Jimmy Work (March 29, 1924 – December 22, 2018) was an American country musician and songwriter who isn't a name that most country music fans are familiar with, even though he was responsible for "Tennessee Border," "Making Believe," and "That's What Makes the Jukebox Play." Like a handful of performers, he worked happily at music for many years but felt privileged simply to have had the opportunity to record and perform, and gladly kept his day job as a millwright.
Jimmy Work was born in Akron, Ohio. In 1926 his parents moved to a farm in Dukedom, Tennessee. He began playing guitar when he was seven years old after he picked up a guitar his father had originally bought for his mother. His two biggest influences at that point in his life, and for many years after, were Gene Autry and Roy Acuff, and one can safely include Jimmie Rodgers on the list as well. He was in a band in high school, and was a good enough fiddle player to win contests on that instrument as well. He began writing songs before he was in his teens, and was encouraged by reactions to his music.
By 1945, he had begun playing professionally in Pontiac, Michigan, where many Southerners had moved to take jobs in the automotive industry. He appeared on local radio and published a songbook late in the decade, in addition to recording two singles for the Trophy Records label. His third single was "Tennessee Border", for Alben Records; his version was not a hit, but the following year, the song became a hit for Red Foley, Bob Atcher, Jimmie Skinner, and Tennessee Ernie Ford. Hank Williams also recorded the tune, but didn't chart with it.
The success of those records got Jimmy Work his first major-label contract with Decca Records in 1949, and "Tennessee Border" also got him invited to appear on the Grand Ole Opry; Work also played at the Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree. By the time of his second session for Decca in August of 1949, Work was being backed by Red Foley's Pleasant Valley Boys, which included Jerry Bird and Delmore Brothers veteran Zeke Turner on guitars, Ernie Newton on bass, and the legendary Tommy Jackson on fiddle.
Unfortunately, despite the quality of the players and the momentum imparted by the success of "Tennessee Border," Work never had any hits from his Decca work, and by 1950 he was released from the label. After a short stay with the tiny Bullet label in 1950, Work jumped to the London label in 1951, which yielded "Pickup Truck," his witty slice-of-Southern-life song, and "Do Your Honky Tonkin' at Home."
During this period, Work's music, mostly by virtue of the bands he was using for backup, was heavily influenced by the honky tonk style of Lefty Frizzell. It may have been the derivative nature of his sound, coupled with the indifferent nature of the material, that left Work out in the cold where sales of his own records were concerned during this period.
Still without a hit of his own to his credit, Jimmy Work signed with Capitol Records in 1952, and although his first four songs yielded no hits, the label stuck with him. It was only after a second round of sessions that he was dropped from the label's roster in 1953. He then moved to the Dot label, and it was there that he cut two of his most popular songs, "Making Believe" and "That's What Makes the Jukebox Play." "Making Believe," issued in 1955, rose to number 11 for Work, but it was Kitty Wells, releasing a rival version, who saw the lion's share of record sales with a number two single.
Elvis, Bob Neal, Jimmy Work & Onie Wheeler |
"That's What Makes the Jukebox Play" became a number six single for Work in the summer of 1955. Work's success boosted his concert activity during the mid-'50s, and he happened to share a number of concerts in 1955 with Elvis Presley, who was still a regional phenomenon.
His future with Dot Records was secure for the time being, with two major hits behind him, and Work continued playing dates, recording, and writing songs; occasionally he would experiment with new sounds, as with his rockabilly-style cover of "Rock Island Line," issued in the wake of English skiffle king Lonnie Donegan's hit version (which charted in America).
Work wasn't a rockabilly player or a rock & roller, however, and the rise of the new music took away just enough of the impetus from country music in general that he eventually was forced to give up the music business. He sold real estate and cut some singles (including yet another version of "Tennessee Border") for the All label, based in Whittier, CA.
By 1959, it was all over, and Work knew it; the music had passed him by, and the honky tonk style wasn't even in favor among the country audience that did remain. He returned to the job he was trained for and knew best, a millwright, on the farm in Dukedom, TN, near the border with Kentucky for several years before fully retiring. He lived in Dukedom with his wife.
Work died at his home on December 22, 2018, at the age of 94.
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For ”Jimmy Work - Making Believe (2CD Bear Family 1993)” go here:
https://krakenfiles.com/view/aeb7adae99/file.html
Track List Disc 1:
01 - Those Kentucky Bluegrass Hills
02 - You're Gone I Won't Forget
03 - Rainy Rainy Blues
04 - Hear That Steamboat Whistle Blow
05 - Tennessee Border
06 - Your Jealous Heart Is Broken Now
07 - Bluegrass Tickling My Feet.mp3
08 - Please Don't Let Me Love You
09 - I Would Send You Roses (But They Cost Too Much)
10 - Surrounded By Water And Bars
11 - Smokey Mountain Moon
12 - Who's Been Here Since I've Been Gone
13 - Mr. & Mrs. Cloud
14 - Hospitality
15 - Pickup Truck
16 - Do Your Honky Tonkin' At Home
17 - Southern Fried Chicken
18 - Let's Live A Little
19 - If I Should Lose You
20 - Don't Play With My Heart
21 - I'm Lonesome For Someone
22 - Puttin' On The Dog (Tom Cattin' Around)
Track List Disc 2:
01 - Crazy Moon
02 - Little Popcorn Man
03 - How Can I Love You (When You're Not Around)
04 - Out Of My Mind
05 - That's What Makes The Jukebox Play
06 - Don't Give Me A Reason To Wonder Why
07 - Just Like Downtown
08 - Making Believe
09 - Don't Knock Just Come In
10 - Let 'Em Talk
11 - My Old Stomping Ground
12 - Blind Heart
13 - There's Only One You
14 - Puttin' On The Dog (Tom Cattin' Around)
15 - When She Said You All
16 - Hands Away From My Heart
17 - Rock Island Line
18 - That's The Way It's Gonna Be
19 - You've Got A Heart Like A Merry-Go-Round
20 - Blind Heart
21 - That Cold Cold Look In Your Eye
22 - Digging My Own Grave
23 - Tennessee Border
24 - Let Me Be Alone
25 - I Never Thought I'd Have The Blues
26 - I Dreamed Last Night
A big Thank You goes to Elane4 @ TJ’s Country Forum for the loan of this album.
Thank you for this! I am completely unaware of this artist.
Mark
Thank you, will enjoy this one later this day!
Thank you!
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