Sunday, 8 June 2025

Vernon Oxford born 8 June 1941

Vernon Oxford (June 8, 1941 – August 18, 2023) was an American country music singer and guitarist with unlucky timing, coming up during an era when traditional country simply wasn't counting for much on the charts. However, he was able to find a different route to success, touring the U.K. extensively to capitalize on his surprising popularity there. 

Vernon Oxford was born near Rogers, a small township in Benton County, Arkansas, to Mr. & Mrs. Walter Vernon and was one of seven children. His childhood was spent in rural surroundings. His school was nothing more than a wooden shack. His leisure time was taken up with music, his father was a fine fiddler, and the whole family would join in during the evening singing and playing the old mountain songs. Just before Vernon reached his teens his family moved from the Ozarks to Wichita, Kansas. Here Vernon joined the local church choir and first began taking an interest in the guitar and fiddle. At first he became more expert on the fiddle and entered several local fiddle contests including the famous Cowtown contest and the Kansas State Championship. He then progressed to singing and formed his own group and played throughout the mid-west at clubs, honky-tonks and other small places of entertainment. 

His first professional gig came in 1960 at a Utah club, and he spent the next several years playing clubs and dances around Kansas. In 1964, he moved to Nashville to try his luck in the business and did the usual round of record companies and music publishing firms. He tried RCA and was turned down; he called in at United Artists and got the same response. At the time no one was interested in somebody who could sing real country music. He became acquainted with Harlan Howard, a successful Nashville writer who specialised in writing straight-forward country songs. 


Howard’s songs and Oxford’s voice were tailor-made for each other, what was needed was just the right song to appeal to one of the record companies. More audition tapes were made. Harlan Howard made it his personal responsibility to get Vernon Oxford started. He was knocked out by his natural voice and the great feeling he had for the music. Eventually RCA were impressed with one of the audition tapes that Vernon Oxford had submitted, and in December, 1965 Vernon Oxford cut his first commercial session for RCA Victor. The result was a small hit with Harlan Howard’s Woman Let Me Sing You A Song, but unfortunately Vernon Oxford didn’t catch on, even though everyone raved about his great ‘country’ voice. 

Most of his recordings were very country, and though he recorded several up-beat numbers, he was better on slow weepers with stand-outs being Touch Of God’s Hand, This Woman Is Mine, Forgetfullness For Sale and Field of Flowers. Though he signed a five-year contract with RCA Victor in 1965, they only released seven singles and one album, all of which are sadly deleted. After leaving Victor  he signed with the Stop label, but again success eluded him, it seems that nowadays you can be too country, even for Nashville. 

While traditional country fans applauded his work, he never managed to hit the charts, and RCA dropped him. He recorded briefly for the smaller Stop label but caught a break when British audiences discovered him as a fine traditional-style artist who'd slipped through the cracks of American popular taste. RCA issued a retrospective of his work in Britain in 1974, re-signed Oxford, and sent him on a tour. Oxford scored his first chart single in America with "Shadows of My Mind" and had his biggest hit with "Redneck (The Redneck National Anthem)"; a few more singles charted in America, and Oxford also scored some British hits with the likes of "I've Got to Get Peter off Your Mind" and "Field of Flowers." He also recorded a comedy duet with Jim Ed Brown, "Mowing The Lawn". 

He toured actively through 1977 then after a break of several years in 1981, he began a career as a born-again Christian dedicated to gospel music. As an actor, Oxford appeared in several films including The Thing Called Love starring River Phoenix, and Coal Miner's Daughter, a 1980 film about American singer Loretta Lynn, who was portrayed by actress Sissy Spacek. 

Mostly as an independent artist, Oxford continued to record new material. Oxford's classic recordings have been reissued by numerous labels, including a comprehensive box set from Bear Family Records, and some compilations from Westside UK and the Morello label, which is a division of UK-based Cherry Red Records. In his later years Vernon suffered from dementia and Parkinson's disease and died on August 18, 2023 in a Nashville hospice. He was 82.

(Edited from Alan Cackett article, AllMusic & Wikipedia)

 

6 comments:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you to Quot for suggesting today’s birthday singer and to Glenn Eric for the loan of the box set below.

For “Vernon Oxford - Keeper Of The Flame (1995 Bear Family)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/MyS4ZejJ

CD 1
1. Watermelon Time In Georgia (1:59)
2. Roll, Big Wheels Roll (2:26)
3. Woman, Let Me Sing You a Song (2:31)
4. Move to Town in the Fall (2:57)
5. Nashville Women (master) (2:19)
6. Goin' Home (2:16)
7. Let's Take a Cold Shower (2:49)
8. Field of Flowers (2:06)
9. Hide (2:14)
10. Stone By Stone (2:28)
11. Behind Every Good Man There's a Woman (2:09)
12. Forgetfullness For Sale (2:39)
13. Baby Sister (2:32)
14. Goin' Home (Alt 1) (1:57)
15. Honky Tonk Girls (1:55)
16. Babies, Stop Your Crying (2:44)
17. The Blues Come In (2:20)
18. Treat Yourself Right (2:29)
19. Little Sister Throw Your Red Shoes Away (2:36)
20. The Old Folks' Home (2:49)
21. That's The Way I Talk (1:56)
22. Touch of God's Hands (2:37)
23. Come Back and See Us (2:47)
24. This Woman is Mine (2:43)
25. A Mansion on the Hill (2:30)
26. Wedding Bells (2:58)
27. Don't Let a Little Thing Like That (2:46)
28. You Win Again (2:53)
29. Touch of God's Hands (master) (2:36)
30. Come Back and See Us (master) (2:46)
31. Nashville Women (take 10) (2:18)

CD 2
1. What Will I Live On Tomorrow (2:34)
2. Wine, Women And Songs (2:21)
3. I'd Rather See You Wave Goodbye (2:17)
4. This Is Where I Came In (2:33)
5. What Color Is The Wind (2:13)
6. Hazard County Saturday Night (2:45)
7. The Rise Of Seymour Simmons (3:23)
8. How High Does The Cotton Grow, Mama (2:43)
9. I've Got To Get Peter Off Your Mind (2:30)
10. We Came Awfully Close To Sin (3:33)
11. Love And Pearl And Me (2:17)
12. She's Always There (3:13)
13. I Wish You Would Leave Me Alone (2:53)
14. We Sure Danced Us Some Goodn's (2:48)
15. Woman You've Got A Hold Of Me (2:25)
16. Soft And Warm (2:42)
17. Surprise Birthday Party (2:56)
18. Shadows Of My Mind (3:13)
19. A Country Singer (2:24)
20. Anymore (2:35)
21. God Keeps The Wild Flowers Blooming (2:54)
22. Giving The Pill (2:06)
23. Beautiful Junk (2:38)
24. Mowing The Lawn (2:51)
25. Wait A Little Longer Please Jesus (2:59)
26. Clean Your Own Tables (2:49)
27. You're Wanting Me Gone (2:58)
28. Don't Be Late (2:56)

CD 3
1. Leave Me Alone With The Blues (2:35)
2. One More Night To Spare (2:31)
3. Only The Shadows Know (2:27)
4. Redneck [The Redneck National Anthem] (2:31)
5. Good Old Fashioned Saturday Night Honky Tonk Barroom Brawl (2:15)
6. Midnight Memories (2:44)
7. Red Hot Women (Ice Cold Beer) (2:52)
8. Backslider's Wine (2:52)
9. Redneck Roots (3:13)
10. Songs That Losers Choose (2:43)
11. Images (3:00)
12. Brother Jukebox (2:39)
13. Kaw Liga (2:27)
14. You're Cheatin' Heart (3:26)
15. Hey Good Lookin' (2:01)
16. When God Comes And Gathers His Jewels (2:05)
17. Baby We're Really In Love (2:22)
18. Wedding Bells (4:18)
19. Cold Cold Heart (3:08)
20. I Saw The Light (2:08)
21. Setting The Woods On Fire (1:49)
22. I Can't Help It (2:40)
23. You Win Again (3:08)
24. Jambalaya (2:51)
25. I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry (3:09)
26. Mansion On The Hill (2:50)
27. The Funeral (3:12)
28. Nobody's Child (3:53)

CD 4
1. There's A Better Place (2:25)
2. Joanna (2:46)
3. Who Were Ann And Louis Adams (3:43)
4. Mommy Do You Think I'll Get To Heaven (3:29)
5. State Of Depression (3:10)
6. Woman (2:55)
7. Maggie The Baby Is Crying (2:35)
8. If I Had My Wife To Love Over (2:52)
9. I'll Forgive You For The Last Time (2:58)
10. If There Was No Country Music (2:56)
11. Cattle Call (2:36)
12. I Love To Sing (2:27)
13. Walkin' My Blues Away (2:21)
14. If Kisses Could Talk (2:50)
15. Gonna Ease My Worried Mind (2:02)
16. No One Is Listening (3:05)
17. Turn The Record Over (2:12)
18. I Think Living Is Sweet (2:14)
19. A Blanket Of Stars (3:15)
20. The Greatest Stoneface (3:51)
21. Rainy Day (2:10)
22. (I Just Want) Somebody To Love Me (2:28)
23. Let Your Light Shine (3:00)
24. Bringing Mary Home (3:08)
25. Bad Moon Risin' (2:16)
26. Letters Have No Arms (2:42)
27. Mother's Not Dead, She's Only Sleeping (3:14)
28. Honky Tonk Troubles (2:37)

boppinbob said...

CD 5
1. Daughter Of The Vine (3:04)
2. They'll Never Take Her Love From Me (3:08)
3. Angel Band (4:01)
4. Have You Loved Your Woman Today (2:27)
5. Lonesome Rainin' City (2:50)
6. Veil Of White Lace (3:16)
7. Sweeter Than The Flowers (2:25)
8. Busiest Memory In Town (2:21)
9. Wings Of A Dove (2:53)
10. This World Holds Nothin' Since You're Gone (2:31)
11. Family Bible (3:09)
12. Always True (3:04)
13. Where The Soul Of Man Never Dies (3:11)
14. Lord, I've Tried Everything But You (2:47)
15. A Better Way Of Life (2:29)
16. The Uncloudy Day (2:55)
17. His And Hers (2:22)
18. House Of Gold (2:44)
19. Baby Sister (2:26)
20. Sad Situation (2:39)
21. Dust On The Bible (2:48)
22. Early Morning Rain (3:19)
23. The Last Letter (3:31)
24. You're The Reason (2:24)
25. Are They Gonna Make Us Outlaws Again (3:14)
26. The Long Black Veil (3:21)
27. I Feel Chained (2:19)

Lester said...

Thanks, Bob. Very underappreciated country artist.

Bob Mac said...

Thanks for this Bob.

Rob Kopp said...

Thanks Bob

iggy said...

What a treat. Thanks to Bob and Glenn. Found Vernon 20 years ago and somehow lost him along the way. So glad you brought him back. All good wishes, Iggy in Oregon