Clyde Moody (September 19, 1915 – April 7, 1989), also known as the "Hillbilly Waltz King" and sometimes as "The Genial Gentleman of Country Music" was one of the great founders of American Bluegrass music.
Best remembered as one of Bill Monroe's original Blue Grass Boys, singer/songwriter/string player Clyde Moody also played in almost every other subgenre of country music during his over fifty-year career, and even performed as a solo artist. During the '40s, he was known as the "Hillbilly Waltz King" after his song "Shenandoah Waltz" became a certified gold hit.
Clyde Leonard Moody was born and raised in Cherokee, North Carolina, where he grew up hearing a lot of local string band music. In the 1930s, Moody and Jay Hugh, sibling of Roy Hall, formed the Happy-Go-Lucky Boys and started playing on the radio in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Later, they joined Mitchell County fiddler, Steve Ledford, and Buncombe County’s Wade Mainer to form The Sons of the Mountaineers. The band also performed on regional radio stations and made recordings for Bluebird Records.
Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys. Moody far right. |
Moody joined Monroe in September 1940 and performed with the Blue Grass Boys at WSM and at the Grand Ole Opry. Moody's guitar style was unique, with him finger picking with his thumb and index finger. Moody also had a mellow voice that was a good contrast to Bill Monroe's voice. He appeared on Monroe's first solo recording session for RCA Victor's Bluebird label on October 7 of that year, playing guitar and singing lead vocals and bass on the Blue Grass Quartet's first recording ("Cryin' Holy Unto My Lord").
About this time, Monroe and his Boys were becoming a bluegrass band, and the changes can clearly be heard in Moody's mandolin playing on the classic "Six White Horses." He also has the rare distinction of having played mandolin on a Blue Grass Boys session, as he provided the rhythm chops on "Mule Skinner Blues" and "Dog House Blues", while Monroe played guitar - the only instance where a Blue Grass Boy other than Monroe played mandolin at a Bill Monroe recording session. A year later, Moody spent a few months in Burlington, North Carolina playing radio duets with Lester Flatt. He later returned to the Blue Grass Boys and remained with them until again attempting a solo career in 1945.
Upon his departure from the Blue Grass Boys in 1944, he remained at WSM and the Opry for several years as a solo artist.and then recorded for Columbia. He had his biggest hit, the sentimental "Shenandoah Waltz," in 1947, and followed it up with a series of similar tunes such as "Cherokee Waltz" and "I Waltz Alone." He had a few more hits through the end of the decade and then moved to Washington, D.C. to work for Connie B. Gay. Beyond the waltzes, some of his more memorable recordings include: “If I Had My Life To Live Over,” “Six White Horses,” “I Know What It Means To Be Lonesome,” “Too Young,” “Little Blossom,” “Rockin’ Alone In An Old Rocking Chair,” and “The Kind Of Love I Can’t Forget.” One of Clyde Moody's biggest hits was "Next Sunday Darling, Is My Birthday."
In 1952, Moody signed with Decca, but only had a few singles up through the mid-'50s. He sang with a young Elvis Presley in 1955 when Tom Parker paired them for a six-week tour. When his health began to fail in the late 50’s, he left music to become a mobile home salesman, but he returned to music n the early 1960s recording a solo album, followed by a more modern country album. When the folk revival revved up in the mid 1960s, Moody played at festivals and became more active in the bluegrass scene. He played at the first Bluegrass Festival at Fincastle, Virginia, in 1965. His nephew, Bruce Moody (March 14, 1940 – February 21, 2009) was also a popular bluegrass musician and toured with him from 1962–1969.
By 1972 Clyde had moved back to Nashville where he would remain and toured some as part of Tommy Scott’s Last Real Old Time Medicine Show. He made three solo albums for Old Homestead, one bluegrass, one country, and one sacred In that decade and the one which followed, he made numerous guest appearances on the Grand Ole Opry, and recorded sporadically until his death. A wire service story reporting Clyde's passing noted that Aubrey Mayhew said Clyde was actually performing the night he went into the Nashville Memorial Hospital to treat complications from an aortic aneurysm that required surgery several weeks prior, but he never recovered and died there on April 7, 1989.
In a musical career that spanned over fifty years, his robust baritone voice, authoritative rhythm guitar style, commanding stage presence, and engaging communication skills left a mark on those fortunate enough to have witnessed him in action. Some of his career highlights include appearing in the White House three times. He was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2011.
(Edited from AllMusic, Wikipedia,
Hillybilly Music.com & Los Angeles
Times)
For “CLYDE MOODY - THE KING YEARS” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://workupload.com/file/F3XaP2BFXCk
1. Shenandoah Waltz
2. There's A Big Rock In The Road
3. If You Need Me I'll Be Around
4. Lonely Broken Heart
5. Next Sunday Darling Is My Birthday
6. Where The Old Red River Flows
7. Waltz Of The Wind
8. Rockin' Alone In An Old Rockin' Chair
9. Carolina Moon
10. Red Roses Tied In Blue
11. That Little Log Cabin Of Mine
12. There's No Room In My Heart For The Blues
13. The Last Goodbye
14. Little Blossom
15. I Waltz Alone
16. I Know What It Means To Be Lonesome
17. Blue Mexico Skies
18. Over The Hill
19. I Dreamed You Dreamed Of Me
20. Paid In Full
21. Cherokee Waltz
22. You'll Never Know What I've Been Through
23. Afraid
24. I Love You Because
25. I Won't Care A Hundred Years From Now
26. Tears On My Pillow
27. It's Too Late To Say You Were Wrong
28. The Angels Must Have Cried Last Night
29. Ivy
30. Six White Horses
31. Some Day You'll Remember
32. The Blues Came Pouring Down
33. What Can I Do
34. Beautiful Brown Eyes
35. You're A Real Sweetheart To Me
36. West Virginia Waltz
37. Tend To Your Business
38. Too Young
39. I'm Sorry If That's The Way You Feel
40. She Cooked My Goose
A big thank you to Jim @ Jeremey’s Saggy Record Cabinet for original post in May 2009 and for Uncle Gil who reposted it in May this year with active link.
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For “Clyde Moody - Moody`s Blues” (1972 Old Homestead) go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/14513993/Clyde_Moody_-_Moody_s_Blues.rar.html
1. Six White Horses
2. Moody`s Blues
3. Don`t This Road Look Rough And Rocky
4. Sitting On Top Of The World
5. Shenandoah Waltz
6. Piney Flat Picking
7. One Step More
8. Columbus Stockade Blues
9. If I Had My Life To Live Over
10. Climbing The Stairs
11. Where The Old Red River Flows
12. I Can Tell When I`m Not Wanted
13. Conversation With Death
For “Clyde Moody - A Country Tribute To Fred Rose (1976 Old Homestead)” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/14513994/ClydeMoody_-_TributeToFredRose.rar.html
1. There's A Big Rock In The Road 3:30
2. Foggy River 3:26
3. Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain 3:07
4. We Live In Two Different Worlds 3:19
5. Blues In My Mind 2:32
6. Mansion On The Hill 3:38
7. No One Will Ever Know 3:26
8. I Talk To Myself About You 2:58
9. Home In San Antoine 2:35
10. There's No Room In My Heart 2:34
11. Waltz Of The Wind 2:12
12. Somebody Else's Troubles 2:11
Banjo, Tenor Vocals – James Miller
Bass, Baritone Vocals – Dave Cahn
Drums – Daryl Fisher
Fiddle – Bill Richmond, Steve Whalen
Resonator Guitar, Electric Guitar – Reggie Alley
Songwriter – Fred Rose
Steel Guitar – Russ De Rose
Vocals, Guitar – Clyde Moody
A big thank you to Allen’s archive Blog for the loan of above 2 albums.
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Here’s my contribution…..
For “Clyde Moody - The Hillbilly Waltz King: 20 Greatest Hits (Gusto 2009)” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/14514009/ClydeMoody_-_HillbillyWaltzKing.rar.html
1. I Love You Because
2. Carolina Waltz
3. Red Roses Tied in Blue
4. Dark Midnight
5. Tennessee Rose
6. Where There's Smoke (There's Bound to Be Fire)
7. Cherokee Waltz
8. Nobody's Business
9. What It Means to Be Lonesome
10. Waltzing in the Arms of a Friend
11. Whispering Pines
12. The Room Across the Hall
13. Next Sunday, Darling, Is My Birthday
14. That Little Log Cabin of Mine
15. What Can I Do
16. I Dreamed You Dreamed of Me
17. Little Blossom
18. I've Only Myself to Blame
19. The Blues Came Pouring Down
20. Beautiful Brown Eyes
Thanks to original unknown uploader from way back.
Great listening from Clyde Moody. Enjoy his nusic. Thanks Bob.
ReplyDeleteCould Please Put These Back Up Please. H.J.
ReplyDeleteHowdy HJ
ReplyDeleteFor “Moody’s Blues, Country Tribute & Hillbilly Waltz King” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/b3Yoi
For “The King Years” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/jyS7T