Monday, 25 December 2023

Howard Crockett born 25 December 1925

Howard Crockett (December 25th, 1925 - 27 December 1994) was a little known singer and songwriter who is sadly ignored by practically every country music encyclopedia. 

Howard Crockett was born Howard Elton Hausey on Christmas Day in the tiny north Louisiana settlement of Yellow Pine, a few miles from Minden. His parents made their living as farmers and sharecroppers. Besides Howard, the Hauseys had a daughter, Irene. Howard became a good baseball prospect, and was discovered by Larry Hunter who owned a Coca-Cola bottling plant in Minden and ran a baseball team. When Howard was twelve, Hunter hired an ex-professional baseball player to teach and train him. By 1942, when Howard was seventeen, talent scouts were coming to see him play, among them one from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Howard wound up playing for the Dodgers organization as a pitcher until a shoulder injury forced him out. 

Johnny Horton

After a short stint with the U.S. Navy, Hausey turned to music and began writing songs. In late 1955, he went to the Louisiana Hayride with three songs he had penned. Two of them were ballads, which he sang for Johnny Horton, but Johnny was looking for something uptempo. Howard then came up with "Honky Tonk Man", his third composition. Horton liked it and so did his manager, Tillman Franks. 

However, to get the song recorded, Howard had to give one third of the publishing to Horton and another third to Franks (who claims that he earned his share by refashioning the melody). "Honky Tonk Man" became Horton's first hit and on the strength of this, Howard moved to Texas (Fort Worth). During the next Horton session (May 23, 1956), they recorded another composition by Howard Hausey, "Sugar Coated Baby", but this wasn't released until 1963, when Johnny Horton was already three years in his grave. 

Howard also tried to land his own recording contract as a singer. In 1957, he was signed to Dot Records by Mac Wiseman, who encouraged the singer to adopt Crockett as a surname. At the first session, four tracks were recorded in Nashville, with the city's finest session men (Chet Atkins, Grady Martin, Bob Moore, Floyd Cramer, Buddy Harman, the Jordanaires). "You've Got Me Lying" and "If You'll Let Me" were issued on Dot 15593 in June 1957. 

Howard named his band the Night Riders and they played regularly on the Louisiana Hayride in 1958-59. He continued to supply Johnny Horton with songs: "Counterfeit Love", "All Grown Up", "Whispering Pines" and "Ole Slew Foot". This last song was first recorded by Crockett himself, as "Slewfoot the Bear". Again, Horton wanted half of the composer credit, waving a large cheque under Howard's nose (Horton had money to burn after the giant success of "Battle Of New Orleans"), but this time Crockett didn't budge. 

                                  

Meanwhile, Howard's recording career continued, though it was far from successful. Dot had dropped him after those first two singles and after that there were releases on Solar, Hamilton, Dixie and Manco. All small labels, but in 1961 he was signed to Smash Records, a subsidiary of Mercury, where his records were produced by Shelby Singleton and accompanied by Jerry Kennedy (guitar), Buddy Killen (bass), Ray Stevens (piano) and Buddy Harman (drums). Of the three Smash singles, the first two are certainly worthwhile: "Deep Elm Dave" and "Break Away Billy Boy". Crockett then moved to Motown's country subsidiary, Mel-O-Dy, where he released sides that emphasized his vocal similarities to Johnny Cash, but these too did not garner much attention. 

Crockett had to wait until 1973 for his one and only hit, "Last Will And Testimony (Of A Drinking Man)" which peaked at # 52 on the Billboard country charts and at # 45 in Cash Box. This was his comeback single after five years of retirement. He had been labelled as too close to Johnny Horton or Johnny Cash and after all those years, he had began to believe it himself. This hit encouraged him to try again, but his fortunes were short-lived and he distilled much of his bitterness into a song called "Don't Go To Nashville In the Summer, Songwriter, Or You'll Freeze To Death And Won't Know Why". 

Crockett retired from singing in 1981, though he continued to write songs. In 1986, Dwight Yoakam had a # 3 country hit with a remake of "Honky Tonk Man". After the death of his wife Patricia in 1989, Howard once again became active as a songwriter, until he died on the 27th December 1994, two days after his 69th birthday after a long struggle against cancer. In 1999, he was inducted into the Texas Country Music Hall Of Fame. "Crock", as he was called by his friends, was a prolific songwriter, with 343 titles in the BMI database. 

(Edited from This Is My Story, Bear Family notes & AllMusic)

7 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Howard Crockett – Out Of Bounds (FLAC 2007 Bear Family)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/dzwFd

1. Break Away Billy Boy
2. Deep Elm Dave
3. Trail Of Tears
4. Jessie And The Glendale Train
5. If You'll Let Me
6. Tell Me Why
7. I Love This Girl
8. Steamboat Bill
9. The Ballad Of Thunder Road
10. Please Answer The Phone
11. Out Of Bounds Again
12. The Great Titanic
13. Going Down To Soldier
14. You've Got Me Lyin'
15. I'm Gonna Try Again
16. Where Did My Baby Go
17. Branded
18. Night Rider
19. Honky Tonk Man
20. All Grown Up
21. Sleufoot The Bear
22. Johnny Reb
23. I Got Stripes
24. That Old Jukebox
25. Just A Poor Man
26. I've Got You Worried Too
27. Seven Cards From Now
28. Polly Ann
29. Dunkerque (Dunkerk)
30. Jessie And The Glendale Train
31. Sugar Coated Baby
32. You've Got Me Lyin'
33. Untamed Heart
34. If You'll Let Me
35. Truddy Brown
36. Seven Cards From Now

He didn't have many hits as a singer, but Howard Crockett wrote Honky Tonk Man, Ole Slew Foot, Whispering Pines, and All Grown Up. All Johnny Horton hits. On the strength of Honky Tonk Man, he signed a contract with Dot Records, and this CD includes all his Dot/Hamilton recordings together with the legendarily rare Manco singles, as well as the never-reissued-until-now Smash recordings. Serious rockabilly collectors have long been aware of Howard Crockett. With this CD, everyone can now appreciate a true original talent in the same vein as Johnny Horton and Johnny Cash but with a style all his own.(Bear Family notes)

============================================

For “Howard Crockett – Leftovers & Hangovers” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/f5Qv2

01 - Howard Salutes Red And Rune (0:40)
02 - Born For Livin' (2:47)
03 - The Big Wheel (2:43)
04 - Star (4:02)
05 - Last Will & Testimony Of A Drinking Man (3:03)
06 - The House Where Mamma Lived (2:35)
07 - Pictures & Memories (3:15)
08 - Nine Miles Of Bad Road (2:06)
09 - I'd Like To Be Everybody For Just A Day (2:44)
10 - I Feel More Like Myself (2:14)
11 - Daddy Poured The Wine (3:03)
12 - It's A Bad Year For Losers (2:30)
13 - Go On And Leave Me Alone Girl (1:45)
14 - Golden Key (2:05)
15 - Be My Guest (1:42)
16 - Love Thy Neighbor (2:08)
17 - That Old Couch (2:29)
18 - Late Last Night (2:20)
19 - There Are Things A Man Likes (2:28)
20 - The Love I've Ever Known (2:06)
21 - Cajun Fever (2:46)
22 - Honey I Got A Feelin' (2:21)
23 - I Wanna Go Back (2:30)
24 - Make Me Understand (3:06)
25 - Mountain (3:08)
26 - Sunday Morning (3:33)
27 - When I Grow Too Old (2:24)
28 - Interview (6:07)
29 - How Are Things In Honky Tonks These Days (3:48)

Bob Mac said...

Thanks for these Bob.

Jacdaw said...

Another fine songwriter and singer from obscurity. Thanks a lot, Bob.

Tom George said...

Thanks a lot for all every day and stay safe!

RiCK SAUNDERS said...

Thank you, Bob!

boppinbob said...

Sad news …..It seems some of my original comments on most posts are gradually disappearing. That means no playlists or links. I will replace links as often as I can, but this seems to be an ongoing battle.

Howard Crockett - Out Of Bounds
https://www.imagenetz.de/dzwFd

Howard Crockett- To Red And Rune
https://www.imagenetz.de/f5Qv2


Aussie said...

thank youuuuu