Saturday, April 25, 2020

R.I.P. Harold Reid, You will be missed

Harold Reid, whose bass voice, songwriting, and gift for humor distinguished his long career as a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame vocal group the Statler Brothers, died at his home in Staunton, Virginia, Friday evening after a lengthy battle with kidney failure, according to Reid’s bandmate Jimmy Fortune. He was 80.
Fortune posted a message on Facebook that read in part, “Our hearts are broken tonight. Our prayers and our thoughts are with [Reid’s wife] Brenda and his children and grandchildren and with my other brothers, Don and Phil. We made a lot of great memories together. I’ll miss you, brother, till I see you again.”
Reid, who with his younger brother Don and fellow Statler Brothers Phil Balsley and Lew DeWitt (neither of whom were related), achieved Top Five country-pop crossover success in 1965 with the Grammy-winning single “Flowers on the Wall.” The group appeared regularly on the ABC music series The Johnny Cash Show from 1969 to 1971, and also toured the world with Cash. From 1972 to 1977, they earned six consecutive CMA Vocal Group of the Year trophies, and went on to win that award three additional times. From 1965 through 1989, the Statlers reached the Billboard Top Ten with 32 hits, four of which went Number One.
Although “Flowers on the Wall,” penned by DeWitt, would stall at Number Two on the country chart, it gained additional interest through a contemporary cover by Nancy Sinatra, a Top Ten country hit by Eric Heatherly in 2000, and through the use of the group’s 1975 re-recording featured in Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 film Pulp Fiction. Tarantino credited the song’s inclusion in the movie (Bruce Willis’s character sings along to it while driving) as the idea of music supervisor Karyn Rachtman. “Karyn just kept giving me different tapes, and for every five new songs she’d put an old song on there,” the director said in 1994. “I [mentioned] it to Bruce, [and he said] ‘Oh god, I love it.’”
Harold Reid was born in Augusta County, Virginia, on August 21, 1939. In 1955, under the name the Four Star Quartet, he, DeWitt, Balsley, and Joe McDorman began singing gospel music. The group changed their name to the Kingsmen in 1958, and by 1962, McDorman had been replaced by Reid’s brother Don. To avoid confusion with other groups called the Kingsmen, they settled on a new moniker — the Statler Brothers, taking the name from a brand of tissues.
Introducing himself to Johnny Cash at a show in Roanoke in 1963, Reid and the group were hired by Cash two days later and with his help secured a deal with Columbia Records. “Flowers on the Wall” brought with it a flurry of TV appearances, commercial endorsements, and a second 1965 Grammy as Best New Country and Western Artist. By 1969, unable to sustain their hit-single momentum, they left Columbia for Mercury Records. With producer Jerry Kennedy at the helm, the group enjoyed a string of hits including “Bed of Rose’s,” (written by Reid), the nostalgic “Do You Remember These,” and “The Class of ’57.” The group’s, and in particular Reid’s, comedy skills were in full force on the 1974 LP Alive at the Johnny Mack Brown High School, which credits them as “Lester ‘Roadhog’ Moran and the Cadillac Cowboys.”
Following Dewitt’s departure in 1982, the Statler Brothers continued to tour and in 1991 began a regular Saturday night Fifties-inspired variety series on The Nashville Network, which ran through 1997. Their Independence Day celebration in Staunton, Virginia, began in 1970 and was an annual event in their hometown for the next quarter-century. After 38 years on the road, the Statler Brothers retired in 2002. They were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008.


Sunday, April 19, 2020

Did you know in

1962
Decca Records released Patsy Cline's second EP of the year - "She's Got You" which contained two new songs: the title track (written by Hank Cochran), and "Strange" which was written by Fred Burch and Mel Tillis.

1965
Roger Miller was at #1 on the US Country charts with "King Of The Road." The song has been covered by many other artists, including George Jones, Dean Martin, Boxcar Willie, Randy Travis, the Statler Brothers, Rufus Wainwright & Teddy Thompson, The Proclaimers and Jerry Lee Lewis.

Friday, April 17, 2020

On This day in Country Music

1961
Marty Robbins was on top of the charts with Don't Worry About me

1970
Jim Reeves was at #1 on the Country singles chart with "He'll Have to Go".

1970
Johnny Cash played at the White House with June Carter and The Statler Brothers for President Nixon, who requested that he played "A Boy Named Sue."

1976
Eddie Rabbitt scored his first #1 country single with "Drinkin' My Baby (Off My Mind).



Wednesday, April 15, 2020

On this day

1933
Born on this day in Meherrin, Virginia, was Roy Clark, musician and performer best known for hosting Hee Haw, a nationally televised country variety show, from 1969-1992. Clark who scored the 1973 country #1 hit "Come Live with Me", also appeared in episodes of The Beverly Hillbillies as "Cousin Roy." He died on November 15th 2018 age 85. 


1959
Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two played their first show in Australia when they kicked off a tour at Melbourne Festival Hall. This was the first time Cash had appeared live outside of the US. 


1968
Dolly Parton released her second studio album Just Because I'm a Woman. The album's title track became the only single from the album. Released in June 1968 it peaked at #17 on the US Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. 


1968
Loretta Lynn released her twelfth solo studio album Fist City which became Lynn's second album to top the Country chart. The first single from the album, "What Kind of a Girl (Do You Think I Am)" was released in August 1967 and peaked at #5 on the US Hot Country Singles chart. The second single, "Fist City", was released in January 1968 and peaked at #1 on the chart, making it Lynn's second #1 hit. 


1977
Kenny Rogers was at #1 on the country charts with "Lucille". Written by Roger Bowling and Hal Bynum, the song is about a man who acquaints himself with a downhearted married woman named Lucille. An inebriated Lucille admits her unhappiness in life and a longing for adventure. An international hit, it reached #1 on the Billboard Country Singles chart and #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 and reached the top of the UK singles chart in June 1977. 



Tuesday, April 14, 2020

HAPPY 88TH BIRTHDAY LORETTA LYNN

On April 14, 1932, country music icon Loretta Lynn was born in Butcher Holler, Kentucky. You can celebrate the occasion by ordering a copy of the great lady’s new book — Me & Patsy Kickin’ Up Dust (Grand Central Publishing), a celebration of her friendship with the late, great Patsy Cline — and listening to Lynn’s new recording of a Cline classic, “I Fall to Pieces.” And then you can top off the day by streaming the 1980 biographical film Coal Miner’s Daughter.

Although she knew Cline for just two years before the legendary performer’s tragic death in 1963, Lynn continues to gratefully acknowledge her as equal parts influential mentor, surrogate older sibling, and soul-mate confidant. “I met her, and it was just like she was my sister,” Lynn told the New York Post earlier this month.  “It was like we’d been together forever.”


The Real Country Music Jukebox

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There you will find the traditional artist of yesteryear and be able to read their bio and listen to some of their best songs. We also have merchandise there for you to show your support and pride for your favorite artist. Be sure to bookmark the page as it will always be growing. Be sure to check out the video tab, there you can watch videos that have many of the great classic songs we grew up on.