Wednesday, 2 September 2020

Charline Arthur born 2 September 1929


Charline Arthur (September 2, 1929 – November 27, 1987) was an American singer of boogie-woogie, blues, and early rockabilly. Described as a "flash
in the pan" and a "woman before her time", Arthur was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame and has, since the 1980s, found
 favour with critics who praise her vocal style, her stage presence, and her influence on artists such as Elvis Presley and Patsy Cline.

Charline Arthur didn't play by the rules. During the '50s, country music wasn't particularly receptive to rowdy, racy material sung by females, much less one who refused to submit to the orders of her record company or promoters. No matter how much
pressure Arthur received, she didn't change her ways. With a raging temper, she was difficult to work with, particularly angering her producer, Chet Atkins. Nevertheless, her music was frequently impressive. 
In some ways, Arthur was a forerunner of rockabilly, with her bluesy, raw hillbilly music and her wild stage shows. She was the first female singer in country music to perform in pants and she used the extra freedom to prowl the stage. Her career was extremely brief, as she recorded for RCA for three years but her music managed to gain a gain a cult following.

The daughter of a Pentecostal preacher, Charline Arthur (born Charline Highsmith in Henrietta, Texas) began singing in church while she was in school. At the age of seven, she earned enough money collecting empty bottles to buy a guitar for six dollars. Influenced by the hardcore honky tonk of Ernest Tubb, she wrote her first song, "I've Got the Boogie Blues," when she was 12. By the time she was a teenager, she was performing on a local Texas radio show. Arthur won a spot on a traveling medicine show in the mid-'40s, yet her parents refused to let her leave home. She countered by marrying Jack Arthur, who would later play bass on her records.


                              

In the late '40s, she began singing in honky tonks and nightclubs across Texas, which eventually led to a single with Bullet Records, "I've Got the Boogie Blues"/"Is Love a Game." After she recorded the single, she and Jack moved to Kermit, TX, where she was hired by a radio station as a DJ. Soon, Charline 
assembled a band. Performing in local clubs and the radio, Arthur gained a fan base. In 1950, she recorded a single for the small label Imperial. During this time, Eddy Arnold and his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, heard Arthur perform. Impressed with what they heard, they directed Julian and Gene Aberbach, owners of the Hill and Range music publishing company, toward the singer. The pair signed her to a publishing deal and landed her a contract with RCA Records in 1953.

Arthur made her first record for RCA early in 1953, recording with session musicians who included Floyd Cramer and Chet Atkins. Her contract with RCA led her to appearances with the Louisiana Hayride, the Big D Jamboree, and the Ozark Jubilee. During this time, she frequently performed on the same stage as Elvis Presley, whose mother was a big fan of Arthur. All of her performances were gaining her acclaim -- in 1955, she was the runner-up to Kitty Wells in Country & Western Jamboree magazine's DJ poll.

Charline with Roy Orbison mid 50's
However, things weren't going smoothly for Arthur. Although she appeared on the "Prince Albert" portion of the Grand Ole Opry, her material was frequently rejected on the grounds it was too racy. At RCA, Chet Atkins followed Steve Sholes as her record producer, and the two musicians could not get along. Furthermore, she was having no success with any of her records. After her contract expired at the end of 1956, she left RCA for Colin, but she had a similar lack of success there. Shortly after her record label switch, she parted ways with her husband, Jack.

Charline formed a trio with her sisters, Betty Sue and Dottie, but the teaming was unsuccessful. By 1960, she was broke. Arthur moved to Salt Lake City, where she met Ray Pellum, a nightclub and record label owner who landed her a regular singing job in Chubbuck, ID. During this time, she also recorded for his Eldorado label. In 1965, Arthur headed out to California. Between 1965 and 1978, she recorded for three small labels -- Rustic, Wytra, and Republic -- with Alice M. Michaels as her manager. 

In the late 1970s she performed for Ernest Tubb's Midnight Jamboree show, and she retired in 1978. Suffering from debilitating arthritis, she went back to Idaho to live with her sister a year later, on a disability check. She died there on November 27, 1987, aged 58, due to natural causes.

Two historians, Mary A. Bufwack and Robert K. Oermann, noted that Arthur "fought for the right to become country's first truly aggressive, independent female of the postwar era. Ultimately she lost".

Charline Arthur lived long enough to see her RCA material reissued by Germany's Bear Family Records in 1986 as "Welcome To The Club" and was greatly pleased. As All Music Guide to Country laments, the only record of hers available.

(Edited from AllMusic & Wikipedia)

9 comments:

  1. For “Charline Arthur - Golden Country Classics” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/12226500/Charline_Arthur_-_Golden_Classics.rar.html

    1 (I'm In Love With) Someone's Used To Be 2:28
    2 Please Darlin' Please 2:23
    3 Soft Hearted Gal 2:13
    4 The Good And The Bad 2:45
    5 Flash Your Diamonds 2:27
    6 Waltzing 2:37
    7 Too Long, Too Many Times 2:43
    8 Dreaming Of You 2:26
    9 I'm Having A Party All By Myself 2:33
    10 What About Tomorrow? 2:17
    11 Just Look, Don't Touch, He's Mine 2:14
    12 I Heard About You 2:12
    13 Kiss The Baby Goodnight 2:17
    14 I've Got The Boogie Blues 2:45
    15 He Fiddled While I Burned 2:08
    16 Double-Crossed My Love 2:48
    17 Hello Baby 2:21
    18 Looking At The Moon And Wishing On A Star 2:24
    19 I Love Him Better Than You Do 2:21
    20 Heartbreak Ahead 3:11
    21 Welcome To The Club 2:25
    22 Anything Can Happen 2:37
    23 Leave My Man Alone 2:36
    24 Honey Bun 2:15
    25 I Was Wrong 2:27
    26 For Old Times' Sake 2:41
    27 How Many Would There Be? 2:19
    28 Burn That Candle 2:14

    The lady who wore the trousers! Charline Arthur leaped from amplifiers, sang lying down on-stage, and cavorted wildly. Her act was radically different from Kitty Wells and the other female country singers of the day. "I was shakin' that thing on-stage long before Elvis ever thought about it," she once bragged. "I was a blues singer. I wanted to sing something original." And she did.

    The best of Charline Arthur's recording career from 1949 to 1957 is captured here. During that time, she recorded for Bullet, Imperial, Coin, and RCA Victor. There were no hits, but an awful lot of good music. When rock 'n' roll came along, it wasn't news to Charline--she had been shakin' it up for years. She found great original country songs like He Fiddled While I Burned, Flash Your Diamonds, and Looking At The Moon And Wishing On A Star; she covered R&B classics like Burn That Candle, and she flat out rocked, as on 'Welcome To The Club'.

    Bear family’s original Charline Arthur LP from 1986 was an eye-opener, and now more records have been added to the original 16 tracks giving the best possible overview of this groundbreaking artist's work. Her voice was brassy, sassy, and loaded with personality. It was a barroom howl that beats even Rose Maddox for out-and-out exuberance.
    This is the Master Classics Records 2010 re-release of the extended Bear family album, which for some strange reason has omitted three tracks.

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  2. Thanks for this! I have never heard of Charline Arthur before... but it's so much fun running across all these early Country music pioneers.

    Thanks for your work!

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  3. Thanks!Great Info On This Wonderful!Trailblazer.

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  4. Sad to say the download link no longer works. Great article though.

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  5. Hello Lindsay, If any link is not working just ask for a new one....

    https://www.upload.ee/files/14926006/Charline_Arthur_-_Golden_Classics.rar.html

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  6. Many thanks Bob. Love the blog.

    ReplyDelete