Updates

- Added several releases to the Universal Artists discography as part of the Humming Bees post. - Added a discography on the Gene Mooney post.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Truman Lankford on Stockyard

Truman Lankford - Every Road Leads to Texas (Stockyard SR 102), ca. 1982

Truman Lankford was a longtime performer, from the 1960s until the 1980s and probably has traveled many highways through Arkansas, Missouri, Louisiana, and Texas. He played every roadhouse and honky tonk among those roads but in the end, never found the recognition that this talented singer deserved.

Truman McCoy Lankford was born on November 15, 1929, in Gentry, located in the northwestern corner of Arkansas near the growing metropolis of Bentovnville/Rogers/Fayetteville. By 1948, Lankford had married Elsie Jean "Jeanne" Montgomery and the couple had at least one daughter. Lankford served in the US Army during the Korean War.

Lankford was probably active as a musician before the mid 1960s but he did not record until 1965, when he was already 36 years old. He came to the attention of Skipper Records, founded the same year by Si Siman (who also co-owned Earl Barton Music with Ralph Foster and John B. Mahaffey) in Springfield, Missouri. Produced by M.A. Box, Lankford recorded the snotty country rocker "Arkansas Man" plus "Here-Comes-Heaven-Again" and both found release on Skipper #828S-1241 in 1965.

He had another three releases on local labels during the mid to late 1960s, including "Freightliner Fever" b/w "Watch Me" on the Big Orange label (#651) in 1968, which eventually became his claim to fame.Written by Lankford and L. D. Allen, "Freightliner Fever" was covered in 1970 by Red Sovine for Starday. It entered Billboard's Hot Country Songs in July that year and peaked at #54. Thought not a major hit, it became a minor classic among trucker country artists and was further covered by artists like Dave Dudley and Boxcar Willie. It also meant some welcomed income from the royalties for Lankford.

Lankford moved into a mainstream trucker country style himself in the 1970s and was a cast member of the 70s edition of the Louisiana Hayride. He continued to release singles on small labels well into the 1980s and had one of his few album releases in the late 1970s or early 1980s, "True Man" on the Louisiana Hayride label. He also appeared in the independent movie "Cody" in 1977, which was filmed in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

Today's selection came from one of his early 1980s recordings that were released on the Stockyard label around 1982. The disc featured "Belly Up" and "Every Road Leads to Texas". While the A side was in a more 80s contemporary country style, "Every Road Leads to Texas" was a throwback to the old western swing days. Fiddle and steel guitar both take nice solos and Lankford supplies good, deep voiced vocals. Of course, it did not become a hit as country audiences had set their minds on other styles.

It seems this was Lankford's last release. He passed away November 17, 1987, at the age of 58 years. He is buried at Friendship Cemetery in Cale, Nevada County, Southwest Arkansas.

 Sources
Find a Grave entry
45cat entry
Discogs
SecondHandSongs
Internet Movie Database: Cody
Praguefrank's Country Music Discographies entry
Garage Hangover: Skipper Records history
Locals Only
Red Sovine - Freight Liner Fever 45cat entry

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Jim Owens on Shock


Jim Owens - Two Shadows (Shock 1005), ca. 1972

Here were have a well-produced, early 1970s country performance from Memphis. Owens was already on the Memphis scene by the early 1960s. He had recorded "Davey Jones Locker" for Marshall Ellis' local Erwin record label, though I couldn't determine exact release information. This song later found its way on a 1986 Ace LP "Memphis Honky Tonk Hillbilly". Around the time Owens recorded for Erwin, he was also part of Gene Williams' Cotton Town Jubilee stage show that originated from Memphis in the early 1960s and also aired over KWAM. Unfortunately, I was not able to come up with more information about Owens.

Shock Records was owned by Jerry Lee "Smoochie" Smith, who came from Jackson, Tennessee, to Memphis in the mid 1950s as part of Kenny Parchman's band. He soon found work as a pianist with different bands, venues, and recording studios. He also recorded as a solo artist during the 1960s and 1970s without much success. He set up the Shock label in the early 1970s and apart from his own releases, recorded a few local Memphis artists, including Jim Owens.

See also
Jerry Smith on Shock

Sources
Discogs

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Uncle Martin Wales

Uncle Martin Wales in the WBAY studio (Coral Gables, Florida),
ca. late 1940s or early 1950s

The First Hillbilly of Florida
The Story of "Uncle" Martin Wales

Uncle Martin Wales was one of the mainstays of Miami country music, possibly being the most enduring radio personality of the area.

Martin Smyth Wales was born on August 12, 1912, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Charles Elliot and Sarah B Wales. Wales' ancestors had been living in Minnesota since the mid 19th century. Music and performing was an early passion of young Martin Wales, as he entertained soldiers at a gathering at his family's house at the early age of six years.

By 1930, Wales had taken up singing and playing guitar professionally and set out on his own. He started his career in 1930 in Billings, Montana, where he "combined announcing with hillbilly singing" according to his obituary in the Palm Beach Post. He then spent some time in a Canadian logger camp and as a beachcomber on South Pacific islands.

In 1934, Wales spent his holidays in Miami, Florida, and liked it so much he stayed for the rest of his life. He married Vivian M. Stanton in 1938 and started appearing on Miami radio in the 1940s. In 1941, he was a performer on WKAT in Miami Beach. It was at that time that he invented the character of "Uncle Martin", singing old-time songs with a fake beard. He became station manager of WIOD but retained his show on WKAT (where he hosted the "Frosty Martin Show") and in 1947, introduced "Uncle Martin's Square Dance" on WBAY in Coral Gables. In 1951, he divorced from his first wife and married Betty M. Carson the same year.

He also made the transition to television in the early 1950s. In 1953, WITV was started in Fort Lauderdale with a country music show entitled "Sunset Ranch", hosted by Wales and Miss Molly Turner (who later became a popular newscaster in Miami). In contrast to many other early TV shows, it was not filmed in a studio but outdoor on what looked like a ranch (or, on rainy days, from a small cabin). The show featured a lot of local talent, including Eddie Thorpe, Happy Harold Thaxton, Buddy Starcher, and Elaine Rouse, among others.

By 1954, Wales had switched to radio WINZ. Like many of his fellow radio performers, Wales did not record much during his long career. One session by him is documented for King Records' DeLuxe subsidiary label, which had a Miami office headed by Henry Stone and therefore cut sessions on a couple of local performers. On January 1, 1954, Wales recorded two songs, "Sweeter Than the Flowers" and "If You Haven't Written Your Mother", which stayed unreleased, unfortunately.

Wales went out of the business in the 1960s or 1970s, after 30 years of Miami broadcasting. He passed away on March 28, 2003, in Hobe Sound, Florida, at the age of 90 years.

See also

Sources
• Donn R. Cole, Jr.: "Towers in the Sand: The History of Florida Broadcasting" (North Loop Books)
• Sales Management, Vol. 48 (Rutgers University), 1941
• "Hearings" (United States Congress), page 1145
• "Broadcasting, Telecasting", Broadcasting Publications (1947)

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Buddy Starcher

The Wandering Boy from West Virginia
The Story of Buddy Starcher in Miami


Probably nobody embodied the rambling 1930s country radio singer better than Buddy Starcher. The West Virginia native appeared on dozens of different radio stations from the late 1920s up to the 1960s. In the early to mid 1950s, Starcher was living and working in Miami, where he appeared on different radio stations and was part of the city's music scene. While we'll look on his whole career, we'll also focus on his Miami years in this post.

Early Life
Born on March 16, 1906, near Ripley, Jackson County, West Virginia, Oby Edgar Starcher was widely known as "Buddy" from an early age. Reportedly, he did not even knew his real first name until he was a young man. His family were longtime residents of the area and one of his ancestors was the founding father of Ripley. He grew up in adjacent Nicholas County and soon learned to play banjo and guitar, accompanying his father Homer Francis Starcher, who was a fiddler, at local dances.

First Steps and Wandering Years

Smiley Sutter and Buddy Starcher,
late 1930s
Starcher enjoyed his first taste of music business when he won a talent contest in Baltimore, Maryland, and won a spot on the city's WFBR station. This marked the beginning of a long career as a radio entertainer and Starcher would criss-cross the country, hopping from one radio stations to another. Frequent stints included those at WCHS in Charleston, West Virginia, where he also appeared on the Old Farm Hour, WMMN in Fairmont, West Virginia, where he started the Sagebrush Roundup, and WSVA in Harrisonburg, Virginia. Until 1937, he appeared solo on radio and personal appearances but founded a band in 1937, the Mountaineers, to enhance the act. Lee Moore and Smiley Sutter were early members of this outfit.

World War II took many of the members overseas, which broke the band up, but Starcher stayed behind and continued his career. During this time, he moved west to KXEL in Waterloo, Iowa, and KMA in Shenandoah, Iowa. By 1944, he had returned to West Virginia and started recording transcriptions the following year. This enabled him to appear on multiple stations simultaneously, a practice he would continue well into the 1950s.

1948 advertisement for Gretsch guitars
featuring Buddy Starcher
In June 1946, he married band mate Mary Ann Estes. Around the the same time, he operated his own country music park, a venue format that was popular during these years in the northern and eastern states. His popularity had grown so much that a recording contract with Bill McCall's California based 4 Star Records was the result. During his time with 4 Star, he scored one hit with his own "I'll Still Write Your Name in the Sand", reaching #8 on Billboard's Best Selling Folk Records chart. He also went into partnership with songwriter Marion Goddard to found the Dixie and Autograph record labels, on which he recorded such artists as the Franklin Brothers, Big Slim the Lone Cowboy, Rusty Gabbard, and Bobby Cook. However, Starcher and Goddard failed to built up a distribution network and the labels folded eventually.

Starcher had enjoyed a drink from the time he had appeared on barn dances with his father but during the 1930s and 1940s, he became more and more dependent on alcohol. A radio pastor took care of him and finally, in 1948, he overcame his addiction and became a newborn Christ. Though, he continued his work in radio and music business but often enriched programs and appearances with religious material and topics. In 1949, he signed with Columbia and recorded mostly sacred material but despite his popularity on air, failed to achieve another hit record.

In Miami
While he was working in Philadelphia on two stations in late 1950, a year later he had relocated to Miami Beach, Florida, where he worked as program director of WMBM and also had his own DJ show there. Also on the station at that time was the comedy duo of Salt and Peanuts, whom Starcher knew for some 20 years by then since all three of them had worked at WCHS in the early 1930s.

Starcher's continuing religious inspiration found express in the fact that he was part of a committee that organized a special service held in January 1953 by Reverend Billy Graham at Miami's Orange Bowl, which drew about 25,000 people. Until the end of 1952, Starcher could be heard over WMBM but left as the new year began and started working with WMIE.

The station was a driving force in Miami's country music scene in the 1950s and Starcher was in good company there as luminaries such as Cracker Jim Brooker, Happy Harold Thaxton, and Uncle Harve Spivey were working the same station. Although he had left Miami by March 1954 to work at WESC in Greenville, South Carolina, where he also managed the station, Starcher obviously split his time between Miami and Greenville.

In July 1954, he held a session for the DeLuxe record label, a subsidiary company of King Records from Cincinnati, Ohio. The Miami office was headed by Henry Stone, who was an influential and well-connected music business man. Stone scouted several Miami singers for the label, including Starcher. Praguefrank's Country Music Discographies lists the session for July 19, 1954, at the WMBM studio, though it seems more probable to me that the session was done at WMIE. Four songs were recorded, "String of Broken Hearts", "We Won't Be Wed", "I Was Crying Then (But You're Crying Now)", and "Don't Call No More", of which the last two saw release on DeLuxe #2025 in September 1954. It remained Starcher's only disc for the label.

By late 1954, Starcher was general manager of WLBS in Birmingham, Alabama, but was heard over different stations at that time, also including WMIE. Being the wandering boy he ever was, he had left Miami for good by May 1956 and became station manager at KCUL, Fort Worth, Texas, where he directed the station's new Cowtown Hoedown live stage show, working with such acts as Jackie Lee Cochran, the Callahan Brothers, Charlie Adams, and Frankie Miller. He would not return to Southern Florida again - at least not for radio work.

The Starday and Boone Years

In 1959, Starcher began recording for Starday Records, which had become a home for many older, traditional country musicians like him. The following year, he returned to West Virginia and started his own morning TV show on WCHS-TV in Charleston. This show lasted until 1966 and held Starcher's popularity in West Virginia and in some parts of Ohio high.

In 1961, Starcher had founded another record label, B.E.S. Records, which released a string of singles until 1965. One of those was Starcher's own "History Repeats Itself" b/w "Sniper's Hill" (B.E.S. #45-91) in 1965. The disc was successful enough that it was picked up by the bigger Boone label and it was  "History Repeats Itself," a spoken word number recounting the parallels between the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy, which finally reached #2 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs and #39 on Billboard's Hot 100. The accompanying album of the same name peaked at #37. It was Starcher's second and last big hit.

Starcher's newly found fame led to a few releases on Decca but none could repeat the success. His cover of Johnny Sea's "Day of Decision" went to #131 in June 1966. He eventually ceased recording and went into retirement in 1976 and moved to Craigsville, Nicholas County, West Virginia. Though, he remained active and partly worked as a car salesman and performed occasional reunions of old live stage show casts, like the Old Farm Hour and Sagebrush Roundup reunions.

At age 92, Starched moved to Harrisonburg, Virginia, to be in the range of medical facilities and passed away on November 2, 2001. He was inducted into the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame in 2015.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Vern Pullens

Who was Vern Pullens?
The Story of the Pearl River Country Rocker

For decades, a sketchy biography of Vern Pullens has been floating around - but do we really know his story? I guess not. His claim to fame was the rockabilly double sider "Bop Crazy Baby" b/w "It's My Life" that he recorded for the Spade label, which began his decades spanning recording career. Pullens was a country singer first and rock'n'roll only second, though he occasionally recorded rockabilly throughout the years.

Right from the start, there is some sketchiness. Adam Komorowski sums it up in his biographical sketch on Pulles for the "Classic Rockabilly" CD box: "No exact date of birth is recorded for Vern Pullens but it is likely that it was in the late '20s. Also in doubt is his place of birth, variously cited as Bogalusa, Louisiana, and Picayne, Mississippi, but it is probable that it was Picayne." The place Komorowski mentions as "Picayne" is actually Picayune, which is less than half an hour away from Bogalusa. My intense research regarding this issue hailed no evidence to proof either assumption. I found a man named Monroe Paul Pullen, who turned out not to be Vern Pullens, however. It was my fellow researcher Volker Houghton who got me on the right track. He pointed me towards the grave of I.V. Pullens, which turned out to be the man I was looking for.

It is clear that Pullens hailed from the rural region known as the Pearl River Valley, Mississippi, which is also the border region to Louisiana. He was born there on March 9, 1931. His parents, Thomas Floyd Pullens, Sr., and Sarah Jane (Henley) Pullens were children of this rural and isolated region as well. Pullens came from a large family with at least ten siblings. By 1940, when he attended the local elementary school, the family was living in rural Pearl River County. Pullens' father earned a living as a farm hand but was also known to have been a reverend and therefore, the family was likely opposed to sacred music. Growing up in a rural area, Pullens was also likely influenced by the country sounds of the day.

It is possible that Pullens served his country during the late 1940s or early 1950s but no documents that would indicate a military service could be traced down so far. By the mid 1950s, Pullens was working as a bricklayer and a performer with a local country outfit on weekends. In 1956, label owner Bennie Hess was traveling the eastern Louisiana/southwestern Mississippi regions in search of local talent to record on his new label, Spade Records. Hess, a Texas born singer, producer and promoter (mostly a self-promoter, though), had started his musical career in the late 1920s and started recording in the 1940s. Following his contract with Mercury Records (which had ended abruptly as Mercury had found out Hess bootlegged his recordings for the company on his own small label), Hess started a string of labels to produce his own records. He went into partnership with Doyle Jones to form Spade Records in the latter part of 1956 and embraced the new rockabilly sounds on the label.

Pullens and Hess possibly came in touch through B.J. Johnson, a Picayune based singer, songwriter, and DJ. Hess was impressed enough with Pullens to arrange a recording session for him in September that year at radio KTRH in Houston. Pullens traveled the approximately 200 miles from Pearl River Valley to Houston to cut not only what was his first session but also Spade's debut release. He was backed by local session men, of which only bassist Lou Fresley's name has survived. Four tracks were recorded that day: "Bop Crazy Baby", "It's My Life", "Would You Be Happy", and a raved up rockabilly version of the old standard "Mama Don't Allow No Boppin'". The first two were chosen by Hess for single release on Spade #1927 around October. It was pressed on both 45rpm and 78rpm formats.

Hess released another single on Pullens, though they headed into another direction and tried out with a traditional country style that Pullens was used to. Spade #1930 featured Pullens' "Would You Be Happy", a rockaballad from the previous session with echo, slap bass, and spicy lead guitar, and a stone-hard country weeper "It Took One Moment". Released in late 1956 or early 1957, it shared the fate of its precursor and went nowhere. A third and last single was released on Spade around May 1957, featuring two country duets with B.J. Johnson,
"What Am I to Do" and "Country Boys Dream" (#1935). It also showed that Pullens was a bit of a songwriter, too, as both songs were his originals. BMI lists a total of 38 compositions by him.

Billboard January 5, 1957

Apart from the rural stamp these recordings had, the biggest problem was the missing distribution network of Spade. Hess' only distributor was Pappy Daily of Starday, who nevertheless used his connections to rather promote his own biggest star at the time, George Jones. Speaking of Pappy Daily, he re-released "What Am I to Do" and "Country Boys Dream" on his own D record label (#1107 in the fall of 1959). This deal probably came into existence through B.J. Johnson again, who recorded for D during 1958-1959 as Byron Johnson.

However, the single failed to stimulate any greater success and it remained their only effort for the label. Pullens kept on performing in the Mississippi-Louisiana border region and in 1957, became a cast member of a local Saturday night live stage show, the Pearl River Valley Jamboree, which aired over WHXY from Bogalusa. He was lead guitarist for the show's house band and remained with the cast until 1959.

Pullens then began working with Hack Kennedy, who had founded Big Howdy Records in Bogalusa two years earlier. Two country singles appeared in the second half of 1960, including an answer song to Hank Locklin's big 1958 hit "Send Me the Pillow (That You Dream On)", written by Pullens "I Sent You the Pillow (That I Dreamed On)". Answer songs were popular in those days and at the same time, the Browns turned their version of the original into a moderate hit, so Hack Kennedy possibly took the chance to cash in on the success.

Though, a hit was not in sight for Pullens and he spent some time in Nashville, Tennessee, possibly hoping to get a better deal while being at the center of country music. He recorded a single for the independent Voice of Country label in 1968, "How Long Now" / "Just at Sundown" (Voice of Country #117) but was back at Big Howdy the next year, recording and working with both Hack Kennedy and B.J. Johnson again.

By the early 1970s, Bennie Hess had moved his operations to Nashville, too, and rockabilly music was gaining popularity among young British music lovers. This did not remained unnoticed by Hess and he reactivated his Spade label. Hess' first move was to lease "Mama Don't Allow No Boppin'", "Would You Be Happy", and "Bop Crazy Baby" to the British Injun label for release in 1972. In 1975, Pullens cut a new session for Hess that included the songs "Long Gone", "Rock On Mabel" and the first version of "You Don't Mean to Make Me Cry", all of which were issued by Spade in the UK.

Rockabilly remained popular and in the summer of 1979, Bill Kilgore approached  Pullens to make more recordings. Kilgore had a small record label in Deer Park, Texas, Rock-It Records, which specialized in rockabilly music and he arranged a session for Pullens at the birthplace of rock'n'roll, in Memphis, Tennessee. The session took place at American Sound Studio, engineered by Stan Kesler, and featured a line-up of legendary Memphis rockabilly musicians: Al Hopson on lead guitar, Jerry Lee "Smoochie" Smith on piano, Marcus Van Story on bass, and Jimmy Van Eaton on drums. It was a split-session with Memphis music stalwart Eddie Bond, who recorded a slew of tracks with the same band. From Pullens' songs, a new version of "You Don't Mean to Make Me Cry" and "Jitterbuggin' Baby" were released on single (Rock-It #105). These and more tracks from the session were released in Europe through Rockhouse Records in the mid 1980s.

In the early 1970s, Pullens had returned to rural Mississippi and settled in Carriere, a small town outside of Picayune. There, he set up his own record label Sun Down Records, on which he released country music by local artists throughout the 1970s and also had two releases under his own name on the label. Though he had returned to Mississippi, he retained his connections to Nashville and produced most of the Sun Down releases there. The label's most successful release became Roger Rainy's "Breaker, Breaker" from 1975, which became a Top 20 country hit.

On the performing side, Pullens continued to play locally in Mississippi but had given up recording after his 1979 Memphis session. He spent his last years in Mississippi and passed away on July 19, 2000, at the age of 69 years (although his death date is usually given as 2001). He is buried at Henleyfield Cemetery in Pearl River County. His 1950s and 1970s rockabilly recordings have been reissued over and over again since the 1970s but a quality re-release of his complete recordings is still missing. The Cramps, British psychobilly band, cited "Bop Crazy Baby" as one of their influences.

See also
The Pearl River Valley Jamboree
Spade Records story
• Penny Records

Recommended reading
Bear Family Records

Sources
Find a Grave entry
Rockin' Country Style entry
• Various entries at 45cat and 45worlds: 45cat, 45worlds/CD albums, 45worlds/Vinyl albums
Discogs
Praguefrank's Country Music Discographies entries (Beware of some wrong and inconsistent information)
Bennie Hess at the Texas State Historical Association
• Adam Komowski: "Classic Rockabilly" (liner notes), Proper Records (2006)
• Official census records accessed through Ancestry.com

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Penny Records

Picayune, Mississippi, in the 1970s

Picayune, Mississippi - a 11.000 people city in Pearl River County, Mississippi, near the Mississippi/Louisiana state border. The city's legacy in music history is limited, very limited. But it has a few contributions to offer. Country comic and Picayune native Jerry Clower recorded his live LP "Live in Picayune" for MCA at a charity event of the city's Women's Club. Allegedly also a son of the city was rockabilly and country singer Vern Pullens - although others say he was born in nearby Bogalusa, Louisiana.

However, Picayune was once home to record labels and a recording studio. Yes, more than one label - including Penny Records.
The name "Picayune" drives from the french word "picaillon", which itself rooted in "picaioun", which was the name of a coin from the Savoy region in Europe. So the label's name "Penny" is probably a reference to the city name's history.

The label started in the early 1970s from a house on Chateau Cove road in the northeast of the city near Highway 59. Possibly also operating from that address was Precision Recording Studio, were at least some of the label's recordings were cut. I can't tell you who the owner was but I sense a connection to Hack Kennedy's Big Howdy label, which had been originally located in the Bogalusa area but had moved to Picayune as well by the late 1960s. Some of the Penny releases bear the Big Howdy publishing stamp. Picayune country DJ B.J. Johnson also penned some of the songs released on the label and could have had a hand in it, too.


1406 Chateau Cove in Picayune, where Penny Records was located in the 1970s
Source: Google Street View

The label started around 1971 and was active at least until 1975 with thirteen known 45rpm releases. The Precision Recording Studio had its life of its own. While many of the Penny releases were recorded there, the studio served as an outlet for other local labels throughout the 1970s. The discs were mainly pressed by Atwell Record Pressing in Lafayette, Tennessee (including the Penny releases). B.J. Johnson, who appears as the songwriter on some Penny productions, also produced records at the Precision studio (e.g. Richard Banquer's LP "The Original Papa Joe's Presents Richard Banquer"), another hint to his involvement.

Discography

Label No.# Artist Credit A / B side Date
103 Wayne Morse Don’t Hide Your Heart / Pull Down the Blind’s Momma
104


105 Joe Brady You’re the Reason I’m Leaving / You Were Only Fooling
106 Jerry Evans Go on Home / Your Old Standby
107 Harvey Mansfield Keep That Country Music Playing / You Destroyed My Life
108


109


110


111 Jerry Evans Catch the Wind / I’m Walking the Dog 1972
112


113


114


115 E.J. Saucier Mr. Warden / Little Girl 1972
126 Spectrum Forever and Always / Made for Me 1973
126 Country Comfort feat. Bobby Boyles Words / Got You On My Mind 1974
127 Johnnie Kirk Wicked Women / Big Bad Stuff 1974
128 Gwen Bush If You Got Leaving On Your Mind / I Don’t Want to Live (Without His Love) 1974
129


130 Billy Mulkey Give Me Freedom / Let’s Fight 1975
131 Tommy Gray Broken Heart Repairman / ?
177 Patty Mason and the Slade Gang Constantly / Hickory Hollar’s Tramp
178 Cleat Wooley That’s Why I’m Walking / You Can’t Stop the Rain from Falling 1971
201 Jerry Evans Green, Green Grass of Home / Rhythm of the Rain 1975

See also
• Big Howdy Records
• Vern Pullens
The Pearl River Valley Jamboree

Sources
45cat entry
• Discord entries for Penny Records and Precision Sound Studio
Locals Only

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Old Floridy Barn Dance

The Old Floridy Barn Dance of Uncle Harve's Ragtime Wranglers

The "Old Floridy Barn Dance", also called "Old Florida Barn Dance" at times, was a live stage show centered around and promoted by Miami western swing band leader "Uncle" Harve Spivey. His band, the Ragtime Wranglers, were the main act of the show and provided musical and comedy entertainment for the audiences.


Spivey came to Miami in the early 1940s and by the end of World War II, he had found entrance into the city's country music scene. By early 1948, he had assembled the Ragtime Wranglers. Although it was big band and popular dance music that was much more popular in Miami, there was an appetite for rural music as well. Spivey and the band quickly became a popular act in this field and started appearing at different venues in the area.

Soon, Spivey developed his own stage show, the Old Floridy Barn Dance. This show took place on friday nights at the Dade County Armory in Miami. Portions of the show aired over WWPB. The Ragtime Wranglers played a mixture of straight country music and hot western swing to the audiences. Bass player "Happy" Harold Thaxton also entertained folks with a comedy routine "Happy and Slappy", which he performed with other members of the group. Following the stage show, a barn dance took place that was called by Spivey, who was also a "champion square dance caller".

In 1950, Spivey added the singing Webb Sisters to his act (one of them, June Webb, would find moderate success in Nashville). Sometimes, the show also featured other local singers such as Rusty Pennynail and even popular music bands like Chet Springer's Popular Dance Orchestra. At times, the Old Floridy Barn Dance set out to appear at other venues such as the Biscayne Palace. 

It is hard to determine how long the Old Floridy Barn Dance lasted. It began likely in around May 1948 but by July 1949, Spivey had signed a contract with the local Wometco Theater chain, which presented him and the Ragtime Wranglers five nights a week at its different theaters of the area. In addition, they had switched to WGBS in May that year. In 1954, the Ragtime Wranglers disbanded and their busy performance schedule came to an end.

If anyone has memories of attending Old Floridy Barn Dance shows, of Uncle Harve and the Ragtime Wranglers or of Miami country music in general, please feel free to leave a comment or send an email.


Dade County Armory, prob. 1940s, with military vehicles in front of the building

See also

Recommended reading
• "A Music Revolt in Southern Florida - the Story of Uncle Harve and Mida Records" (American Music Magazine #144, April 2017)

Sources
• Thanks to Bill Spivey for providing a wealth of information on his father's activies in Miami during the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s.

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Johnnie Leach on Round Up

Johnnie Leach and the Country Gentlemen - Faded Love (Round Up No.#), 1971

Here we have some fine Tulsa western swing, from a local outfit Johnnie Leach and the Country Gentlemen. "Faded Love" is of course the 1950 Bob Wills hit, a standard in western swing and one of my favorites. Naturally I had to buy this record.

The Round Up label (no connection to a label of the same name from Nashville) had at least three releases, all of them by Leach. It was based in Catoosa, a suburb of Tulsa, and it seems all of its releases were manufactured by Rite Record Productions from Cincinnati.

I could not really find out much about Leach or the label. Judging from a fitting Find a Grave entry, he was probably Johnnie A. Leach, born on July 2, 1926, and passed away on February 5, 2002. He is buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Claremore, also near Tulsa. I suspect him to be the leader of a local western swing act, the Country Gentlemen. Leach was not the vocalist but co-wrote at least two of their songs, "Home Maker" and "Three Empty Chairs". Vocalists in the group included Robert Hill and Bob Bintliff.

Discography

Round Up 28531/2: Johnnie Leach and the Country Gentlemen - Three Empty Chairs / Lone Star Rag
Round Up 28533/4: Johnnie Leach and the Country Gentlemen - Home Maker / Under the Double Eagle
Round Up 28535/6: Johnnie Leach and the Country Gentlemen - Faded Love / Maiden's Prayer

Sources
Find a Grave entry
Information on all three Round Up discs thanks to Western Red

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Joe Manuel

Joe Manuel

Not to be confused with the more famous cajun musician of the same name, Joe Manuel was a popular country music entertainer of the 1940s and 1950s in Memphis. He played an important role in giving young Memphis musicians a stage to present their talents - his Saturday Night Jamboree hosted a number of later rockabilly artists and in addition, his radio show was popular all over the mid-south in the 1950s.

Born Joseph Manuel to Thomas and Arrie Manuel on March 26, 1912, he was from Northwest Alabama like fellow Memphis country entertainer Gene Steele. Joe's father was born in Texas but lived in Alabama when he married Arrie Wilburn in 1913. When Arrie died in 1938, Thomas married Willie B. Waldrep. The Manuel family hailed from the small community of Town Creek, Alabama, but relocated to the Arkansas delta region when Joe was a small boy. They lived the hard life of sharecroppers and Manuel and his brothers were raised on farms in the Mississippi River regions. As a teenager, he left Arkansas and joined a carnival, where he met comedian Dave Perkins. Perkins took the youngster under his wing and mentored him how to entertain people.

Manuel then took up the guitar and singing, becoming an entertainer in his own right. By the early 1930s, he was back in Arkansas and began appearing on local radio stations. He had made the move to the region's metropolis, Memphis, by 1933 and began performing on WNBR, which eventually became WMPS after it was acquired by the Memphis Press-Scimitar. The station was an affiliate of the Blue Network (which evolved into ABC) and for a while in the 1930s, Manuel's radio shows were beamed over the network into several states.

By 1940, Manuel had married Elizabeth A. Van Hooser, with whom he had a daughter, Dotty. Manuel was married several times, a fact that he also incorporated into his songs (like "Alimony Blues"). In 1942, he was married to Margaret Mary "Elsie" Keywood, which gave birth to another daughter Sylvia.

Following World War II, Manuel worked a radio station in Dallas, Texas, for a short time but despite the good offer from the station, he returned to Memphis due to family responsibilities (which also included his son Larry by then). Upon his return to the city, he hooked up with WHBQ, which transferred his show to an early morning slot. As Manuel's show matched perfectly with many farmers' breakfast time in the surrounding Memphis areas, it became a huge success among the rural audiences. As WHBQ was a 5,000 watts station, Manuel was heard as far away as Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, Illinois, and Kentucky.

In 1948, television reached Memphis but Manuel did not transfer to the new medium. His popularity ceased and his radio show came to an end in 1950. He stayed out of radio business for about two years but returned to the airwaves in 1952, then appearing on KWEM in West Memphis, where he started a daily broadcast. By then, an idea had grown on Manuel. He noticed the many young, talented singers in the city and wanted to create a possibility for them to present themselves. He introduced a live stage show patterned after the Grand Ole Opry, which he called the Saturday Night Jamboree. The show started in 1953 and took place at the Goodwyn Institute in Memphis. It quickly drew crowds and became successful enough that KWEM began airing the shows live. Apart from his own band (which also included his son Larry on accordion), acts like Johnny Cash, Eddie Bond, Johnny and Dorsey Burnette, Harmonica Frank Floyd, Marcus Van Story and band, Charlie Feathers, and others who became known as rockabilly legends appeared on Manuel's stage.

Despite his popularity, Manuel made only few recordings and none of them were released in a commercial way. Probably in 1954, he and his band laid down a couple of recordings at Sam Phillips' Memphis Recording Service. Some of them were jingles for bread companies and found release on 78rpm discs released by the Action Advertising Agency credited to "Dreamy Joe". Those included "Hardin's Bread Boogie" and "Holsum Boogie" and as the titles reveal, they were hot country boogie numbers. His "Holsum Boogie" became so popular with listeners in South Illinois that Manuel and his band were once invited by the Holsum Bread Company to perform in front of a 11,000 audience in Anna, Illinois.

Advertisement sign for Holsum Bread

It was especially lead guitarist Lee Adkins' playing that foreshadowed the rockabilly sounds, which would evolve about two years later in Memphis. There was a third boogie number called "Daisy Bread Boogie" as well as "Alimony Blues", a song written by Manuel already in the early 1940s with its lyrics bearing a lot of self-reference. It featured yodeling in the style of Jimmie Rodgers by Manuel and enjoyed great popularity among his radio and live audiences. Those two recordings were apparently not released at the time. Apart from Manuel on vocals and rhythm guitar and Adkins on electric lead guitar, the line-up also included Danny Chambers on bass.

The Saturday Night Jamboree ended in 1954 as the Goodwyn Institute's auditorium was closed down for remodeling and a year later, Manuel was sidelined by Sun Records' young rockabilly artists. He continued to broadcast on and off for KWEM but did not make recordings anymore. His son Larry recorded for Eddie Bond's Stomper Time label in 1959.

Joe Manuel died on July 16, 1959, at the age of 47 years from melanoma cancer. He is buried at Calvary Cemetery in Memphis. His daughter Sharon was born shortly after his passing.

Discography

Label No.# Artist Credit A / B side Date
Action Prod. 101 Dreamy Joe Holsum Boogie / You’ve Done Me Wrong
Action Prod. 101/2 Dreamy Joe You’ve Done Me Wrong / Hardin’s Bread Boogie

See also
Gene Steele - The Singing Salesman of Memphis

Recommended reading
Hillbilly-Music.com
(note: this side is mixing up "Cajun" Joe Manuel and Memphis' Joe Manuel)
Larry Manuel collection at Wilson Special Collections Libraries
Photo of Joe and Larry Manuel with Marcus Van Story (Memphis Public Libraries)

Sources
Biography on "Remembering the Shoals"
Ancestors page
Find a Grave entry
45worlds.com/78rpm entry
• Colin Escott, Martin Hawkins, Hank Davis: "The Sun Country Boy" (Bear Family Records), liner notes, 2013

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Gene Steele

Gene Steele - the Singing Salesman of Memphis

Gene Steele was a longtime performer in Memphis. He was already there in the late 1930s, when nobody even dreamt of something like rock'n'roll, and Steele was still there when Sun Records was making noise in the whole country with this hybrid of country and rhythm & blues. During the years, Steele was heard on radio by dozens of later Memphis rock'n'roll performers - both black and white and had an impact on several performers' careers.

Steele was born on October 22, 1908, in the small town of Kennedy, Northwest Alabama, near the Mississippi border. By the late 1930s, Steele had made his way to the mid-west's regional metropolis Memphis and began appearing on local radio around 1939. He became a mainstay on WMC, which hosted several country performers throughout the years such as the Delmore Brothers and Slim Rhodes' Mountaineers.

In July 1939, Steele recorded his first session for the Vocalion label at the Gayoso Hotel in Memphis. On four of the recorded numbers, he was backed by the Swift Jewel Cowboys, a Memphis jazz and western swing group which had recorded at the same location the previous days. The cuts included the bluesy "Freight Train Blues" with some Jimmie Rodgers inspired yodeling by Steele. Steele also recorded "Rio Grande Moon" and
"Just a Little of the Blues" with a smaller combo that included possibly Gene Bagett.

In the early 1940s, Steele's band had become known as the "Sunny Southerners", playing on WMC and six nights a week at venues in Memphis and surrounding areas like Northeast Arkansas and Southeast Missouri. For a short time in the spring of 1942, this band included Kelland Clark and Boudleaux Bryant, who later became famous as a songwriter with his wife Felice. However, Clark and Bryant did not stay very long with Steele, as they left in April that year for Detroit.

Throughout the 1940s and early 1950s, Steele remained a fixture on Memphis radio and became known as the "Singing Salesman" on his morning show. Sometimes, he was also billed "King of the Hillbillies". Quite a few now legendary Memphis artists referenced to his broadcasts, like future R&B and Soul singer Bobby "Blue" Bland. Charles Farley cites Bland in his book "Soul of the Man": "I've always been concerned singing. First spirituals and then white country blues - you know, what they call hillbilly. There used to be a morning radio show here in Memphis, Gene Steele, the Singing Salesman, and when I listened to him sing 'Take That Night Train to Memphis', I got interested in hillbilly music and in coming to Memphis."

The Courier News (Blytheville, Arkansas)
August 4, 1949

Steele also became friends with Marshall Grant, who had come to Memphis in 1947, worked as a mechanic at the same company as guitarist Luther Perkins. Both joined with Johnny Cash in the early 1950s and Steele happened to work as a salesman at the same company as Grant and Perkins. Steele, who was a veteran performer by then, advised Grant how to tune an upright bass when he switched from guitar to bass. Grant remembered: "And so I bought it [the bass] and took it home. Put it in my car and took it back to the shop, went back to work, had to work it on my car and lay it on top of the seat, as a lot of bass people did. But anyhow, I called John, and I said 'Luther's got this guitar, and I got a bass, and I don't know how in the hell you tune this thing.' So there was a person that worked at Auto Sales there, his name was Gene Steele, and he was a salesman there, and he had a little band. So I went to Gene the next day and said 'Gene, how in hell do you tune a bass?' He said 'I don't know but we're doin' a little gig tonight, and I'll ask the bass player.' He came back the next morning with a picture drawn in his hand [showing] G, D, A and E, just like the top four strings on a guitar. So I called John, and Luther was working on the other side of the shop, and I said 'Look here Luther, this is how you tune this little sucker'. And I said 'Let's get together tonight, tune it and make some music.'"

Paul Burlison, who became lead guitarist with the Johnny Burnette Rock'n'Roll Trio, remembered "they [the radio station] had a place there for people to sit and watch while it was broadcast live" as written in Tav Falco's book "Ghosts Behind the Sun". Burlison also recalled watching acts like Al Burns, Bobby Knight, and Gene Steele. By 1954, Steele had done more than 3,300 programs with the same sponsor and his early morning show had become an institution. 

I could not find any traces of Steele's activities past 1954. He was possibly sidelined by the emerging trend of rock'n'roll and changes in the radio business. Gene Steele died in 1984.

In the 1970s, Sun Records researchers found uncredited tapes in the studio's vaults, containing recordings of "Alimony Blues" and "Daisy Bread Boogie" cut around 1953/1954. In the first instance, these were wrongly attributed to Earl Peterson, who had recorded for Sun around the same time. Then, in the 1980s, Memphis bassist Bill Diehl assured these tapes had been recorded by Gene Steele and for many years, this was accepted as true although further investigations failed due to Steele's death. A couple of 1990s and early 2000s reissues credited those songs to Steele, too, but new researches some 30 years later by Martin Hawkins, Colin Escott and Hank Davis revealed that these songs were written and recorded by veteran Memphis country performer Joe Manuel and not by Steele. Manuel had been commissioned by an Ohio bakery to produce a jingle for their Daisy Bread brand.

The same likely applies to more tracks recorded at Sun and released on the Memphis based Action Productions label under the pseudonym "Dreamy Joe" (which was more likely Joe Manuel). The label was part of the Action Advertising Agency and the songs intended to be ads for the Holsum and Hardin bakeries. Only few copies were pressed and later wrongly credited to Steele. The recordings included more boogie-oriented numbers like "Holsum Boogie" and "Hardin's Bread Boogie". 

Discography

Label No.# Artist Credit A / B side Date
Vocalion 05068 Gene Steele Here’s Your Opportunity / Don’t Wait ‘Till We’re Old and Grey 09-1939
Conqueror 9336 Gene Steele Here’s Your Opportunity / Don’t Wait ‘Till We’re Old and Grey 1939
Vocalion 05135 Gene Steele Rio Grande Moon / Ride’em, Cowboy, Ride’em 1939
Conqueror 9337 Gene Steele Rio Grande Moon / Ride’em, Cowboy, Ride’em 1939
Vocalion 05204 Gene Steele Freight Train Blues / Just a Little of the Blues 11-1939
Okeh 05204 Gene Steele Freight Train Blues / Just a Little of the Blues 1939

See also
• Swift Jewel Cowboys

Sources
• Charles Farley: "Soul of the Man: Bobby 'Blue' Bland" (University Press of Mississippi), 2011, pages 47-48
• Bobbie Malone, Bill C. Malone: "Nashville's Songwriting Sweethearts: The Boudleaux and Felice Bryant Story" (University of Oklahoma Press), 2020
• Steve Turner: "The Man Called CASH: The Life, Love, and Faith of an American Legend" (W Publishing Group), 2004
• Michael Streissguth: "Johnny Cash - The Biography" (Da Capo Press), 2006
• Tav Falco: "Ghosts Behind the Sun - Splendor, Enigma & Death" (Elektron Ebooks), 2023
• "Broadcasting, Telecasting Volume 47" (1954)
• various Billboard News Items
• Colin Escott, Martin Hawkins, Hank Davis: "The Sun Country Boy" (Bear Family Records), liner notes, 2013