Roy Lanham (16 January 1923 - 14 February 1991) was known primarily as guitarist for the Sons of the Pioneers from 1961 through 1986. He also led the Whippoorwills for many years and performed as a solo artist, recording albums of country-jazz guitar instrumentals under his own name in the late '50s and early '60s. Despite his relative obscurity, Lanham is often esteemed on the level of such well-known guitar greats as Chet Atkins and Merle Travis.
Roy Howard Lanham was born in Corbin, KY, and picked up
the guitar at an early age. Beginning as a teenager he found radio work as a
rhythm guitarist in a number of instrumental combos, one of which was
eventually hired by pop vocalist Gene Austin and renamed the Whippoorwills. In
this group Lanham functioned as lead guitarist, performing in a jazzy style
influenced by Charlie Christian and Django Reinhardt but distinguished by his
development of a four-part harmony chord technique he would alternate with
single-string figures.
In 1943 Lanham joined Cincinnati's WLW, a 50,000-watt
station that allowed him the opportunity to work with King Records, for which
he soon performed regularly as a session guitarist, appearing on recordings by
Hank Penny and the Delmore Brothers, among others. After participating in one
Chet Atkins session in 1946 for the Bullet label, Lanham moved to Dayton and
re-formed the Whippoorwills.
For the next few years the combo toured, recorded
transcriptions for Smiley Burnette's radio show in Hollywood and collaborated
with Merle Travis on six sides for Capitol in the early '50s. It was during his
tenure with Smiley Burnette's show that Lanham first
met the Sons of the Pioneers, who invited the Whippoorwills to fill in for them on their radio show while the Sons were on tour.
met the Sons of the Pioneers, who invited the Whippoorwills to fill in for them on their radio show while the Sons were on tour.
Lanham found additional session work recording separately
with Johnny and Dorsey Burnette as well as Johnny Horton, Jim Reeves, Bonnie
Guitar, the Browns, and the Fleetwoods, in addition to recording singles under
his own name and with the Whippoorwills. The success of the Fleetwoods singles
on which he appeared led to his recording of a solo LP in 1959 and the sole
Whippoorwills album, Sizzling Strings, later that year.
During his time with the Sons of the Pioneers, he appeared
in many movies, movie shorts, and a television show with Roy Rogers. His best
known acting performance was in the 1963 film short "30 Minutes at
Gunsight". Also between tours he demonstrated Fender guitar equipment at National
Association of Music Merchant Shows at various cities, including Nashville.
Lanham had open-heart surgery in 1980, but was back
onstage within two months. In 1983 he went to Phoenix and worked with pioneer
steel guitarist Bud Isaacs, Duane Eddy, Thumbs Carllile, Jethro Burns, and
fiddler Johnny Gimble, in an event Isaacs called the Great American Jam. He
continued with the Pioneers and played on Tex Williams final LP. Around this
time he was diagnosed with bladder cancer. Though surgery appeared successful
he suffered a stroke although he recovered sufficiently to return playing
though not to rejoin the Pioneers.
In 1989 he was found to have prostate cancer, from which he
succumbed to on Feb 14th 1991 (age 68) in Camarillo, California, USA.
He was given surprisingly few obituaries outside the western music field. Given
the consistency of his work and the artistic sense of his musical vision, ne
deserved better.
(Edited from All Music & article in Soutwest Shuffle
by Rich Kienzie)
Roy Lanham was one of the best. The fact that he kept in western circles all
his life didn't hide the fact that he was also one of the top jazz guitarists
of all time. Here Roy and his band the
Whip-Oor-Wills show why they were one of the greatest ensembles of the 1940's.
For “Roy Lanham - The Most Exciting Guitar” (1961) go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://ulozto.net/file/6fTrYEQUaqny/roy-lanham-the-most-exciting-guitar-rar
01 Lost Weekend
02 Where Or When
03 Body And Soul
04 Song Of India
05 A Smooth One
06 These Foolish Things
07 Steel Guitar Rag
08 Lover Come Back To Me
09 As Time Goes By
10 Wildwood Flower
11 Kerry Dance
12 Old Joe Clark
Credits
Bass – Red Wootten
Drums – Earl Palmer
Guitar – Roy Lanham
Password: egroj
A big thank you to Egroj @ Egroj World for active link.
Thanks! Although I'm already familiar with this album, I'm still glad to see you drawing attention to such a great if under-recognized musician.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with Crab Devil!
ReplyDeletesuperb guitarrist. many thanks Bob!
ReplyDelete