Saturday, 1 March 2014

Cliffie Stone born 1 March 1917


 

Cliffie Stone (March 1, 1917–January 17, 1998), born Clifford Gilpin Snyder, was an American country singer, musician, record producer, music publisher, and radio and TV personality who was pivotal in the development of California’s thriving country music scene after World War II during a career that lasted six decades. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1989.
 
Born in Stockton, California, Stone's father was country musician Herman the Hermit. The family moved to Burbank, and early in his life, he played bass in the big bands of Freddie Slack and Anson Weeks in Southern California, as well as working at local radio stations KXLA, KFI, KFVD and KFWB. Starting in 1935, Stone appeared on the Los Angeles-based radio shows Covered Wagon Jubilee, Hollywood Barn Dance, Dinner Bell Roundup, and Lucky Stars, singing as well as performing comedy routines and acting as host and DJ in the mid-1940s. In 1939, he married his first wife, Dorothy, and they had four children.
 
Stone began working at Capitol Records in 1946, and became an A&R man there; among the talents he discovered were Tennessee Ernie Ford (for whom he acted as manager from 1947 to 1957), Molly Bee, Hank Thompson and Stan Freberg. He also worked regularly with Merle Travis after his relocation from Nashville to Hollywood.
 
Stone was instrumental in helping various young musicians get their start in television, such as guitarist Zane Ashton (aka Bill Aken) who would also write songs for Stone's Central Songs publishing firm. His Hometown Jamboree premiered as a weekly TV broadcast in December 1949 over KLAC-TV/KCOP-TV in Pasadena; in 1953 it moved to KTLA-TV, where it replaced a competing program hosted by Spade Cooley and itself ran until cancellation in 1959.
 
 
 
 
 
Stone's career at Capitol was  successful, but he was ultimately better known for his successes in radio. He recorded six albums with a backing band which went under various names, including Cliffie Stone & His Orchestra, Cliffie Stone & His Barn Dance Band, and Cliffie Stone's Country Hombres. His 1955 hit, "The Popcorn Song", peaked at No. 14 on the just-launched Billboard magazine's singles charts in 1955.
 
 
By the 1960s, Stone was doing well in music publishing with his company, Central Songs; and for a short period launched a label called Granite Records. Stone's son, Curtis Stone, played in Highway 101. 1989, he married his second wife, songwriter Joan Carol. After he retired Stone continued to host occasional Hometown Jamboree Reunion shows in Southern California. He died from a heart attack on January 17, 1998 at his Saugus, California, home, the following year Cliffie was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. (Info mainly Wikipedia)
 
 
 
Cliffie Stone sings Little Old Wine Drinker Me as part of Melba Toast's 1994 Holiday Fest & Fanfaire held at The World Famous Palomino Club in North Hollywood, CA.The Holly Buddies: Jim Novak, Judy Lee Paxton, Doris Paxton, Chris Lawrence. Also featured: Sylvester the Jester, Kathy Tally. Video By Earl Reinhalter.

5 comments:

  1. For Cliffie Stones 1959 album "Cool Cowboy" go here:

    https://mega.co.nz/#!E1RGQCAK!USBKLAq0wjedk747cQIsEn1mAGL1asCcuZatWXQ2YRo

    ReplyDelete
  2. This vocal style reminds me a lot of Screamin' Jay Hawkins. Cool song.

    ReplyDelete
  3. P.S. - I share his birthday!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I am a new blogger, I get to know you as a longtime blogger in classical music. Your knowledge was amazing! It's nice if you exchange links with. here is my blog: http://classicaltotal.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  5. My mother, Foye McMillon worked with Cliffie Stone in the late 1940's at KXLA as a record librarian. I have some memorabelia that I still have and have sold some things to historians on ebay a few years back. I get so emotional when I look up old radio hosts and pictures. Those were the good old days as I heard so many wonderful stories about her time there. I was born in 1950 just after she left in 1949. Grand Memories she passed to me about an incredible industry that has given us all so very much. Someone said once, "without music, we might have forgotten most of our life's history". Sissi Brackney

    ReplyDelete