Posted on 09/21/2013 5:19:06 PM PDT by nickcarraway
I always think Hank Williams appears so frail in comparison to the robust, chiseled country stars of today, but dont let those looks fool you. Despite battles with illness and drug and alcohol addiction that lead to a career cut short by his death at 29, Hank had a career that todays stars can only dream of. In six short years, Hank Williams wrote and recorded only 66 songs under his own name (he also recorded as Luke the Drifter, but thats for another day)but of those, an incredible 36 were Top Ten hits and 11 went all the way to Number One on the equivalent of todays Billboard Country Chart.
Let that sink in for a minute. 6 years, 66 six songs, 36 top ten hits. 11 number ones. So, you could break that down to an album a year for six years. 6 top ten hits each year, and two of those going to number one. And he wrote all but one. Oh, and all those number-one songs are considered standards today. How many of hit makers today (in any genre) can claim that?
Born in Mount Olive, Alabama on September, 17, 1923, Hiram Hank Williams was a shy and sickly child. He was born with a spinal condition (believed to be spina bifida, but never diagnosed) which meant hed never be able to work a farming or factory job or do any kind of manual labor. Good thing his musical talent showed itself early, with Hank learning gospel songs in church, traditional folk and country songs from his neighbors. He also learned the blues from a local African-American street musician, who also taught him the basics of playing the guitar.
He must have been a quick study, because young Hank Williams was entering local talent contests soon after he moved to Montgomery, Alabama (the big city!) with his mother in 1937. Ten years later, when he was only 23, Hank had his first hit, Move It On Over. Two years later, at 25, Hank hit it big with Lovesick Blues (which he didnt write) and was honored with an invitation to join the Grand Ol Opryan even bigger deal in 1949, than it is today. For the next few years, Hank was THE MANreleasing a string of hits that included the now classic songs Im So Lonesome I Could Cry, Honky Tonkin, Your Cheatin Heart and Jambalaya and I Cant Help It (If Im Still In Love With You).
And while Hank Williams couldnt be more country, his songs cant be stuck in a box and labeled one style or another. Theyve been hits when pop, gospel or blues singers. One of Tony Bennetts biggest hits was his cover of Cold Cold Heart, but as he explained in this video, it almost didnt happen!
Even with all his success, Hank Williams wasnt happy. The constant traveling was difficult on his back and kept him in pain. He hoped that spinal surgery would help, but it only made things worse. Hank turned to drugs and alcohol to ease the pain and thats never the answer. He began missing shows. Soon he lost his wife (mother to son Hank Williams, Jr.) and was kicked off the Grand Ol Opry. And while he was still writing and releasing hit records, Hank Williams was proving to be an unreliable performershowing up late for gigs or not at all. Soon, his bookings started dropping off and instead of playing the big joints, it was back to the beer gardens and dance halls.
At the end of 1952, things might have been looking up. Jambalya was one of the biggest hits of the year. Hank decided to go home to Montgomery and recuperate. But he also decided to keep two dates that were on his scheduleNew Years Eve in Charleston, West Virginia and New Years Day in Canton, Ohio. It makes sense that hed want to play those, theyd be well-paying gigs. But, in an ending befitting a character in one of his songs, Hank Williams died alone, in the back of a Cadillac en route to his Charleston shows, surrounded by sheet music, beer cans and whiskey bottles. He was only 29.
Sixty years after his death and on what would have been his 90th birthday, Hank Williams has not been forgotten. He is still an icon in American music, his songs rediscovered by every generation. They pop up in movie soundtracks like Forrest Gump and Steel Magnolias and have been licensed to television programs in almost every country around the world.
There are countless hits collections and boxed sets out thereranging from simple ones that include only the Number One hits to treasure troves with live radio broadcasts and concerts. And The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams features lyrics Hank left behind turned into finished songs by artists including Norah Jones, Bob Dylan and Jack White.
And if youd like to retrace Hank Williams last ride, hop in and ride along with singer-songwriter and journalist Peter Cooper. He did just that in this haunting story from a few years ago. You can follow that up with a scrubbed up and fictionalized film version of the storyits called The Last Ride.
By the way, I have an every changing list of my top five Hank Williams songs. Today, Your Cheatin Heart is atop the list (I have no idea where it will be tomorrow). You?
Thanks for that toe-tapper, and that pretty version of "The Great Speckled Bird". (Roy Acuff would like that rendition!)
(On that page, you said something about how the woman on the recording added the "twiddy". Excuse my ignorance, but was that a reference to those high piano keys? That really sounded nice.)
I know how to find songs on U-tube, and play them, but I don't know how to upload songs/photos/videos yet. (Someday I'll have to learn how to do that too, and I'll contact you to find out how to do it.) :-)
Have you ever heard Hank sing this song?
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