his prison stay.

 He continued to perform and tour until the late 1990s.

After the year 2000 his health would only allow for short appearances. Suffering from emphysema and asthma after a lengthy illness, Paycheck died at Nashville's Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 2003.

His funeral was paid for by good friend and music legend George Jones.[citation needed]

He was buried in Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Nashville and survived by his wife Sharon and son Jonathan.

His brother Bud Lytle died from cancer in the mid 1990s in Ohio.[citation needed]

His brother Jeffrey L. Lytle was killed in a car crash on Ohio State Route 73 near Hillsboro, Ohio on April 1, 2009.[5]

 

Source: Wikipedia.org



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