Monday 17 May 2021

Red Smiley born 17 May 1925


Arthur Lee "Red" Smiley (May 17, 1925 – January 2, 1972) was an American bluegrass and country musician, best known for his guitar playing with Don Reno under the name Reno and Smiley. 

Born Arthur Lee Smiley in mountainous western North Carolina, his red hair suggested the nickname “Red.” His father, a school administrator, teacher, and fiddler, was a friend of mountain music scholar and performer Bascom Lamar Lunsford. According to Barry Willis in “America’s Music: Bluegrass,” Red was inspired by two hobos playing in Bushville, North Carolina, when he was about seven. As a teenager, he played guitar and sang with Bryson City, North Carolina residents Harry and Harley “Smoky” Tallent and Lewis Sherrill as Smoky and the Carolina Ramblers. By the late 1930s, he was playing on WROL in Knoxville. 

Smiley joined the Army in 1943. After discharge, he attended diesel mechanic school in Nashville, Tennessee, where he first saw Don Reno on stage at the Grand Ole Opry with Bill Monroe, but didn’t meet him. He also performed in east Tennessee and western North Carolina with well-known musicians Zeke Morris, Red Rector, Fred Smith, and the Sauceman Brothers. 

In 1949, Red joined fiddler Tommy Magness’s band at WDBJ radio in Roanoke, Virginia. Hearing that Don Reno had left the Blue Grass Boys, he convinced Magness to call and offer him a job. Don accepted and came to Roanoke, where he and Red first met. Soon after, they recorded four Reno-penned sacred songs for Federal, a subsidiary of the King label in Cincinnati, Ohio. Although their personalities and styles were very different, Red and Don realized that the combination was magical. After Tommy Magness retired, both joined Toby Stroud’s Blue Mountain Boys in Wheeling, West Virginia for a short stint. 

King Records’ Syd Nathan called, offering to record Reno and Smiley alone. In 1952 the pair went to Cincinnati and recorded a session, which included “I’m Using My Bible for a Roadmap.” Red subsequently went back to Asheville and worked as a mechanic with the State Roads Commission, playing some with Bill Monroe alumnus Wilbur Wesbrooks. Don went back with Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith and the Crackerjacks in Charlotte, North Carolina. 

The King records began to sell and more sessions were held, in 1953 and 1954. A man in Richmond badly wanted to produce a live show with Red and Don, so during the Easter weekend of 1955 they got the bass player and fiddler from the last session out of their South Carolina cotton mills and went to Richmond. It was at this time that Red Smiley, Don Reno, John Palmer, and Mack Magaha first played together on a stage. The Saturday night before their stage show the group played the Dominion Barn Dance, a radio show held in Richmond. 

                              

After that appearance, the Barn Dance offered them a regular job at eighty dollars a show. They accepted and Don Reno, Red Smiley and the Tennessee Cut-Ups were born. In December they took on Carlton Haney as a manager and went on to break box office records wherever they appeared – releasing a single record every six weeks. They started the first early morning country music TV show in Roanoke, Virginia, on December 31, 1956.

“Top O’ the Morning” appeared every weekday until 1968, and was soon followed by a Saturday night radio barn dance in Danville and a weekly TV show in Harrisonburg. Touring was restricted by the heavy TV schedule, and by Red Smiley’s health. The war injuries and diabetes sapped Red’s strength, and he lost almost 100 pounds in the decade following 1955. An amicable parting of the ways occurred in 1964, shortly after fiddler Mack Magaha left to join Porter Wagoner in Nashville. Don took the band name and his mandolin-playing son Ronnie. Red kept bass man John Palmer, the bus, and the Roanoke TV show. 

Smiley recruited fine musicians for his Bluegrass Cut-Ups. They worked on the WWVA Jamboree in Wheeling, West Virginia, and recorded five albums for Rimrock and Rural Rhythm, most of them since reissued on CD. When “Top O’ the Morning” was cancelled in 1968, Red retired and the band continued as the Shenandoah Cut-Ups. That year, Smiley recorded 10 sides for Major with electric country backing. Although they sounded good, and “Best Female Actress of the Year” got some airplay, a country career was not in the cards for Red. 

Bored at home, Smiley joined up with Don Reno and his current partner Bill Harrell and toured with them for several years. In 1971, he began to suffer mild heart attacks and took seriously ill during a flu epidemic late in that year whilst returning home from a tour of Eastern Canada and the North-eastern United States. He died on January 2, 1972, at the age of 47. He was buried at the Dehart Cemetery in the Jackson Line Community of Bryson City, NC.  In 1992, Smiley was posthumously inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.

(Edited from the Bluegrasshall.org) 

8 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “The Best Of Red Smiley Essential Original Masters (25 Bluegrass Classics)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13150758/Red_Smiley_-_Best_Of.rar.html

1 Roll On Buddy 1:33
2 Rock About My Sarah Jane 1:13
3 The Old Gospel Ship 1:21
4 Little Glass Of Wine 2:07
5 Katy Hill 1:11
6 Oh! Monah 1:48
7 Take This Hammer 1:53
8 Take Me In Your Lifeboat 2:00
9 Shady Grove 1:13
10 It's Raining Here This Morning 1:35
11 Short Life Of Trouble 2:26
12 Somebody Touched Me 2:33
13 Darlin' Corey 1:14
14 Dear Old Dixie 1:20
15 Wreck Of The Old No. 9 2:36
16 When Our Lord Shall Come Again 1:33
17 Ain't Nobody Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone 1:40
18 Banks Of The Ohio 2:18
19 Coney Isle 1:10
20 Working On A Building 1:57
21 Little Birdie 1:48
22 In The Pines 2:28
23 900 Miles 1:30
24 I'll Be No Stranger There 1:35
25 Salt Creek 1:18

This is a 2006 compilation from Rural Rhythm Classics containing choice cuts from various albums from Red Smiley And The Blue Grass Cut-Ups.

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Here’s two albums I found from the very much missed “Visit Me In Music City blog”. Thanks Harlan, wherever you are.


For “Don Reno and Red Smiley - 1956-1957” (Warped 2010) go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13150750/Don_Reno_and_Red_Smiley_-_1956-1957__2010_.rar.html

01. It Takes Me a Lifetime.mp3
02. Country Boy Rock & Roll.mp3
03. I Know You're Married (But I Love You Still).mp3
04. No Longer a Sweetheart of Mine.mp3
05. Forgotten Men.mp3
06. Never Get to Hold You in My Arms Anymore.mp3
07. Kneel Down.mp3
08. Cumberland Gap.mp3
09. Remington Ride.mp3
10. Beer Barrel Polka.mp3
11. Richmond Ruckus.mp3
12. When You and I Were Young, Maggie.mp3
13. Sawing on the Strings.mp3
14. Sweethearts in Heaven.mp3
15. One Teardrop and One Step Away.mp3
16. Unforgiveable You.mp3
17. Howdy Neighbor Howdy.mp3
18. Banjo Medley.mp3
19. One More Hill.mp3
20. (Won't You) Kiss Me One More Time.mp3
21. Where Did Our Young Years Go.mp3
22. Cotton Eyed Joe.mp3
23. Dark Waters.mp3
24. Your Love Is Dying.mp3

For “Red Smiley – 1966” (Warped 2012) go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13150697/Red_Smiley_-_1966__2012_.rar.html

01. It's Because God Planned It That Way.mp3
02. I'm Just a Stranger Here.mp3
03. What Hope Would We Have (Without God).mp3
04. I'm Satisfied with Jesus.mp3
05. I Know the Lord Will Make a Way.mp3
06. The Old Village Church on the Hill.mp3
07. May We Meet Again.mp3
08. That's The Way I Want to Go.mp3
09. Standing Outside.mp3
10. Where No Cabins Fall.mp3
11. Glory Land Is Nearing.mp3
12. I'll Understand It Bye and Bye.mp3
13. I'll Be Alright on Heaven's Shore.mp3
14. Just a Rose Will Do.mp3
15. I Heard My Mother Call My Name in Prayer.mp3
16. Camping in Canaan's Land.mp3
17. Everbody Will Be Happy Over There.mp3
18. Way Down Deep in My Soul.mp3
19. Cobbler's Hop.mp3
20. Sweet Daisy Waltz.mp3
21. Black Mountain Rag.mp3
22. Done Gone.mp3
23. Wake Up Susan.mp3
24. Callin' the Cattle.mp3
25. The Waltz You Saved for Me.mp3
26. Johnson's Ole Grey Mule.mp3
27. Satan's Dream.mp3
28. Over the Waves.mp3
29. Whistling Rufus.mp3
30. Maple Sugar.mp3
31. Grey Eagle.mp3
32. No Grass Growin'.mp3

iggy said...

Thanks for this great collection of Red's material, Bob. Good day to you.

Iggy

D said...

Thanks BB, took his Best Of. Cheers.

Dave said...

Thanks

Dave

Dj Diego MC said...

Muchas gracias

rev.b said...

I remember when I was a child Reno & Smiley had a show on WDBJ Channel 7 every Saturday morning. Luckily, an episode survives and can be enjoyed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYPKyPyFnL0

MC Irv Sharpe was quite a character and had a long career at the station. He turns in a great appearance here too, sort of a poor man's Fats Waller.

Thanks as always BB!

T.G. said...

This is very very great, thanks a lot for this!

newnativemark said...

Thank you for another classic country artist. I had some of his work as part of Reno & Smiley, but none of his solo stuff.

Mark