Sunday, 3 January 2021

Leon McAuliffe born 3 January 1917


William Leon McAuliffe (January 3, 1917 – August 20, 1988) was an American Western swing guitarist who was a member of Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys during the 1930s and was nicknamed “The World's Greatest Western Swing Steel Guitarist”.. He was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of that band. 

Born William Leon McAuliffe in Houston in 1917, he started playing both acoustic and steel guitar at 14, and quickly joined the Waikiki Strummers, a Hawaiian-style group, on the latter instrument in 1931. In 1933, he joined the early Western swing band the Light Crust Doughboys, and found a major influence in Milton Brown's steel guitarist Bob Dunn, who taught him how to electrically amplify his instrument. In 1935, he moved on to the Texas Playboys, who would soon become the premier Western swing band in existence. 

With Wills, he helped compose San Antonio Rose (instrumental version). Leon is more noted, however, for his most famous composition, Steel Guitar Rag and his playing, along with that of Houston's Bob Dunn (Light Crust Doughboys) that popularized the steel guitar in the United States. McAuliffe learned to electronically amplify his guitar from Bob Dunn, who later was a member of Milton Brown's Musical Brownies. Steel Guitar rag helped make McAuliffe a star and a standard-setter on his instrument, and Wills' directive of "Take it away, Leon!" became something of a musical catch phrase. McAuliffe remained with the Texas Playboys until being called to serve in World War II in late 1942, during which time he worked as a flight instructor. 


                              

After the war, McAuliffe returned to Tulsa and decided to form his own big band, which he dubbed the Cimarron Boys. The group played regularly on a Tulsa radio station and soon signed a contract with Columbia, and McAuliffe's instrumental showcase "Panhandle Rag" became a Top Ten hit in 1949. This group recorded more than 200 songs and was generally recognized as innovative and technically proficient. Over the course of the '50s, McAuliffe's band mixed down-home Western tunes with smooth big band jazz, which sometimes brought him fairly close to mainstream swing territory. 

Though McAuliffe is most famous for his association with the Texas Playboys, he also had a respectable solo career. Around mid-1953, he was doing a daily show over the 50,000 watt KVOO in Tulsa, OK from 12:15pm. Leon also appeared on Wednesday nights at 11:00pm as well as Saturday nights at 10:30pm on a show called the Western Dance Parade. Leon and his band also played every Wednesday and Saturday evenings at the Cimarron Ball Room in Tulsa. In 1954 he purchased radio station KAMO in Rogers, Arkansas. In the late 1950s, he appeared on ABC-TV's Jubilee USA and other broadcasts. McAuliffe funded a music program at Rogers State College in Claremore, Oklahoma, paying for a recording studio and office on campus. 

He recorded for a variety of labels during the '60s, including Dot, Capitol, and Starday, but by this time Western swing was a phenomenon of the past, and he performed mostly on a local basis. He played on a reunion recording with Wills in 1973. The album's success encouraged the Playboys to tour again. Following a successful Austin City Limits taping in 1975 and a subsequent appearance at an Austin night spot, the Original Texas Playboys began to tour with McAuliffe at the helm. 

They did so successfully until the death of pianist Al Stricklin in 1986, at which time they disbanded. McAuliffe moved on to Rogers State College in Claremore, Oklahoma, and taught a course on the music industry which dealt primarily with business and legal issues. The Steel Guitar Hall of Fame honored McAuliffe in 1978, and he was inducted into the Western Swing Society Hall of Fame in 1987 and the Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame in 1991. He died in a local Tulsa hospital after a long illness on September 20, 1988. He was 71 years old. 

(Edited from AllMusic. IMDb  & The Handbook of Texas) 

9 comments:

  1. I was looking for the Bear Family compilation “Tulsa Straight Ahead - Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight” but alas was unsuccessful, but I did find this 2001 Jasmine CD (thanks to “miw” for the loan)

    For"Leon McAuliffe & His Cimarron Boys - Take It Away The Leon Way!" go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/12718197/Leon_McAuliffe.rar.html

    01. Leon's Boogie.mp3
    02. Boil'em Cabbage Down.mp3
    03. Mississippi Delta Blues.mp3
    04. Fiddle Boogie.mp3
    05. Texas Drummer Boy.mp3
    06. This Is The Southland.mp3
    07. In The Mood.mp3
    08. Tulsa Straight Ahead.mp3
    09. Goin' Home.mp3
    10. Sizzlin' Cecil.mp3
    11. Downhill Drag.mp3
    12. Lover's Leap.mp3
    13. Liberty.mp3
    14. Beaumont Rag.mp3
    15. Night Train.mp3
    16. You Gotta Stop Your Runnin' Around.mp3
    17. Twin Guitar Special.mp3
    18. Catfish.mp3
    19. Eatin' Right Out Of Your Hand.mp3
    20. One O'clock Jump.mp3
    21. Bear Creek Hop.mp3
    22. If It Weren't For A Dream.mp3
    23. Blue Skirt Waltz.mp3
    24. Boot Heel Drag.mp3
    25. Twin Fiddle Rag.mp3
    26. Reckon I Love You.mp3
    27. Take It Away, Leon.mp3

    Leon’s big chance came in 1933 when W. Lee O’Daniel wanted a steel guitar in the Light Crust Doughboys, which included Bob Wills on fiddle. Being in such short supply, the sixteen-year-old Leon was given a shot at the job. Wills also bought the still teenaged Leon an amplified instrument, which enabled him to ‘compete’ in volume with other instruments in the band and play solo choruses. It was by exploring the possibilities of the steel guitar that the famous "Steel Guitar Rag" was born. Leon had made up the tune whilst with the Doughboys, and subsequently Bob Wills incorporated an augmented version into his dance hall repertoire. When it was first recorded with the Texas Playboys in 1936, Wills added the memorable words, "Look out, friends, here’s Leon. Take it away, my boy, take it away!" And ever since, "Take it away, Leon!" has been the self-appointed McAuliffe catch-phrase. Featured here are rare studio recordings from the 1950s, showcasing the very polished Western Swing style of Leon McAuliffe and His Cimarron Boys, with an added final bonus track from 1950 written in tribute to that famous line "Take it away, Leon!".(Jasmine notes)

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  2. For “Leon McAuliffe ‎– Tulsa Straight Ahead” go here;

    http://www.mediafire.com/file/636tc5zuy0a39y5/LeonBCD.zip/file

    1 Panhandle Rag 2:47
    2 Hard-Hearted Girl (Tk 1) 2:42
    3 Hear Me Now 2:48
    4 Rag Mop 3:05
    5 Cimarron Rag 2:31
    6 Take It Away, Leon 2:46
    7 Sh-Boom (Life Could Be A Dream) 2:19
    8 Run 'Em Off 2:51
    9 No One For Me 2:59
    10 The Three Bears 2:59
    11 Bonaparte's Retreat 2:50
    12 Blue Guitar Stomp 3:02
    13 What've You Got 3:05
    14 Birmingham Bounce 3:07
    15 I've Never Lived In Tennessee 2:54
    16 Eating Right Out Of Your Hand 2:31
    17 Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy 3:03
    18 Tulsa, Straight Ahead 3:00
    19 Jelly Bean Rag 2:58
    20 Mr. Steel Guitar 2:19
    21 Hard-Hearted Girl (Tk 2) 2:24
    22 Redskin Rag 2:30
    23 Wished You Would 2:24
    24 Somebody Else Is Beatin' My Time 2:54
    25 This Side Of Town 2:45
    26 Twin Fiddle Rag 2:37
    27 Blacksmith Blues 2:53
    28 What, Were And When 3:01
    29 Smooth Sailing 2:19
    30 There's A Right Way, A Wrong Way 2:47
    31 Daylight 2:

    A big thank you to Uncle Gil for CD and active link.

    This great album presents 31 tracks of his classic period (1949 ' 1955), all taken from the original sources. It contains four previously unissued recordings, incl. a take of Panhandle Rag. These recordings highly sought after not only by western swing fans but by fans of early rock 'n' roll and rockabilly for the many jump and boogie tracks that anticipated the coming of those styles a few years later. Bear Family has here collected the cream of Leon McAuliffe's six year tenure with Columbia, including a never-issued alternate take of Panhandle Rag, and several other unissued tracks. Highlights include the unissued first - and considerably hotter - version of the hard-swinging blues Hard-Hearted Girl. There are steel guitar classics like Mr. Steel Guitar and Cimarron Rag. A fantastic take on the early rock 'n' roll classic Sh-Boom, as well as what was arguably the best among the twenty-odd versions of the 1950 smash Rag Mop. (Bear Family notes)

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  3. Thanks for Leon McAuliffe ‎– Tulsa Straight Ahead

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  4. I am always appreciative of your sharing any of the old classic country artists.

    Thanks,
    Mark!

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  5. Thank you for these, and for all your great posts. They are much appreciated.

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  6. Another kind and generous share, Bob. Can't get enough of these great old classics. And thanks for the comprehensive track list, too. All good wishes,

    Iggy

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  7. Could we get a re-up of Leon Mcauliffe, please?
    Thanks Bob!
    -Rick

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  8. Hello Rick, here's Leon...
    https://www.imagenetz.de/jNrQG

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