Sunday, 19 April 2026

Bobby Russell born 19 April 1940

Bobby Russell (April 19, 1940 – November 19, 1992) was an American singer and songwriter. Between 1966 and 1973, he had five singles on the Hot Country Songs charts, including the crossover pop hit "Saturday Morning Confusion". Russell was married to singer and actress Vicki Lawrence from 1972 to 1974.

Robert L. Russell was born in Nashville Tennessee. There's not much information regarding his early years but he was raised in the days when the Tennessee capital was taking steps towards becoming Music City. His roots and leanings were in country but he would wisely lend his composing talents which were very adaptable to the pop market in the 1960s. He first hit the nation’s Hot 100 with a rather obscure song by Jan and Dean, “Tennessee” but it would take four years for Russell to enter the Top 20 which he did with a song recorded by Gary Lewis and the Playboys, “Sure Gonna Miss Her”.


                                 

 Russell's best-known songs were lyric-heavy, with lines that seem artfully torn from conversation. Two of those songs ruled the radio in 1968, the year Bobby Goldsboro had a five-week pop #1 and three-week country #1 with "Honey." The hit song inspired numerous cover versions, as did another Russell-penned hit, "Little Green Apples."

"Little Green Apples", won the Song of the Year Grammy Award in 1968. It was originally recorded and released by Roger Miller, who had the first Top 40 hit with the song. It was also a hit for O.C. Smith and Patti Page in the US in 1968. The song was a particular favourite of Frank Sinatra. Russell also wrote the song "Honey", which was a hit for Bobby Goldsboro in 1968, spending five weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Russell wrote the ballad "Do You Know Who I Am", which was recorded by Elvis Presley during his 1969 Memphis sessions. Russell penned "The Joker Went Wild", a Billboard Top 40 hit for Brian Hyland in 1966. Russell also wrote "Anabell of Mobile" for Nancy Sinatra. The Russell composition "Camp Werthahekahwee", an ode to summer camps sung by a father to his son, appeared on a 1986 album by Ray Stevens. The name of the camp is pronounced "where the heck are we?"

Bobby with Vicki Lawrence

Russell had modest success as a solo recording artist, reaching the pop Top 40 with a whimsical look at domesticity called "1432 Franklin Pike Circle Hero," and again with another glimpse of suburbia called "Saturday Morning Confusion," a top 25 country hit and No. 28 pop hit in the early fall of 1971.The song was a first-person account of a family man suffering from a hangover and trying to find peace and quiet to sleep it off, but constantly being henpecked by the kids, wife and neighbours. But his next indelible hit would come in 1972 when his actress wife, Vicki Lawrence, recorded "The Night the Lights Went out in Georgia," a pulsing tale of Southern injustice. Lawrence sang the demo of the song in hopes of placing it with another artist, but Cher and others turned it down. Lawrence went on to record a studio-polished version, and it became another cross-format hit. Also penned and sung by Russell was 1974's "Go Chase Your Rainbow", his highest-charting entry in Australia.

Other songs that Russell recorded were "Better Homes and Gardens", "1432 Franklin Pike Circle Hero", "For a While We Helped Each Other Out", "Our Love Will Rise Again", "How You Gonna Stand It", and "Mid American Manufacturing Tycoon". He also wrote and recorded "Summer Sweet" for the Disney live-action Rascal in 1969 and wrote and sang the title song "As Far as I'm Concerned" over the opening credits of The Grasshopper. He continued writing songs throughout the '80.

Russell died in Nicholasville, Kentucky, of coronary artery disease on November 19, 1992. He was 52 years old. He was posthumously inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1994.

(Edited from Wikipedia & Nashville Songwriters Foundation)

Saturday, 18 April 2026

Hal Galper born 18 April 1938

Harold Galper (April 18, 1938 – July 18, 2025) was an American jazz pianist, composer, arranger, bandleader, educator, and writer.

Born in Salem, Massachusetts, Galper first began taking piano lessons at age six. A gifted performer, he entered Berklee School of Music in Boston from 1955 to 1958, honing his skills by studying with noted pianist and teacher Madame Chaloff. During college, he hit the jazz clubs, playing with such luminaries as Sam Rivers, Herb Pomeroy, and Jaki Byard. He also garnered his own gigs, working as the house pianist at such Boston venues as The Stables, Connelly's, and Lennie's on the Turnpike. After graduating, he launched his professional career, touring and recording for three years with iconic trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker. From there, he also played with such luminaries as Joe Henderson, Cannonball Adderley, and others .He also accompanied vocalists Joe Williams, Anita O'Day, and Chris Connor.

By the '70s, Galper had begun to embrace an expansive soul-jazz and fusion sound, a style he showcased on two 1971 recordings for Mainstream Records, "The Guerilla Band and Wild Bird," both of which featured trumpeter Randy Brecker and his brother, saxophonist Michael Brecker. A third Mainstream session, the trio date Inner Journey, followed in 1972 and found Galper returning to a more acoustic sound. He played with Stan Getz for a year starting in 1972, and in 1973, he played electric piano in Cannonball Adderley's Quintet, but he quickly became dissatisfied with the instrument. He replaced George Duke and stayed with Adderley until 1975. 

                         Here's "Yellow Days" from above LP

                                
He then joined saxophonist Lee Konitz for the straight-ahead duo session "Windows". Galper's follow-up as leader, 1976's Reach Out, reunited him with the Brecker Brothers for a fiery and searching post-bop set. Along with several more sessions with the Breckers, he rounded out the decade by recording two albums with John Scofield for the Enja label in 1978-79, the first led by Scofield, and the second led by himself.

The '80s were also a busy time for Galper, who recorded again with Baker. He worked steadily with Phil Woods for much of the decade, appearing on 14 of the saxophonist's albums. Consequently, his own output slowed somewhat, though he did deliver several highly regarded efforts like 1982's Naturally with bassist Rufus Reid and drummer Victor Lewis, 1986's Dreamsville, and 1987's Time to Remember. After releasing his 1989 trio album Portrait, he decided to return to more regular solo work. Galper left the Woods group in August 1990 to tour and record with a trio with Steve Ellington on drums.

From 1990 to 1999, his group was on the road six months a year. Galper's output increased steadily and he recorded for such labels as Concord, Enja, and Philology with albums like 1992's Tippin', 1995's Rebop, and 1999's Let's Call This That.

Along with performing, Galper has worked as an educator and helped found New York's New School of Jazz and Contemporary Music. He also taught at Purchase University until 2014. He also authored a highly regarded theory textbook, Forward Motion. His theoretical and practical articles appeared in six of Down Beat editions. His scholarly article on the psychology of stage fright, originally published in the Jazz Educators Journal, has subsequently been reprinted in four other publications.

During these years, he remained active, recording a handful of trio albums including 2007's Agents of Change with bassist Tony Marino and drummer Billy Mintz, 2009's Art-Work with former John Coltrane bandmates bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Rashid Ali, and 2012's Airegin Revisited with bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer John Bishop. In 2018, Galper delivered Cubist, a quartet date featuring saxophonist Jerry Bergonzi. A concert album, The Zone: Live at the Yardbird Suite, appeared the following year and found the pianist leading his trio. It proved to be one of his last major projects.

In his final years, Galper continued to perform locally in upstate New York, notably with drummer Billy Mintz and bassist Tony Marino at Rafter’s Tavern in Sullivan County, where he continued to “explore his roots and learn something new every day.” In November 2024, he announced a hiatus from performing to focus on writing.

Hal Galper died in Cochecton, New York, on July 18, 2025 at the age of 87.

(Edited from AllMusic, Wikipedia, New Grove Jazz Dictionary & Hal Galper's website)  

Friday, 17 April 2026

Don Winters born 17 April 1929

Don Winters (April 17, 1929 - August 17, 2002) was an American country singer and songwriter.

Don Winters was born in 1929 in Tampa, Florida, he was raised mostly in South Georgia, he was the son of entertainer "Pop" Winters who headed "The Southern Strollers." Don began performing with them in the late 40s but moved to Nashville in the 50s and recorded on Decca and RCA labels. He recorded a few duets with his sister Rita Marie Winters, who was born on August 15, 1932 and chose the stage name Rita Robbins, with whom she had already participated in Nita, Rita & Ruby. The stage name Rita Robbins has no personal connection to Marty Robbins. 

Don was a gifted vocalist, noted especially for his yodeling and long wind. He began recording for RCA Victor in 1953 with his sister Rita. Then from 1956 - 1966 he recorded for various labels which included Coin (1956) Columbia (1957) Decca (1960) Brunswick (1961-62) Hamilton, Sims (1963) Ashley, Robbins (1966).  

                                   

His solo efforts included his 1961 top-ten single of "Too Many Times" and another favourite,  "Shake Hands With A Loser. Around 1960 he joined Marty Robbins' band as a singer and guitar player. With Bobby Sykes the three were known as "The Marty Robbins Trio" and performed with Marty Robbins. During his 23 years with Marty, he was part of the band and a featured solo artist in his shows.

Most internet sources credit them as being in the recording sessions for Columbia Records from spring 1960 to Dec. 1964 although, however it is well known that Marty Robbin's producers Don Law and Frank Jones mainly used session staff from the Nashville A-Team. Strangely both Winters and Sykes are not mentioned in Marty's recording sessions except for two in 1960. in the early '70s he had a brief side career recording several albums of country covers and generic tribute albums along with the studio band, The Country Ramblers.

Don Winters, Bobby Sykes and Marty Robbins
Meanwhile he was a devoted and loyal friend to Marty Robbins, accompanying him to races and public appearances until his death in 1982. Later, in an interview with Swampland, reporter Michael Buffalo Smith asked him that as well as touring with Robbins if he also recorded with him. Winters replied " Oh yes. I did the background vocals on a lot of songs like “El Paso City” and “Devil Woman.” Not the original “El Paso City,” we re-recorded it."   

Winters recorded the album "The Yodeling King" with his sons Donnie and Dennis, The Winters Brothers Band in 1984 , and also did a few shows with them. His last last performance was with his sons on June 15, 2002, a few months later he passed away at his home in Nolensville, Tennessee on August 17, 2002. He was first diagnosed with colon cancer in 1994 from which he recovered, but died after a year's struggle with liver cancer. He is buried in Nolensville Cemetery in Nolensville, Tennessee, USA.

(Scant information edited from IMDB, Rock'n'Roll Records Forum & Rocky 52)


Thursday, 16 April 2026

Vince Hill born 16 April 1934

Vincent Brian Hill (16 April 1934 – 22 July 2023) was an English traditional pop singer, best known for his cover version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein show tune "Edelweiss" (1967), which reached No. 2 on the UK singles chart. He recorded 25 studio albums and several soundtracks, wrote songs and plays and hosted TV shows during the 1970s and 1980s, and earned a national and international reputation through hit records and sold–out performances at some of the world’s most prestigious concert venues such as the Sydney Opera House, London’s Royal Albert Hall and the London Palladium.

Vince Hill was born in Holbrooks, Coventry. He first sang professionally in a public house named The Prospect in Margate, Kent, when he was 17 years old. He decided to become a full-time musician after working as a baker, truck driver and coal miner. His first opportunity as a singer came when he read an advert in Melody Maker magazine, which said that the Band of the Royal Corps of Signals needed a vocalist. He travelled to Catterick camp in Yorkshire where the band was based, performed the audition, and gained the job. This offered Hill a way to undertake his National Service as well as experience performing across the world. After completing his military service, he toured with the musical Florodora, and later became a singer with Teddy Foster's Band, a big band based in London. At the beginning of the 1960s Hill joined a British vocal group, the Raindrops, which gave him his first opportunity to perform in television and radio shows, especially on the BBC radio show Parade of the Pops. The Raindrops also had in its ranks Jackie Lee, Len Beadle and Johnny Worth.

                                    

By late 1961, Hill left The Raindrops for a fledgling solo career. His debut entry in the UK Singles Chart was the Les Vandyke penned "The River's Run Dry", which went to No. 41 in June 1962. In 1963, he participated in A Song for Europe, the UK heat of the Eurovision Song Contest, with another Vandyke-penned song, "A Day at the Seaside". The next few years proved fallow, as a succession of single releases failed to reach the chart. 

In January 1965, Hill was offered an international recording contract with the EMI group, which signed him to their Columbia label. His first Top 20 chart success with his new label came a year later with "Take Me to Your Heart Again", Hill's cover of the Édith Piaf hit "La Vie En Rose", which climbed to No. 13 on the UK Singles Chart in 1966 and No. 18 on the RPM chart in Canada. "Roses of Picardy", composed during the First World War, was another Top 20 success, reaching No. 13 in mid 1967.

Further notable songs that he recorded included "Heartaches" (No. 28, 1966), "Merci Cherie" (written by the Austrian singer Udo Jürgens), which was the winning song in the Eurovision Song Contest 1966, (No. 36, 1966), "Love Letters in the Sand" (No. 23, 1967), "The Importance of Your Love" (music by Gilbert Bécaud, English lyrics by Norman Newell) and "Look Around (And You'll Find Me There)". The latter track, taken from the soundtrack to the film Love Story, was his final Top 20 hit, peaking at No. 12 in the latter half of 1971. His most successful hit was his cover recording of the Rodgers and Hammerstein song "Edelweiss", from their 1959 musical The Sound of Music. The recording was a No. 2 hit on the UK Singles Chart in March 1967. It was to become his signature tune for the rest of his career, which saw him top the bill at the London Palladium and Talk of the Town. His album Edelweiss was also a hit for EMI Columbia.

Although known mainly for his voice, Hill was also a songwriter and composed many songs with his musical director Ernie Dunstall. These were used on his studio albums and flip sides to his singles of the day. The Dunstall-Hill composition "Why Or Where Or When" was also recorded by Mr. Lee Grant and topped the New Zealand chart in 1968, while "I Never Did As I Was Told" was covered by Broadway star Robert Goulet in 1971. Hill's song "I'm Gonna Make It", sung by Joe Cuddy, was the overall winner of the 1973 Castlebar Song Contest. Hill's long-term recording contract with EMI Columbia came to an end in 1974, by which time he had released 14 studio albums and countless singles. In the following year he signed to a new recording deal with CBS Records, for whom he released a further three studio albums of contemporary song material. Hill also continued to perform regularly in clubs, cabaret and various stage productions. He also hosted his own prime-time television show in Canada called Vince Hill At The Club, which also aired in the US.

Vince and Annie
From the 1980s onwards, Hill concentrated mainly on his live performances and continued to play all the top venues around the world, including the London Palladium, Royal Albert Hall, Sydney Opera House and Talk of the Town, as well as appearing on cruise ships. He would also continue to make guest appearances on popular television shows of the day, such as The Golden Shot, Seaside Special, Rainbow, The Good Old Days, 3-2-1, Blankety Blank and Cash in the Attic. In 1982, Hill added acting to his CV, in the BBC radio drama, Tolpuddle (which he also wrote). In 1990, Hill took to the stage to play Ivor Novello in the stage play My Dearest Ivor. Hill also wrote the stage musical, Zodiac. His stage acting continued, including a starring role as The Cowardly Lion in an adaptation of the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of The Wizard Of Oz.

In 2004, Hill was diagnosed with prostate cancer and underwent successful keyhole surgery. A year later, following a routine blood test, it was discovered he also had chronic myeloid leukaemia. Following extensive treatment, the illness was brought under control. His autobiography, Another Hill to Climb (Bank House Books), written in collaboration with Nick Charles, was released in 2010. Hill came out of semi-retirement in April 2012 to make a successful return to the stage for one night only in which he performed in a big band night at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club. Hill said, "It was an absolute success — we sold out and I got a standing ovation. At that point, I just thought, "I've finished, that'll do me." In 2009, the Vince and his wife Annie celebrated their golden wedding anniversary and invited 130 friends to their home for a party. In 2014, he lost his only son Atholl and in 2016, Vince’s beloved wife Annie passed away from a degenerative lung condition.

Hill came out of retirement again in March 2018, when he returned to the stage in The Good Old Days of Variety at the Cast in Doncaster. Later that year, in September, Hill appeared in his 'Final Farewell Show' at the Kenton Theatre in Henley-on-Thames. Hill became a Patron of the Macular Society in October 2010. Hill suffered from AMD (age-related macular degeneration) from 2011; this was a major reason for his reluctantly retiring from live performances. In August 2021, it was revealed via Twitter that Hill had recently suffered a stroke. Hill died peacefully at his home in Henley-on-Thames on 22 July 2023, at the age of 89.

(Edited from Wikipedia & Beat Magazine)

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Ginette Acevedo born 15 April 1942

Ginette Acevedo (born April 15, 1942), is a Chilean singer, who won the Viña del Mar International Song Festival twice: the international genre in 1964 and the folkloric genre in 1971. 

Born Mirna Jinett Acevedo Palma in San Fernando, Colchagua, Chile. Due to work of her father, a soldier assigned to the Infantry School, the family moved from San Fernando to San Bernardo when Ginette was two years old. It was in that commune of Greater Santiago that she developed all her school studies and began to be interested in singing. Like almost all performers of her generation, her first stage was on the radio. Every Sunday morning her voice could be heard in "La revista postal telegráfica", on Radio Minería. Ginette had recently turned 18 and still considered singing as a hobby. She had no studies on the subject and clung to what experts described as a "naturally imposed" register. Her early repertoire was New Wave hits, and imports from American balladeers, such as Connie Francis and Brenda Lee.

Ginette was then inspired by the Argentinian folk singer Ramona Galarza. "The cadence of the songs was very much in line with my way of singing," she recalled,  who in 1963 recorded her first single, the guarania "No quiero ser", and immediately established herself as one of the new successful young voices in the country, capable of crossing generations with a combination of freshness and tradition. That song spent nine months at the top of the radio ranking and was chosen the best of the year by disc jockeys and the press. Four other hits by Argentine composers followed: "La canción del Jangadero", the strumming double "Puente Pexoa" and "Collar de caracolas", and the guarania "Anahí".

                        Here's "El Jangadero" from above LP

                                   

After marrying her manager, the well-known show producer Luciano Galleguillos, the singer travelled to Buenos Aires in 1964, determined to make a professional space for herself among Argentines. It was hard work, which forced her to an intense promotion in the provinces, but which soon distinguished her with great radio and even film appearances. From the end of 1964, Ginette Acevedo continued her career in Argentina, where she was presented as "The sweet voice of America", achieving her definitive professionalization and Latin American projection, and becoming the cover of the prestigious magazine Folklore. 

One her greatest successes at the time was the recording she made for Ramón Ayala's musicalization of Pablo Neruda's "Poema 20". "Many could not believe that I was Chilean, more than anything because of the repertoire I sang. It was assumed for a long time that I was an Argentine singer," she recalls. In addition to releasing albums and promoting herself through extensive tours, she was summoned in 1967 to participate in two musical films: Pichones de hombre and Chao, amor. 

In 1967, she participated in three television programs in Buenos Aires: "Telemúsica", hosted by Raúl Matas; "Argentina canta y baila", where she was part of the stable cast along with Atahualpa Yupanqui, Eduardo Falú and Los Fronterizos; and "Domingo 67", in which she was the main figure. She also worked in radio and performed in up to six dance clubs weekly, but with a failing marriage and the death of her father, she suffered from a mixture of stress and depression, and she saw no greater future for a musical activity that at that point only produced tension for her. She decided to give up her professional promotion in Argentina and return to Santiago. Acevedo returned to Chile in the mid-1970s, and wrote a farewell letter to her admirers that was published in Ritmo magazine. She believed that with it she had closed her musical career forever.

It was her friend Palmenia Pizarro who convinced her to return to the stage. With the argument that "I couldn't be so irresponsible as abandoning my fans like that," Acevedo recalls, Palmenia took her to the Philips label, where a song that Óscar Cáceres and Luis Barragán had composed with her voice in mind was waiting for her. It was called "La torcacita", and it told the story of the despair of a man immersed in heartbreak. For the singer, the song touched chords very close to her recent emotional depression. After rehearsals and arrangements, the song won the folkloric section of the 1971 Viña Festival and is to this day the most popular in his repertoire. The song was later included on the album Ginette (1972).

After a couple of years of intense work, a second retirement took place this time because of her new marriage and her decision to settle down to family life after the birth of their first child. In 1977, the top brass of the Channel 13 stars came to her house to convince her to return to television, to Gonzalo Bertran's program "Esta noche fiesta". It was the first of several television slots that had her presence since then and for almost all of the eighties. From that period, her most important album was Mujeres de Chile (1979), a work composed by Willy Bascuñán of which the song "Mujer en el tiempo" stood out. Despite her constant presence on television, self-management was the only channel of work for Ginette Acevedo during that time. Without a record contract, from 1982 she herself looked for a way to publish and distribute her own recordings. 

At the end of 2003, the singer decided to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the appearance of her first single with a concert at the Providencia Theater in the capital, in which Palmenia Pizarro also participated. Until well into the 2000s, Ginette Acevedo has remained active in a constant dynamic of live performances and self-releases. Among the latter, the duet album with Valentín Trujillo Desde el alma (2012), recorded only with piano and voice, stands out. Together with composer Julio Zegers, she was recognized by the Chilean Society of Musical Authors and Performers (SCD) as a "fundamental figure of Chilean music" in 2022.

(Edited from Musical Popular, Chile) 

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

D.L. Menard born 14 April 1932

D.L. Menard (April 14, 1932 – July 27, 2017) was an American songwriter, performer, and recording artist in contemporary Cajun music. He was called the "Cajun Hank Williams".

Doris Leon, the only son of Ophy Menard and his wife, Helena Primeaux Menard, members of a farming family, was born outside Erath in Vermilion Parish, Louisiana. Most musicians from deep Cajun country are raised on the traditional sounds of accordion and fiddle and keening French love songs, but DL came to the music late; he didn’t hear a Cajun band until he was 16. What he listened to first was hardcore country songs by Hank Williams, Lefty Frizzell and Ernest Tubb, borne on the airwaves from station XERA in Del Rio, Texas. 

When the family radio died, he had to wait for the next cotton crop to provide cash for a new battery. Hearing an uncle’s band practising, he fell in love with the guitar, ordered one from a mail-order catalogue, learned some chords, bought a better guitar, and played his first dance job with accordionist Elias Badeaux and his Louisiana Aces. Joining the band in 1952, he initially sang country songs, but in the revival of Cajun music during the 50s he started singing in French. 

                                   

In time, he also began song writing. “The band had this pretty waltz that didn’t have words to it, so I made up some.” They called it La Valse de Jolly Roger, after a dancehall where they played, recorded it in 1961 for Floyd Soileau’s Swallow label and had some local success. The following year they made another record, a rueful song about a loser’s life called La Porte en Arrière – The Back Door.

“The story came to me all at once,” DL told the Cajun historian Barry Jean Ancelet, “but I was working in a service station. It took only a few minutes to write it down, but they were stretched out over a long afternoon. I based the tune on Hank Williams’ Honky Tonk Blues, changed it some, and made up words in French. It’s about having to come in through the back door. Lots of people could identify with that.” Three days after it was released, the band played at the Jolly Roger and had to perform the song seven times. It would stay with DL for the rest of his life. His wife Lou Ella (nee Abshire), whom he married in 1951, told him that if he went on stage and didn’t sing it, it was like not going on at all. Soileau boasts that it has taken over from Jolie Blonde as the Cajun national anthem.

The Louisiana Aces disbanded in 1967, but the 1973 National Folk Festival in Washington seemed to open doors again. “After we played our last song,” DL remembered, “the people gave us a standing ovation. If you had given me a million dollars cash, I would not have felt better.” There was an Aces reunion LP in 1974, followed in 1976 by the magnificent LP Under the Green Oak Tree with two other Cajun master musicians, the fiddler Dewey Balfa and accordionist Marc Savoy. 

In the company of other folk musicians, Menard went on State Department tours of South America, the Middle East and east Asia. By then he had quit the service station and, looking for an occupation that left more time for music, had settled on chair-making. He and Lou Ella, who was skilled at caning (weaving) chair seats and backs, opened a small chair factory in Erath, and DL was now invited to folk festivals as both musician and craftsman.

In 1984 he was offered his dream session: a programme of his own and Hank Williams’ songs, accompanied by members of Williams’ Drifting Cowboys and Ricky Skaggs. “DL doesn’t imitate Hank,” Skaggs wrote in the sleeve notes to Cajun Saturday Night, “but he has that bottom-of-the-heart sincerity that Hank had, so people tend to remember Hank when DL sings.”

In the late 80s and 90s he joined fiddler Ken Smith and accordionist Eddie Lejeune to play classic Cajun songs and tunes. They were warmly received on several tours of France and the UK, made the albums Cajun Soul and Le Trio Cadien, and collaborated on DL’s 1988 album No Matter Where You At, There You Are, a characteristic mixture of Cajun tradition, Hank Williams-style honkytonk and original songs by DL such as La Pompe Du Puits (The Water Pump, literally a well pump).

In 1993, his album Le Trio Cadien was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Traditional Folk Album category. In 1994 DL received a National Heritage Fellowship award, in 2009 he was inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame, along with Jo-El Sonnier, Doug Kershaw, and Jimmy C. Newman and in 2010 his album Happy Go Lucky secured a Grammy nomination. 

Throughout his career, Menard held performances in more than 30 countries and served as a good-will ambassador for Cajun culture. He gave his last public performance in July at an event in Erath celebrating the 55th anniversary of The Back Door. Menard, and his wife Lou Ella, had seven children, leading to 17 grandchildren, and 27 great-grandchildren. Lou Ella died in 2011. DL died at age 85 on July 27, 2017, in Scott, Louisiana.

(Edited from Guardian obit by Tony Rusell & Wikipedia) 

Monday, 13 April 2026

Wade Ray born 13 April 1913

Wade Ray (April 13, 1913– November 11, 1998) was an American Western Swing fiddler and vocalist. His bands, the Wade Ray Five, Wade Ray And His Ozark Mountain Boys, etc., included musicians such as Kenneth Carllile and Curly Chalker.

Fiddler Wade Ray made his name playing traditional country and Western swing from a very young age but made very few recordings of his own over his lengthy career. Born Lyman Wade Ray in Evansville, Indiana, he grew up in Boynton, AR, and at age four began playing a homemade fiddle his father fashioned from a cigar box. Just a year later, he was touring the vaudeville circuit as the World's Youngest Violin Player; he also learned to play tenor banjo and remained a vaudeville regular until his 18th birthday in 1931. 

A keen collector of fiddles, Wade amassed over a hundred in a short period of time and by the time he was 18 had a collection of over a hundred. He then moved to St. Louis and spent the next 12 years as the fiddler, singer, and musical director for Pappy Cheshire's Western swing group, the National Champion Hillbillies, who performed locally as well as having a regular radio slot on station KMOX. Wade was then called to serve in the Army in 1943.

Upon his return, he joined Patsy Montana's group the Prairie Ramblers for several years, also recording with the Ozark Mountain Boys. He moved to Los Angeles in 1949, where he became a regular on The Rex Allen Show and appeared in the film Hollywood. Wade Ray has the distinction of being the first performer to play with an electric fiddle.

                                    

Wade's recording carer as a solo performer kicked off in 1949 when he signed for the Paramount label, although this association was short-lived and by 1951 he had switched to the RCA label and released a total of 23 singles from 1951 to 1957, none of which charted. In 1954 Wade cut the proto-rockabilly number "Idaho Red" which was one of the all time great road songs and still a hot favourite in clubs today. Other recordings from this period included the equally good 'It's All Your Fault' and 'Cuddle Bug'. 

He made a good living appearing regularly at the "Cow Town", a legendary western night club in Los Angeles, and played frequent gigs in various Nevada resort towns; he also appeared regularly on The Roy Rogers Show and The Ernest Tubb Show. He moved to Nashville and did session work in the mid-'60s and also recorded his first solo album, A Ray of Country Sun, for ABC-Paramount in 1966. RCA Camden released Walk Softly (And Other Country Songs) later that year, and in 1967 Ray collaborated with the likes of Homer & Jethro, Sonny Osborne, and Hargus "Pig" Robbins on Down Yonder: The Country Fiddlers. He also managed the Renfro Valley Barn Dance, 1967-1970.

He continued his session work until 1979, when he retired to Sparta, Illinois where he continued playing "for fun" and supporting the annual 'Wade Ray Fiddle Contest' which continues to this day. Wade continued playing until 1997. He performed with a local radio station's road show until health problems made it impossible, with his final performance being alongside Willie Nelson. He passed away on November 11, 1998 and was laid to rest at Ellis Grove City Cemetery, Illinois.

(Edited from AllMusic, his Is My Story & Hill-Billy Music)