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Red Sovine
________________
The
Biography
b. Woodrow Wilson Sovine, 17 July 1918,
Charleston, West Virginia, USA, d. 4 April 1980, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Sovine was taught the guitar by his mother and was working professionally by the
time he was 17 on WCHS Charleston with Johnny Bailes, and then as part of Jim Pike And His
Carolina Tarheels. In 1948 Sovine formed his own band, The Echo Valley Boys, and
became a regular on Louisiana Hayride. Sovine acquired
the nickname of "The Old Syrup Sopper" following the sponsorship by Johnny Fair
Syrup of some radio shows, and the title is apt for such narrations as "Daddy's
Girl". Sovine recorded for US Decca Records and
first made the country charts with "Are You Mine?", a duet with Goldie Hill.
Later that year, a further duet, this time with Webb Pierce, "Why Baby Why",
made number 1 on the US country charts. They followed this with the tear-jerking
narration "Little Rosa", which became a mainstay of Sovine's act. From 1954
Sovine was a regular at the Grand Ole Opra and, in
all, he had 31 US country chart entries. He was particularly successful with
maudlin narrations about truck-drivers and his hits include "Giddyup Go" (a US
country number 1 about a truck-driver being reunited with his son), "Phantom
309" (a truck-driving ghost story!) and his million-selling saga of a crippled
boy and his CB radio, "Teddy Bear" (1976). Sequels and parodies of "Teddy Bear"
abound; Sovine refused to record "Teddy Bear's Last Ride", which became a US
country hit for Diana Williams. He retaliated with "Little Joe" to indicate that
Teddy Bear was not dead after all. Among his own compositions are "I Didn't Jump
The Fence" and "Missing You", which was a UK hit for Jim Reeves. Sovine recorded
"The Hero" as a tribute to John Wayne, and his son, Roger Wayne Sovine, was
named in his honour. The young Sovine was briefly a country singer, making the
lower end of the US country charts with "Culman, Alabam" and "Little Bitty Nitty
Gritty Dirt Town". Red Sovine's country music owed nothing to contemporary
trends but his sentimentality was popular in UK clubs. He had no big-time image
and, while touring the UK, he made a point of visiting specialist country music
shops. In 1980 Sovine died of a heart attack at the wheel of his car in
Nashville. The following year, as CB radio finally hit the UK, a reissue of
"Teddy Bear" reached number 5, his first UK chart entry.
Source:
VH1
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- If music be the food of love, play on;
Give me excess of it, that,
surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again! it
had a dying fall: O, it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound That
breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odour!
- William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616),
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