Updates

• Added info on Pete Peters, thanks to Volker Houghton. • Added info on Jimmy Ford, thanks to Volker Houghton. • Extended and corrected the post on Happy Harold Thaxton (long overdue), thanks to everyone who sent in memories and information! • Added information to the Jim Murray post, provided by Mike Doyle, Dennis Rogers, and Marty Scarbrough.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Tops Rock & Roll!

Another of the sound-a-like comps. The last for now.
Tops was a label founded by the Tops Music Enterprises in the early 1950s in Los Angeles and had success with their cheap versions of the hits-of-the-day. In 1960, Tops was sold and the new owner discontinued the label in the mid-1960s. Some of the Tops recordings were actually recorded by the Starday company and issued on their budget imprint Dixie. The masters were later leased to Tops. Hope you enjoy it!

Download

track list:
1. Hank Smith - Heartbreak Hotel
2. Dave Burgess - Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On
3. Dusty Glass - Jailhouse Rock
4. Stevens Mark - School Day
5. Johnny Curtis - Rock-a-Beatin' Boogie
6. Johnny Ryan - Hot Rod Lincoln
7. Scott Otis - Heard Headed Woman
8. Hank Smith - Blue Suede Shoes
9. Uncredited artist - Hound Dog
10. Mimi Martel - Rock Love

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Johnny Waleen on Coulee

 
Johnny Waleen - Mystery Train (Coulee C45-102), 1964
 
This flashy sparse rockabilly version of "Mystery Train" was recorded by Johnny Waleen in 1964 on the local Coulee label. It has been reissued many times since 1978 and the original record is now 300 USD or more worth.


Johnny Waleen, whose real name is Johnny Wallin, was born in 1940 in Cumberland, Wisconsin. His first record was released in 1959 on the Minneapolis, Minnesota, based Soma label, featuring "The Road to Heartaches" and "Mandy." In 1964, Waleen cut his version of "Mystery Train" coupled with "Now Is the Hour" for Coulee Records out of LaCrosse, Wisconsin. Waleen is still alive and performing.


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Gateway Rock & Roll Soundalikes

Reup. Gateway was part of the Rite Record Productions, founded in 1950 by Carl Burckhardt. Rite started his budget label activities in 1952 by launching its new labels Gateway, Big 4 Hits and Kentucky (later more labels followed). We have the great Delbert Barker here covering some nice Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins. Rite sold his budget outfits in late 1957/early 1958 and concentrated on its custom pressing service, which began in 1955 (see the That's All Rite blog for Rite custom pressings).

Download

track list:
1. Bob LaMont - Dim Dim the Lights
2. Dick Warren - Rock Around the Clock
3. Delbert Barker - So Doggone Lonesome
4. Delbert Barker - Blue Suede Shoes
5. Delbert Barker - Heartbreak Hotel
6. Marv Lockard - Don't Be Cruel
7. Billy St. Claire - Shake, Rattle and Roll
8. Buddy Thomas - Wear My Ring Around Your Neck
9. Earl Robbins - Teddy Bear
10. Jack Daniels - Tutti Frutti

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

The Annotated Kenny Owens discography

The following discography was compiled with the aim to list all of Arkansas Country and Rock'n'Roll singer Kenny Owens' known recordings. The information was taken from original sources and witnesses where available. Special thanks goes to Larry Donn, who answered patiently all of my questions.

Poplar 45-106 (1958)
Kenny Owen
High School Sweater (J. Wingate; A. Wingate) / I Got the Bug (Ollie McLaughlin; Lawson)
P-119 / P-120
 Unknown recording date and place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with unknown (ld gtr/pno/bs/dms)
Billboard pop review on February 24, 1958

Ruth 441 / 442
Kenny Owens
Come Back Baby (Kenny Owens) / Frog Man Hop (Kenny Owens)
441 / 442
Unknown recording date and place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with unknown (ld gtr/pno/sax/bs/dms)
Ruth was owned by Ollie McLaughlin, who also co-wrote "I Got the Bug."

Reka 401 (1964)
Kenny Owens
Wrong Line (Kenny Owens) / Come Back Baby (Kenny Owens)
13317 RK 300 / 13318 RK 301 (Rite)
 Recorded possibly at Joe Lee's Variety Recording Studio (213 East Monroe Street - Jonesboro, Arkansas), unknown recording date
Kenny Owens (vcl) with unknown (ld gtr/bs/dms)
"Come Back Baby" is a completely different recording from the version on Ruth 441.

Cotton Town Jubilee 95 (1965)
Kenny Owens
Christmas Poem (Norman Beal)
SK4M-3921 (RCA)
Gene Williams
My Son in Service (Norman Beal)
 SK4M-3922 (RCA)
 Unknown recording date and place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with unknown (ld gtr/rhy gtr/bs/chorus)
Gene Williams is the singer on the flip side.

Cotton Town Jubilee LP 99 "Stars of the Gene Williams Country Junction Show" (1965)
Various artists LP featuring Kenny Owens
Crazy for Your Love ()
I'm Cheatin' Again ()
Recorded ca. 1965 at unknown recording place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with Lemand James (ld gtr), unknown (pno/bs/dms), Ken Burge (harmony vcl) on "I'm Cheatin' Again"
Probably the Country Junction show house band featuring Johnny Duncan, Alton Yaney, Bill Medlock, and Ken Burge, played on these recordings.

Alley 1028 (1966)
Kenny Owens
Traveling on Her Mind (Kenny Owens) / Oh, How I Miss You (Jim Funches)
T4KM-5101 / T4KM-5102 (RCA)
 Possibly recorded at Joe Lee's Variety Recording Studio (213 East Monroe Street - Jonesboro, Arkansas), unknown recording date
Kenny Owens (vcl) with unknown (ld gtr/gtr/bs/dms)

Ork OS 35
Kenny Owens
Ballad of the Teenage Queen (Jack Clement) / Hey Porter (Johnny Cash)
Unknown recording date and place
Kenny Owens (vcl/gtr) with poss. Eddie Slusser (ld gtr), Dub Phelps (bs), Ronnie Harris (dms), unknown (chorus)
Ork was owned by Owens. The label's name were his initials spelled backwards.

Shork No.# (1967/68)
The Travelers featuring Ronnie Harris
You've Got No Reason (R. Harris)
PRP 6101 (Precision)
The Travelers featuring Eddie Slusser
First Date (E. Slusser)
PRP 6102 (Precision)
 Recorded late 1960s at Joe Lee's Variety Recording Studio (213 East Monroe Steet - Jonesboro, Arkansas)
Eddie Slusser (ld gtr), Kenny Owens (rhy gtr), Dub Phelps (bs), Ronnie Harris (dms/vcl)
According to Eddie Slusser, these two tracks were demo recordings released by Owens on the Ork subsidiary Shork. Ronnie Harris sings on "You've Got No Reason."

Ork #OS-35 (1969)
Kenny "Skinny" Owens
Honky Tonk Man (Johnny Horton; Tillman Franks; Howard Hausey) / Mama Layed the Law Down (Dub Dickerson)
PRP 9241 / PRP 9242 (Precision)
 Recorded late 1960s at unknown recording place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with poss. Eddie Slusser (ld gtr), unk (st gtr/hrmnca/pno), Dub Phelps (bs), Ronnie Harris (dms)

Ork #OS-35 (1969)
Kenny Owens
Long Lost John (L. Dunagan) / That Big Ole' Moon (F. Husky)
PRP 13081 / PRP 13082 (Precision)
 Recorded late 1960s at unknown recording place
Kenny Owens (vcl) with poss. Eddie Slusser (ld gr), unknown (pno), Dub Phelps (bs), Ronnie Harris (dms)
Kenny Owens used the number Ork 35 at least three times.

Ork LP 1003 "Kenny Owens and the Travelers with Mid-American Music"
Kenny Owens and the Travelers
Side 1
A Boy Named Sue (Shel Silverstein)
Big Boss Man (Al Smith; Luther Dixon)
Together Again (Buck Owens)
Oakie from Muskogee (Merle Haggard; Eddie Burris)
Hot Rod Race (George Wilson)
Side 2
Black is Black (Tony Hayes; Steve Wadey; Michelle Grainger)
Great Balls of Fire (Jack Hammer; Otis Blackwell)
Green-Green Grass (Curly Putman)
Midnight Hour (Wilson Pickett; Steve Cropper)
Settin' in the Bathroom (Larry Donn)
Na-Na Na-Na Good-Bye (Paul Leka; Gary DeCarlo; Dale Frashuer)
Recorded late 1969 or 1970 at Wayne Raney's Studio (Rimrock, Arkansas)
Kenny Owens (vcl/gtr) with Eddie Slusser (ld gtr), Larry Donn (vcl/pno/org), Dub Phelps (bs), Ronnie Harris (dms/vcl), unknown (chorus)
This album was sold at concerts. Larry Donn was the vocalist on side 2 except for "Na-Na Na-Na Good-Bye," which was sung by Ronnie Harris.

Ork LP No.# "If I Were a Carpenter"
Kenny Owens
Side 1
If I Were a Carpenter ()
Travelin' on Her Mind (Kenny Owens)
Remember Me ()
Lonely Women Make Good Lovers ()
I Love You Because (Leon Payne)
Side 2
Long Haired Country Boy ()
Truck Drivin' Man ()
Come Back Baby (Kenny Owens)
Music City U.S.A. ()
Help Me ()
Recorded at Beaverwood Studio (133 Walton Ferry Road - Hendersonville, Tennessee), unknown recording date
Kenny Owens (vcl), other musicians unknown

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Rockabilly Obscure & Forgotten (But Still OK!)

Another bobsluckycat post presented by Mellow's Log Cabin

Bobsluckycat presents the first own comp on this blog. The liner notes below are also in the download folder. Enjoy!

Download

track list:
1. Eddie & Chuck - Boogie the Blues
2. Marty Robbins - That's Allright Mama
3. Joe Clay - Get on the Right Track Baby
4. Johnny Burnette Trio - The Train Kept a-Rollin'
5. Sanford Clark - Lonesome for a Letter
6. Jackie Lee Cochran - Riverside Jump
7. George Hamilton IV - If You Don't Know
8. Roy Orbison - Mean Little Mama
9. Jimmie Lloyd - Where the Rio de Rosa Flows
10. Bonnie Guitar - Mister Fire Eyes
11. Joe Therrien, Jr. & his Rockets - Hey Babe Let's Go Downtown
12. Sparkle Moore - Skull and Crossbones
13. Johnny Hampton - Honey Hush
14. Ricky Nelson - I'm Walkin'
15. Wanda Jackson - Fujiyama Mama
16. Bobby Lee Trammell - Shirley Lee
17. Carl McVoy - Little John's Gone
18. Wynn Stewart - She Just Tears Me Up
19. Jerry Lee Lewis - Put Me Down
20. Jack Scott - Two Timin' Woman
21. Carl Perkins - Levi Jacket
22. Ronnie Hawkins & the Hawks - 30 Days
23. Ronnie Hawkins & the Hawks - 40 Days
24. Dale Hawkins - My Babe
25. Elvis Presley - I Need Your Love Tonight
26. Rusty York - Sugaree
27. Ronnie Self - Big Town
28. Paul Chaplain & the Emeralds - Shortnin' Bread
29. George Jones - Revenoor Man
30. Johnny Gray - John's Blues
31. Carl Mann - I Ain't Got No Home
32. Boliver Shagnasty - Tappin' that Thing
33. Ray Campi - Rockin' at the Ritz
34. Gene Vincent - How I Love Them Old Songs

Just what is Rockabilly? It swings a wide loop and there are many definitions, none of which is set in stone. This CD offers various forms. Take your pick.

Eddie & Chuck with The Louisiana Ramblers had one record out in late 1953 which includes them in the honorable mention list of the Rockabilly Hall Of Fame. This recording sounds a little like Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant's style playing and York Brothers vocals, popular country recording artists in 1953. Nothing is known about the group otherwise.

Marty Robbins was a well established country music star by 1954. His cover of "That's Allright Mama" indicates that Elvis Presley's Sun version had garnered enough attention to warrant a cover. Robbins recorded several Rockabilly style or flavored numbers through the 50's. A couple were major hits in country or pop music or both. He's in the Country Music Hall Of Fame, and deservedly so.

Joe Clay came and went in a hot minute in early 1956. He had two sessions with Vik Records (RCA Victor). His first record made a little noise as a cover of two Starday records by Rudy "Tutti" Grayzell and Link Davis, garnering him a spot on the Ed Sullivan TV Show. Sullivan hated his music and would only let him perform a ballad he had not recorded. His second release, while raw Rockabilly, died from lack of exposure. This is the "B" side.

The Johnny Burnette Trio consisted of Johnny Burnette, his brother Dorsey Burnette and Paul Burlison on a tricked out amp playing electric lead guitar. In early 1956. They gained recognition on the nationally televised "Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour", which lead to a record contract. This track was the "B" side of their first record release and was a cover of an R&B hit by Tiny Bradshaw from a few years earlier.

Sanford Clark's first record on Dot Records was a country/rockabilly hit "The Fool", and this song is the "B" side. Some people liked it better.

Jackie Lee Cochran came on the scene through the "Big D Jamboree" in 1956 and this record. Shortly thereafter, he signed with Decca Records in Hollywood and cut "Ruby Pearl" which started to get air-play, contract problems however killed that record. Cochran stayed in California and released a few minor singles over the years to not much notice. He also had a few movie and TV bit parts along the way. He was re-discovered in the 70's and 80's on Rolling Rock Records to much success.

George Hamilton IV had an apple-cheeked white boy hit in 1956 of "A Rose And A Baby Ruth", which was a top 20 hit in November of that year. Later a Gold Record) This is the flip side and with tongue firmly in cheek is a fun little number that a lot of people liked as well. A few years later, a re-recording of this song went to number 6 on the country charts. Hamilton is still on the Opry after 50 years and is considered an international country and gospel music super-star.

Roy Orbison with The Teen Kings came out of Texas in 1956 and after a couple of minor releases on Sun, languished in recording hell to the point that Orbison quit the business for a while. After the song he wrote "Claudette" was a hit for the Everly Brothers. Roy came back via RCA Victor to no success and then to super-star status on Monument Records with "Only The Lonely" and many more. In 1962, Sam Phillips, now with state of the art recording equipment, went back and overdubbed and spliced together an album entitled "Roy Orbison At The Rockhouse", which was not a major seller at the time, but now considered a rockabilly classic. This song, "Mean Little Mama", may be the best cut.

Jimmy Lloyd (Logsdon) had a long career in country music radio and early TV as a D.J. and performer as well as a fair country recording history on various labels. This song was picked up by Carl Perkins for his first Columbia album in 1958.

Bonnie Guitar had a long and up and down career in country music and the record business as well. Her initial hit on Dot "Dark Moon" was a country and pop hit in 1957, but it was surpassed by the cover of Gale Storm's version which went to #4 also on Dot. This follow-up got some airplay at the time, but no chart success. While she has an honorable mention in the Rockabilly Hall Of Fame, Bonnie Guitar is more noted for her more mature country recordings of the 70's and 80's.

Joe Therrien Jr & His Rockets were out of New England. This cut was picked up from Lido Records and gained popularity in some places His band carried an accordian player and the flip side featuring the accordian, "Roses Are Blooming" aka "Come Back To Me Darlin'" also was popular as well.

Sparkle Moore (Barbara Morgan) gets an honorable mention in the Rockabilly Hall Of Fame for her Fraternity label recordings. She was blond and clad in female attire similar to what Elvis wore. That's about all we know about her. She had some sizzle but not enough to live up to her billing as the "female Elvis". Pregnant in 1957, she left the business after touring some with Gene Vincent.

Johnny Hampton, another honorable mention in the Rockabilly Hall Of Fame, Not a threat to Big Joe Turner's version of "Honey Hush". This is about as bad as it gets. United Records closed up at the end of 1957. From embarassment?

Ricky Nelson was a long time major recording star until his untimely death. His father, Ozzie Nelson a musician and band leader before he was a star in radio and TV saw and understood the teen idol appeal of his son from the TV show and quickly in 1957 after Ricky turned 16 and recorded a cover of "I'm Walkin'" which did rather well. By September, he was recording for Imperial Records and doing a long list of Rockabilly style hit records into the 60's, due in no small part to his dad, Ozzie.

Except for a few radio stations in late 1957, "Fujiyama Mama" by Wanda Jackson got no air play and went un-noticed in the USA. Program directors heard the line "When I start erupting nobody's gonna make me stop" and immediately thought "we can't play that as it refers to female orgasm". Whether it did or it didn't remains to be seem. The song is now one of her best known recordings. It was a big hit in Japan at the time due in large part to all the occupational forces stationed in Japan or who did "R-n-R" there. The Japanese also loved it. Go figure.

Bobby Lee Trammell was a certified nut case from Arkansas, who put out a lot of records before turning to politics successfully later on. His original version of "Shirley Lee" on Fabor was picked up nationally by ABC-Paramount Records. The record went nowhere. Ricky Nelson heard it and covered it on an early album and that kept the royalties coming in for quite some time. Stories about Trammell are legendary, but not for re-telling here.

Carl McVoy's second release on Hi Records is included here only to prove there was one. It went nowhere. More on McVoy in an earlier post here.

Jack Scott (Scafone) started young in the music business, and by age 21 had signed to ABC-Paramount Records. The song included here was a local hit in and around Detroit. In 1958, Scott moved over to Carlton Records and had a series of national hits there and on Top Rank and Capitol Records through 1961. Many say he was, along with Elvis, the total package of talent and looks and personality which was early Rockabilly.

Carl Perkins, Rockabilly super-star. Everybody agrees with that statement. Beyond that, many people argue that he should have never left Sun Records. The song offered here, "Levi Jacket" was his second release in the summer of 1958 and while slightly risque, girls did dress that way, saw no chart action or sales. By 1959, his Columbia album "Whole Lotta Shakin'" had been pulled from circulation. Perkins at the time of his death, however, was the foremost elder statesman of Rockabilly and all around good guy.

Ronnie Hawkins an Arkansas native moved north to Canada in 1958 and stayed. He brought American Rockabilly to Canada and nutured it there. Members of his band "The Hawks" gained fame as "The Band" in the 60's and 70's. This is a unique combination. His demo of Chuck Berry's "Thirty Days" got no real attention at Quality Records in Canada. In 1959, Ronnie signed a record deal with Roulette Records in New York. Re-recorded "Thirty Days" as "Forty Days" and had a top 20 hit record. Rockabillys' popularity was fading at the time and before long he was back in Canada, where he has held forth ever since.

Dale Hawkins was an easy going rockabilly pioneer out of Louisiana who had several big hits on Checker Records in the 1950's. This song "My Babe" features Roy Buchanan on lead guitar and is quite good, but largely unknown. The single was released between two hit singles by Hawkins, just missing the mark.

Elvis Presley, simply "The King", while this was a number 4 chart record in 1959, it doesn't get much play these days, but it's still a great Rockabilly classic.

Rusty York from Kentucky started in the Country and Bluegrass fields of music, but by 1959 had a release on Chess Records, written by Marty Robbins, "Sugaree" which became a minor hit in some places. He continued in the music business with his own record label and studio for many years. He also had a minor hit in 1963 on Gaylord "Sally Was A Good Ole Girl" written by Hank Cochran in the country music field and covered by Don Rich and The Buckeroos.

Ronnie Self never made it successfully as a rockabilly artists, and not because he didn't have enough chances. He first recorded for ABC-Paramount in 1956. The record for them "Pretty Bad Blues" is well remembered today. He was signed to Columbia next and had no hits, except "Bop-A-Lena" which was #63 in March of 1958 on which he was literally screaming. He next signed with Decca Records and had no hits. The song featured here is a 1959 release that ironically made his estate a nice royalty in 1987 as it was the main theme of the film "The Big Town" which starred Tommy Lee Jones and Matt Dillon.

Paul Chaplain & The Emeralds version of "Shortnin' Bread" probably was the last hit record of truly outrageous Rockabilly. It was a number one record on KYA in San Francisco in the Fall/Winter of 1959 and stayed through most of 1960. It was a number one record on WLS in Chicago in September of 1960. The flip side was equally outrageous "Nicotine" concerning the worry about getting lung cancer.

George Jones' record "Revenoor Man" was one of the left over tracks at Mercury Records in much the same vein as "White Lightning" and 'Who Shot Sam" and recorded around the same time. When it was released in 1963, it was shunned for air play due to the word "damn" as in "damned moonshiner". Mostly conservative country radio didn't play no damn songs like that in those days, and the record died.

Johnny Gray was a guitarist in the style somewhat of Duane Eddy and who had a couple of earlier records out on Federal as "The Puddle Jumpers". After this record, Gray did some easy listening jazz recordings in the Wes Montgomery style and was never heard from again.

Carl Mann came to Sam Phillips' Phillips International Records as a sort of replacement for Jerry Lee Lewis. He had a couple of modest hits in 1959, "Mona Lisa" and "Pretend". His 1960 LP "Like Mann" was DOA. His next to last Phillips release had been a bare bones track on the LP, "I Ain't Got No Home." This track was overdubbed and polished and very sharp rockabilly. The "A" side was a slow ballad which got no air play. This version is mostly unknown today. Foot-note: Carl Mann's last for Phillips "Mountain Dew" was either never issued or deleted and never distributed.

Bolivar Shagnasty was a name comedian Red Skelton had for one of his many characters on TV. Somebody took the name for this rather risque record and it became a cult favorite and a jukebox favorite for years. A real "party" record. I don't know who the singer was. Any guesses?

Ray Campi cut this tune for Rollin' Rock Records around 1977. He was a wild man of Rockabilly and still is. This song is included here mainly because it is sort of autobiographical as to how he and many others on the lowest rungs of the Rockabilly ladder tried to get their start in the 50's. Funny and quite true.

Gene Vincent, Rock-n-Roll and Rockabilly Halls of Fame legendary artist, at the sunset of his career, indeed of his life, recorded this Mickey Newbury song, which forty years or so later still expresses this writer's feelings for the music and good times he had all those many years ago including the "out door johns and Mason jars" back in the 50's and early 60's. Enjoy!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Cotton Town Jubilee label story

Country Music from Cotton Town Memphis

Arkansas based radio and TV personality, record producer, and country singer Gene Williams was an established figure in the local Arkansas country music scene during the 1960s and 1970s. He operated various label throughout these years, the most prolific being Cotton Town Jubilee Records. Until 2016, this label had been the subject of a couple of German reissue LPs and CDs but had never been spotlighted properly. My intense research mounted in a special American Music Magazine issue in September 2017, concentrating on Williams, his activities in the record business and the artists that recorded for him.


Gene Williams, ca. 1965

Gene Williams was born 1938 in Tyronza, Arkansas, and attended high school in Dyess, Arkansas. He started his career in the radio business in 1958 when he took a job as a DJ on KWAM in Memphis, Tennessee. Eventually he became also the station's sales manager and began promoting Grand Ole Opry acts such as Flatt & Scruggs in the area. In 1962, he created a new country music stage show he called "Cotton Town Jubilee", which debuted on January 27, 1962. It was a live show held at the Rosewood Theater in Memphis and aired over KWAM every Saturday night, featuring local singers and musicians as well as guest stars from the Opry. James O'Gwynn was the first guest star to appear on the show.


Williams soon extended his activities by founding his own record company in the spring of 1962, the Cotton Town Jubilee label based in West Memphis, Arkansas. In addition, he also set up a music publishing company. The first record release was by Sonny Williams, a talented singer who was a regular cast member of the Cotton Town Jubilee show. He had cut two old Hank Williams numbers, "A Teardrop on a Rose" and "If You'll Be a Baby," for the label's first single. By August, Gene Williams had signed Chuck Edwards to a contract. Edwards was originally from Chicago.

By June 1962, the Cotton Town Jubilee show had moved to the Hollywood Theater on 2469 Chelsea Avenue and grew in its popularity. Also the Cotton Town Jubilee label constantly released discs by new local acts Williams was promoting. In late 1962, Jay Chevalier and Cousin Jake & Uncle Josh, originally band members of the Flatt & Scruggs Foggy Mountain Boys, signed a contract with Williams. In early 1963, the Magnolia Play Boys were added to the label's roster and Williams set up a subsidiary called Dover Records. It was also reported by Billboard that Chuck Comer had been signed and afterwards, two singles appeared. At that time, Comer was a DJ on KSUD in West Memphis and also worked as a producer for the label. In addition, he wrote "I'd Give It All to Be with You" for Sonny Williams.

On November 4, 1963, Williams debuted on KAIT-TV in Jonesboro, Arkansas with his new show, the "Gene Williams Country Junction Show," which eventually would run in various forms until his death in 2011.  The new program also brought new artists to his Cotton Town Jubilee label. Ray Coble and Kenny Owens joined the show's cast as well as Marlon Grisham, Sylvia Mobley, Slim Rhodes, and others. Johnny Duncan on vocals and guitar, Jimmy, Roby on steel and lead guitar, Alton Yancey on lead guitar, Bill Medlock on bass, Sandy Manuel on drums, and Ken Burge on dobro made up the house band and likely also played on many of the label's releases. During the years, this line-up changed and also included such musicians as Ira Pierce on steel guitar and Leeman James on lead guitar. 

In early 1963, Jay Chevalier's "Too Many Bubbles" was a 'hit' record in some areas of the country. DJ Bob Luningham of KRZE (Farmington, New Mexico) reported that the song was the 'hottest platter in that area.' Chevalier and his band, the Louisiana Long Shots, also appeared at the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas at that time. A fake live LP, pretending to be a recording from one of their appearances there, was issued in 1963 on the Cotton Town Jubilee label.

Slim Rhodes (center) and his band, ca. 1956

During the next two years, the Country Junction show proved to be very popular across the South and was broadcast on different stations in Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kentucky. In 1965, Williams released a LP featuring many of the artists that appeared on the show.


While the Cotton Town Jubilee label folded sometimes likely in 1966 (the catalog had nearly 30 releases), the Country Junction show ran up to 2011 (under different names, like "Gene Williams Country Television Show"). Williams died in December 2011 and was buried at Potter's Cemetery in Lepanto, Arkansas.

Discography
Singles
100: Sonny Williams - If You'll Be a Baby / A Teardrop on a Rose (1962)
101: Chuck Edwards - The Same Old Place / The Last Seven Years (1962)
102: Jay Chevalier - Khrushev and the Devil / Too Many Bubbles (1962)
103: Cousin Jake & Uncle Josh - This World of Min (Is a Lonely Place) / Just Joshing (1962)
104: Sonny Williams - Foot Prints on the Floor / I'd Give It All to Be with You
105: Sonny Williams - The Tears That Never Fell / It Was Sweet While It Lasted
106: Chuck Comer - I Had My Fingers Crossed / A Love That Never Dies
107: Bob Taylor - If I Had Back What I Used to Have / Walking the Street
108:
109: Cousin Jake & Uncle Josh - Cotton Town Jubilee / Big Flop of the Year
110: Jay Chevalier and the Louisiana Long Shots - Simpley & Softly / Louisiana Living (1963)
111:
112: Cousin Jake & Uncle Josh - Dobro Rumba / Were Going to Have a Ball (1965)
113: Sylvia Mobley - Are You Sorry / Worried Over You
114: Bob Taylor - Did You Miss Me / You've Gone and Broke My Heart
115: Sylvia Mobley - I'm Not Alone Anymore / Every Time I See You (1965)
116: Sonny Williams - Too Much Competition / Play Me a Country Song (1964) 
117: Sonny Williams - Cotton Patch Hop / Making Up for Lost Time
95: Kenny Owens - Christmas Poem / Gene Williams - My Son in Service (1965)
96: Gene Williams - A Mother's Love / Father's Table Grace (1965)
97: Amos Wren - Where Were You / Poor Folks
98: Chuck Comer - I'm the Luckies Guy in the World / What Are We Gonna Do
99: Charles Norris and the Magnolia Play Boys - Explain This Thing to Me / I Want You for My Own
4001: Nancy Ruud - I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry / Once a Day

Albums
101: Cousin Jake & Uncle Josh - Just Joshing (1963)
102: Slim Rhodes - The Rhodes Show on the Road (1963)
103: Jay Chevalier and the Louisiana Long Shots - Live at the Golden Nugget (1963)
99: Various artists - Stars of the Gene Williams Country Junction Show (1965)

See also

Recommended reading
• Alexander Petrauskas: "The Cotton Town Jubilee Story" (American Music Magazine #145), September 2017


Thanks to DrunkenHobo, Bob , Michael Hancock, Richard McCarter

Monday, August 13, 2012

Smokey Joe's Piano

This is a project I was working on for a very long time. Finally I was able to finish it about a year ago but the end of Megaupload took it away this year. Here it is again! My liner notes also appeared in the American Music Magazine in April 2012. This is the only comp where you can listen to ALL of Smokey Joe's (still existing) solo recordings.

Download

track list:
1. Lonely Sweetheart (Bill Taylor / Snearly Ranch Boys)
2. Split Personality (with Bill Taylor / Snearly Ranch Boys)
3. The Signifying Monkey
4. Listen to Me Baby
5. Perfect Girl
6. Start All Over Again
7. She's a Woman
8. Hula Bop
9. The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere
10. She's a Woman
11. Hula Bop
12. She's a Woman
13. Rock'n'Roll Ruby (Warren Smith)
14. I Need a Man (Barbara Pittman)
15. That's the Way I Feel (Jimmy Pritchett)

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

More Dave Dudley

This one's by request. I am currently working on a third installment of this series, so if anyone has more pre-1964 Dudley songs that have not been used for the previous two volumes, feel free to contact me. Dudley was a great singer and his early stuff how much talent he had. Sometimes, he fused different styles such as pop, country, and rock'n'roll, other tracks are pure country. Enjoy!

Download

track list:
1. John Henry
2. Barbara Allen
3. Last Day in the Mines
4. Ink Dries Quicker Than Tears
5. I'll Be Waiting for You
6. Cry Baby
7. Where There's a Will
8. Under Cover of the Night
9. Lonely Corner
10. Oh Lonesome Me
11. Last Day in the Mines

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Arthur Smith - Guitar Boogie

Arthur Smith performs his big hit "Guitar Boogie," looks like 1990s. A variation here and there...but, he still plays just as good as back in 1945!

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Ken Hammock on Starday-Dixie

Ken Hammock is certainly not a household name in music history - even in collector scenes he is an obscure figure. Only two record releases - one on Dixie and the other on Starday - were his contribution to American music but nevertheless, these recordings are now sought after collector items.

Hammock first appeared in the late 1940s, when he was a member of the Tennessee Valley Boys led by Clyde Grubb. This group was possibly the same that was a featured act on the Grand Ole Opry and recorded on Victor sometimes after 1942. May it as it be, Hammock left the band around the summer of 1948 and founded his own act, which he called the "Tennessee Valley Gang." Members of the gang included H.J. Keck (fiddle/guitar), Ray West (guitar), Jimmy Wisher ("hot guitar" as called in Billboard), Jimmie Brewer (guitar), Johnnie Brewer (bass) with Hammock possibly on lead guitar.

In 1948, they performed on a tent show and joined WGAP in Maryville, Tennessee, in January 1949. The next nine years are a blanket in Hammock's career since there is no mention of him performing. He appeared in 1958 on the Dixie label with a rockabilly instrumental called "Blue Guitar Jump" with Hammock taking over the lead guitar. By then, a singer called Hugh Lewis was a member of the group and he is the one who can be heard on Hammock's second single, "Now or Never" b/w "Gotta Find Some Way" for Starday. Both tracks were solid Country performances. These tracks were possibly recorded in Ashland, Kentucky.

Hammock again disappeared for a while. In 1970, there was a Ken Hammock who accompanied the Bailey Brothers on some of their recordings in Knoxville, Tennessee, backing the duo up on string bass. There's no indication that this is the same musician.

Discography 
Dixie 45-2009: Blue Guitar Jump / Angel in Person
Starday 45-370: Now or Never / Gotta Find Some Way

Recordings with the Bailey Brothers
These recordings were released on Old Homestead LP OHCS 138 in 1982

Knoxville, Tennessee, in June 1970
Charlie Bailey (vcl/mand), Danny Bailey (gtr/vcl), Ken Hammock (bs)

"Mary of the Wild Moor"
"Jack and Mae"
"Alabama"
"The Sweetest Gift"
"Where No Cabins Fall"
"He's Still Knocking"
"Step Out in the Sunlight"
"I'd Rather Have Jesus"
"Blow Your Whislte Freight Train"
"Knoxville Girl"