Ramblin' Tommy Scott (June 24, 1917 – September 30, 2013), aka "Doc" Tommy Scott, was an American country and rockabilly musician. He recorded consistently from the 1930s-2000s and released a number of solo sides in the 1950s and 1960s which branched into rockabilly.
He returned to television in the 1950's with Tommy Scott's "Smokey Mountain Jamboree" in syndication around the country. Early television appearances also include Johnny Carson. From 1949-1980 his touring stage show provided a vehicle for former western film stars to reach their public.
Among those western stars were Carolina Cotton, Ray Whitley, Johnny Mack Brown, Sunset Carson, Monte Hale, Fuzzy St. John and Tim McCoy. Many others tried to sign on and some came for a day or two. Other stars included Uncle Dave Macon, Curley Williams, Billy Grammar, Junior Samples, Clyde Moody, "In the Heat of the Night" star Randall Franks among others.
In the 1970s, Scott returned to his earliest roots and rebranded himself as "Doc" Scott, impressario of his own latter-day, nostalgia-themed medicine show. Until the mid-1990s when his wife was stricken with Alzheimer's, "'Doc' Scott's Last Real Old Time Medicine Show" visited nearly 300 towns each year across the United States and Canada. To date, the show, founded by "Doc" V. O. Chamberlain in 1890, has performed over 29,000 times in towns across America and Canada. It was at this time that Scott, wearing his trademark colourful clothes, red top hat and snake skinned shoes, endeared himself to millions of fans around the world.
According to his autobiography, Snake Oil, Superstars and Me, published in 2007 and co-authored by Randall Franks and Shirley Noe Swiesz, that over almost 60 years, there can be few major country artists with whom he has not appeared and few major US or Canadian programmes on which he has not been featured. In subsequent decades he appeared on The Today Show, Late Night with David Letterman, and Oprah Winfrey. He was the subject of a PBS documentary Still Ramblin'.
Scott's status as a treasure is evidenced by many accolades, including his nominations for the National Heritage Award, his 1976 placement in the Country Music Foundation's Walkway of Stars and the 1996 unveiling of his Georgia Music Hall of Fame exhibit, the museum's largest, in Macon.
With over 500 recordings to his credit, his chart success with included three titles "Rosebuds and You," "Dance With Her, Henry," and "Mule Train." He wrote around 300 of his recordings including "Rosebuds and You," recorded by numerous artists, and the bluegrass standard "Rainbow of My Dreams" popularized by Lester Flatt. He recorded for various labels, including 4-Star and King, and some early recordings were reissued in the 80s by the German Cattle label, who did a reasonable job of trying to improve the relatively poor recording quality of some of the original recordings.
Frankie Scott died Saturday April 24th, 2004 of a stroke at the age of 84. Tommy Scott died on September 30th 2013 in Toccoa, Georgia following injuries sustained in an automobile accident on Aug.10. He was 96 years old.
(Edited from Wikipedia, AllMusic, tommyscott.net & IMDb)
For “Tommy Scott -- Early Recordings (1991 Collector Records)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/14261252/Tommy_Scott_-_Early_Recordings.rar.html
1 Juke Joint Girl
2 Tennessee (Remake)
3 Freckle-Faced Girl
4 Rockin' And Rollin'
5 You Done Me Wrong
6 Come On, Gimme Some Lovin'
7 Free Again
8 Gonna Paint The Town Red
9 Santa Claus Shuffle
10 Uncle Sammy
11 It's You
12 Cherokee Rose
13 Juke Joint Girl
14 Ain't Love Grand?
15 What Do You Know - I Love Her
16 Just A-Diggin' And A-Diggin'
17 Tennessee (Original Version)
18 When A Man Gets The Blues
19 Been Gone A Long Time
20 My Little Moonbeam
21 Alley Cat Blues
22 Mountain Ma & Pa
23 Nobody But You
24 Cats & Dogs
25 Cat Music
26 Dance With Her, Henry
27 Jumpin' From Six To Six
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A big thank you goes to the much missed “Don’t Fence Me In” Blog for the loan of above CD.
Here's another one (Italian pressing)
ReplyDeleteTOMMY SCOTT AND HIS COUNTRY CARAVAN - LP Joker It.
A1 - Soldier At Sea
A2 - Garden Of Divorce
A3 - Part Time Love
A4 - False Heart
A5 - Rocking Towards Tennessee
A6 - Loved And Lost
B1 - Concert For The Lonely
B2 - Thibodaux
B3 - Wino
B4 - Indian Creek Tavern
B5 - Snake Oil
B6 - A Ghost And A Pink Elephant
https://workupload.com/file/ccXhdyq39aM
Thanks for the addition UG, Regards, Bob.
ReplyDeleteGreat Album Thanks Greetings
ReplyDeletethank you both.
ReplyDeleteCould You Put The Early Recordings Back Up. Thanks. H.J.
ReplyDeleteHowdy HJ, Here's Tommy Scott -- Early Recordings
ReplyDeletehttps://www.imagenetz.de/fSded