Tuesday, 15 December 2020

Ernest Ashworth born 15 December 1928

Ernest Bert Ashworth (December 15, 1928 – March 2, 2009) was an American country music singer, broadcaster, and longtime Grand Ole Opry star. Signed to the Hickory label, he recorded two studio albums in his career and charted several singles on Billboard Hot Country Songs, including the number one "Talk Back Trembling Lips" and seven other top ten hits. 

Born Ernest Bert Ashworth in Huntsville, Alabama, he listened to the Grand Ole Opry as a youth and he began writing songs even before taking up the guitar. By 1948 he was playing in a band called the Tunetwisters and appearing on Huntsville radio station WBHP. Making the move to Nashville the following year, Ashworth earned a living as an early member of that city's fabled community of songwriters and performed on radio stations WLAC and WSIX. 

He became a staff writer for the Acuff-Rose publishing house, composing songs for such performers as Little Jimmy Dickens and Carl Smith and even crossing over to the pop sphere when he placed "I Wish" with rock & roll crooner Paul Anka. In 1955, Wesley Rose greased the wheels for Ashworth's signing to the MGM label as Billy Worth, but the six singles he cut for the label went nowhere on the charts. Success as a recording artist eluded him, however, and in 1957 he returned to Huntsville and began working at the US Army's Redstone Arsenal, doing guided missile work. 

Meanwhile, Rose remained determined to further Ashworth's music career and managed to get him signed to Decca in 1960. Now billed as Ernest Ashworth, he hit the Top Five with his first Decca single, "Each Moment (Spent With You)." That same year he scored a Top Ten hit with "You Can't Pick a Rose in December" and in 1961, "Forever Gone" reached the Top 20. In 1962, Ashworth moved to Hickory Records, owned by Acuff-Rose, and he scored a Top Five hit with "Everybody But Me" and a Top Ten with "I Take the Chance". But it was his third release for Hickory that became a smash hit and his signature song. "Talk Back Trembling Lips" hit number one and stayed on the national country chart for 42 weeks, and peaked at No. 101 on the pop charts. 


                             

That song was tailor-made for Ashworth's vulnerable tenor voice, influenced by Anka and by Buddy Holly but with a more distinctively country reediness; it propelled him to being voted "Most Promising Male Artist" by Cashbox, Billboard, and Record World magazines in 1963 and 1964, he was invited to join the cast of the Grand Ole Opry in 1964. 

Opry Manager Ott Devine and Ernie 

More chart records followed including "The D.J. Cried", "At Ease Heart", and "I Love To Dance With Annie". In 1965, he gave the movie business a try, appearing in The Farmer’s Other Daughter. In 1968, he told one magazine what he hoped his future would be. "I just hope I can always record songs that people will like and accept."

During the 1970's Ernie worked regularly performing for tourists in the theatre shows in Pigeon Forge, where Dolly Parton has her theme park Dollywood and was a consistent hit maker up to the release of 1970's "The Look of Goodbye." After four singles on the independent O'Brien label flopped, he retired to his farm in Lewisburg, TN, continuing to appear regularly on the Opry and occasionally touring the country. 

Ernie also owned a radio station in Flomaton, Alabama. In 1989, he purchased radio station WSLV in Ardmore, Tennessee , and his occasional recording releases in the 1990s found favour among tradition-minded European country listeners. 

Always a popular performer overseas, he had a number one song on the UK Independent Chart, "Lonely Only Bar", in 1999 and was also named the "Number One Most Programmed Independent Artist in Europe" that year.  Ashworth remained active as a recording artist, making appearances at the Grand Ole Opry and spending much of his time tending to the affairs of his radio stations in Ardmore and Gallatin, Tennessee. In 2008, Ernie was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. Throughout his career he achieved many awards and inductions into Halls of Fame across the United States. 

Ernie Ashworth died on March 2, 2009 in Nashville, Tennessee at age 80. He had undergone bypass surgery prior to his death.

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

Well music lovers I managed to find two albums on the web “Hits of Today and Tomorrow (1964 Hickory) “Greatest Hits” (1991 Curb) and a 6 track 2019 mp3 album on Amazon. I’ve taken all the duplicates out and added some mp3’s from various compilations to make a substantial 30 track presentation.

For “Ernest Ashworth ‎– Greatest Hits and More” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/12645021/Ernest_Ashworth.rar.html

01) Ernest Ashworth - Talk Back Trembling Lips
02) Ernest Ashworth - I Love To Dance With Annie
03) Ernest Ashworth - Everybody But Me
04) Ernest Ashworth - I Take The Chance
05) Ernest Ashworth - The DJ Cried
06) Ernest Ashworth - A Week In The Country
07) Ernest Ashworth - Pushed In A Corner
08) Ernest Ashworth - Because I Cared
09) Ernest Ashworth - At Ease Heart
10) Ernest Ashworth - I Wish
11) Ernest Ashworth - Sad Face
12) Ernest Ashworth - A New Heart
14) Ernie Ashworth-Drive These Blues Away
15) Ernie Ashworth-Honey Don't You Miss Me
16) Ernie Ashworth-The Nearest Thing To Heaven
17) Ernie Ashworth-You'll Hear My Heart Break
18) Ernest Ashworth - You Can-'t Pick A Rose In December
18) Ernie Ashworth-Night Time Is Cry Time
19) Ernie Ashworth-Each Moment
20) Ernest Ashworth - Forever Gone
21) Ernie Ashworth-Life Of The Party
22) Ernest Ashworth - I Just Spent Another Sleepless Night
23) Ernest Ashworth - King of the Blues
24) Ernest Ashworth - That-'s How Much I Care
24) Ernie Ashworth-My Heart Would Know
25) Ernie Ashworth-Crazy Me, Foolish You
26) Ernie Ashworth-Heartbreak Avenue
27) Ernie Ashworth-Love Has Come My Way
28) Ernie Ashworth-Just One Time
29) Ernie Ashworth-It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels
30) Ernie Ashworth-Flip Flop and Fly

Dates (may need confirming)

Track 14 -1953, Track 15 – 1956, Track 16- 1957
Tracks 17, 18, 19 – 1960, Tracks 20, 21 – 1961
Tracks 3, 4, 22, 23 – 1962, Tracks 1, 2, 6, 7, 10, 24 to 28 – 1963
Tracks 5, 8 – 1965, Tracks 9, 11 – 1966, Track 12 - 1968
Tracks 29, 30 – 1980’s recordings

newnativemark said...

Thank you for this! I am always grateful for any old classic Country artists you run across.

Mark

Aussie said...

A NICE THANK YOU FROM AUSSIE