Monday 21 December 2020

Freddie Hart born 21 December 1926


Frederick Segrest (December 21, 1926 – October 27, 2018), known professionally as Freddie Hart, was an American country musician and songwriter best known for his chart-topping country song and lone pop hit "Easy Loving," which won the Country Music Association Song of the Year award in 1971 and 1972. 

Hart was born to a sharecropper family in Loachapoka, Alabama, in 1926 and spent his childhood in nearby Phenix City, Alabama, along with his 11 siblings He learned to play guitar at age 5 and quit school by age 12. At age 15, Hart lied about his age to join the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II, seeing combat action on Guam and Iwo Jima. Following the war, Hart lived in California where he taught classes in self-defence at the Los Angeles Police Academy. Hart got an early career break when singer Carl Smith covered Hart's song "Loose Talk" in 1955. Other artists who recorded his songs included Patsy Cline ("Lovin' In Vain"), George Jones ("My Tears are Overdue") and Porter Wagoner ("Skid Row Joe"). 

During the early 1950s, Hart and his family moved to California to further the growing country music scene there. In 1951, he joined Lefty Frizzell's band for a year. It was through Frizzell that Hart got his first recording contract with Capitol Records in 1953. He released several singles including his version of "Loose Talk", but none of these were successful. In 1958, Hart signed with Columbia Records and scored his first chart hit with "The Wall" in 1959 which made the Top 20. His biggest hit for the label was the 1960 Top 20 hit "The Key's In The Mailbox". 


                              

In 1965, Hart signed with Kapp Records where he would score several Top 40 hits between 1965 and 1968. The biggest of these hits included "Hank Williams' Guitar" (1965), "Born A Fool" (1968) and "Togetherness" (1968). In 1969, Hart re-signed with Capitol Records and soon became a part of the Bakersfield sound by signing up with Buck Owens' songwriting and management company. 

In early 1970, he scored a Top 30 hit with "The Whole World's Holdin' Hands". Hart's song "Togetherness", a hit for him in 1968, became a Top 15 hit for Buck Owens and Susan Raye that summer. Hart would score several minor hits during the year. 

In 1971, Hart released a song that he wrote called "Easy Loving" which was first recorded in the summer of 1969 for his album California Grapevine, released in 1970. Released in the summer of 1971, "Easy Loving" rapidly began climbing the charts; and by that September, it was No. 1 for three weeks on the country charts and reached No. 17 on the pop charts. The song would ultimately win Hart numerous awards from both the Academy of Country Music and Country Music Association. The song sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold record by the R.I.A.A. in November 1971. The album of the same name also reportedly went gold. The song also earned Hart a Grammy Award nomination. 

From this success, Hart and his backup band, the Heartbeats, had a string of Top 5 hits. He has been called by many fans as "The Heart and Soul of Country Music". With the success of "Easy Loving" and other songs he wrote, plus a popular concert attraction on the road, Hart became independently wealthy and owned a songwriting company, a school for the blind, a trucking company, and a chain of martial arts studios—his hobby was as a master of karate. 

By 1976, Hart continued to have major hits although now his streak of Top 10s was replaced by a streak of Top 20 and Top 30 hits. His last Top 10 hit came with the hit "Why Lovers Turn to Strangers" in 1977, which peaked at No. 8. This song was written by east Idaho based composer Bobby Fender. 

In 1980, Hart signed with Sunbird Records, and immediately scored a Top 20 hit with "Sure Thing" that year. He followed this up with 3 Top 40 hits in 1981. This ended his days as a major country artist. In 1985 and 1987, he had a couple of minor hits on El Dorado and 5th Avenue Records, with his last hit being "The Best Love I Never Had" in 1987 peaking at No. 77. 

In 2001, Hart was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. Hart released a handful of new albums on CD, showcasing his passion for gospel music, patriotism and the traditional country sound that originally made him famous. These albums prompted him to selectively tour and perform concerts around the world. Hart retained a large following in Europe and the U.S., performing at music festivals, universities, churches and industry events. 

Hart continued to write and record gospel music during the 2000s. He received numerous awards and had several number one songs in the gospel field. In 2004 he was inducted into the Nashville Songwriter's Hall Of Fame. In 2017 he performed in Pigeon Forge Tennessee and received the Hall Of Fame award from the North American Country Music Associations International. His final performance was in March 2018 on the Ernest Tubb Midnite Jamboree as a special guest to David Frizzell.  Hart died at the age of 91 years old as a result of pneumonia on October 27, 2018 in Burbank, California. 

(Edited from Wikipedia)

5 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Freddie Hart ‎– Juke Joint Boogie” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/12668922/Freddie_Hart_-_JukeJointBoogie.rar.html

1. Juke Joint Boogie (2:19)
2. Whole Hog Or None (2:19)
3. Loose Talk (2:24)
4. From Canada To Tennessee (2:24)
5. Please Don't Tell Her (2:28)
6. Heart Trouble (1953) (2:10)
7. Caught At Last (1954) (2:36)
8. Snatch It And Grab It (1956) (1:50)
9. Dig Boy Dig (1956) (2:06)
10. Drink Up And Go Home (1956) (2:42)
11. Extra (1956) (2:40)
12. Oh The Prowl (1956) (2:04)
13. Dance And Sing (1958) (2:07)
14. Blue (1956) (2:36)
15. Baby Don't Leave (1957) (2:22)
16. Heaven Only Knows (1957) (1:55)
17. Say No More (1956) (2:18)
18. From A Boy To A Man (1958) (2:12)
19. Lovin In Vain (1958) (2:05)
20. I'm No Angel (1958) (2:13)
21. Farther Than My Eyes Can See (1959) (1:57)
22. I'm Gonna Live For Today (1956) (2:26)
23. Chain Gang (1959) (2:47)
24. Mr. Fool (1959) (2:04)
25. The Key's In The Mailbox (1959) (2:47)
26. My Last Dime (1959) (2:51)
27. Careful (1958) (2:36)
28. Do My Heart A Favor (2:40)
29. Lyin' Again (2:31)
30. Some Do, Some Don't, Some Will, Some Won't (2:05)
31. Heart Attack (2:34)
32. Midnight Date (2:22)
33. The Wall (1959) (2:47)


Freddie Hart will always be remembered in country music circles for his #1 smash hit Easy Loving from 1971. What most people never realized was that Freddie Hart had been making great country music records for almost twenty years before his big hit! With a plaintive voice and great songwriting abilities, Freddie was always top notch country talent.

Freddie Hart was from Alabama, and after being under the wing of both Hank Williams and Lefty Frizzell, found himself out in California as a regular performer on the successful 'Town Hall Party' television show.
Freddie Hart recorded in the 1950s for both Capitol and Columbia Records, making great hillbilly, country boogie, rockabilly and honky tonk records that were unjustly obscure. Bear Family has compiled a solid 'best of the early years' that spans from Freddie Hart's 1954 debut to his first breakthrough hit The Wall from 1959. A must have release for West Coast Country and Rockabilly collectors! Eight tracks were published for the first time on this CD from 2004.

boppinbob said...

For “Freddie Hart – The Hit Albums
Easy Loving (1971) / My Hang Up Is You (1972” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/12669251/Freddie_Hart_-_Hit_Albums.rar.html

01 - Easy Loving
02 - House Of Sand
03 - Without You
04 - If Fingerprints Showed Up On Skin
05 - One More Mountain To Climb
06 - Write It All In (Put It All In)
07 - That Hurtin' Feeling
08 - The Whole World Holding Hands
09 - In The Arms Of Love
10 - California Grapevine
11 - My Hang-Up Is You
12 - She Belongs To Me
13 - Jesus Is My Kind Of People
14 - Love Makes The Difference
15 - Loving Her Through You
16 - I'm In Love
17 - Heart
18 - The Key's In The Mailbox
19 - Would You Settle For Roses
20 - The Greatest Gift Of All

A big thankyou to tjs country forum for above album.

newnativemark said...

Thank you for these! Love finding these classic Country folks, and this is an artist I've never heard of before.

Your work is much appreciated, sir!

Mark

Bob Mac said...

Many thanks for Freddie Hart – The Hit Albums

Aussie said...

thank you very much from Aussie