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Roy Clark
________________
The
Music
b. Roy Linwood Clark, 15 April 1933,
Meherrin, Virginia, USA. When he was 11, the family moved to Washington DC after
his father, a competent musician who played guitar, banjo and fiddle, progressed
from being a cotton picker to become a computer programmer, and augmented his pay for the
government job by playing at local dances (his mother also played piano). Clark
played banjo and mandolin at an early age and was playing guitar at dances with
his father by the time he was 14. He won the National Banjo Championship at the
ages of 16 and 17, the latter occasion resulting in an appearance at the Grand Ole Opry. He considered a baseball career in his late
teens but at 18 became a professional boxer. Fighting as a light-heavyweight, he
won 15 fights in a row before the next fight convinced him he should look
elsewhere for a living. He found work in clubs and appeared on local radio and
television in such shows as the Ozark Jubilee and
Town And Country Time. In 1955, he joined Jimmy Dean on
his Washington television show Country Style, and when
Dean left for New York, Clark was given the show. He played instruments, joked
and sang and gradually built himself a reputation, but in the early 60s, he
decided to seek fame further afield and became lead guitarist and frontman for
Wanda
Jackson. He stayed with her for about a year and played lead guitar on her
hit recording of "Let's Have A Party". When she gave up her band, Jim Halsey
took on the role of Clark's manager and soon
found him a spot on one of the most popular network television shows, The Beverly Hillbillies. Here he appeared in the dual role of
Cousin Roy and (dressed as a woman) his mother Big Mama Halsey. He also signed
for Capitol Records and released his first album,
which contained both songs and instrumentals. In 1963, he was given the chance
to play on the Tonight Show on television, owing to
the fact that Jimmy Dean was hosting the programme. This led to further
invitations to appear on other top television shows and his popularity rapidly
grew. In later years he hosted many of the shows personally. He achieved his
first chart success in 1963, when his version of Bill Anderson's "The Tips Of
My Fingers" made both the US country and pop charts. He left Capitol, joining
Dot Records in 1967. During the 60s, somewhat
ironically, he had country hits with pop songs, when further double chart
successes included Charles Aznavour's
"Yesterday When I Was Young" and "September Song'. During the mid-60s, he
fronted the Swingin" Country television series and in
1969, CBS invited him to co-host their new country comedy show Hee Haw with Buck Owens. This programme became
one of the most popular on television, so much so that when CBS dropped it in
1971 because they felt it did not create the right impression for the company,
it was immediately syndicated by the show's producers and even grew in
popularity. During the 70s, Clark had a great number of country chart hits,
including the very humorous "Thank God And Greyhound", "Riders In The Sky",
"Somewhere Between Love And Tomorrow" and "Come Live With Me", his only number 1
US country hit. He also made several popular television commercials. Clark
progressed to become one of country music's biggest stars and to enable himself
to keep up a punishing schedule of concert appearances, he learned to fly and
piloted himself around the States. He was one of the first country artists to
star in his own show on Las Vegas strip, where he still appears regularly,
usually backed by an orchestra. Clark also became the first star to take his
show to the Soviet Union, when in January 1976, he played to packed houses
during a 21-day tour of Riga, Moscow and Leningrad. The same year, Clark also
played concerts with Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra. In 1977, he
appeared at Carnegie Hall, New York, and in 1979, he recorded an album with
blues artist Clarence "Gatemouth"
Brown. Between 1979 and 1981, he recorded for MCA but during the late 80s,
he was with several labels. Although he had no major hits, a version of "Night
Life" registered country hit number 50 for him in 1986. In later years, he
become involved in cattle ranching, publishing, advertising and property. During
his career, he has won many CMA awards including Comedian Of The Year 1970,
Entertainer Of The Year 1973, Instrumental Group Of The Year (with Buck Trent)
in 1975 and 1976 and was nominated as Instrumentalist Of The Year every year
from 1967 to 1980, winning in 1977, 1978 and 1980. He guested on the Opry many times over the years but did not become a member
until 1987. He has appeared in several films and in 1986, he co-starred with Mel Tillis in
a comedy western called Uphill All The Way, which they
both also produced. Clark is a talented multi-instrumentalist and all-round
entertainer, who is equally at home with various types of music.
Source:
VH1.com
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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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