Thursday, 4 June 2026

Bill Mack born 4 June 1929

Bill Mack (June 4, 1929 – July 31, 2020) was an American country music songwriter, singer, and radio host.

Born William Mack Smith, Jr., in the panhandle town of Shamrock, Texas, he was the oldest of two boys of Irene and Ernest Smith. His father worked in real estate; his mother was a homemaker. 

As a boy, fascinated by radio, he landed a cleaning job at the little station in Shamrock that led to a spot on the air. While still in his teens, Bill Mack formed a band (in which he played guitar and harmonica) to play dances at Shamrock High School. He majored in speech at West Texas State College and worked for radio KEVA during his student years. At 19, he was news-director for radio KLYN in Amarillo. Bill got his first break of his multi-faceted career in Wichita Falls, Texas, where his own show 'The Big Six Jamboree' played over KWFT-TV in the early 50s. He emceed 'The Old Hadocol Western Barn Dance' on KWFT-TV and in 1951 this led to a contract with Imperial Records.

                                 

Mack cut a neat CD-sized bundle of 30 tracks for Imperial and came close to capturing the blue-collar aggression of primal rockabilly on tunes like "Sue-Suzie Boogie" and the 1952 piano- drenched "Play My Boogie" (Imperial 8174). Stints in broadcasting co-existed with further recordings for Starday ("Kitty Cat" and "Cat's Just Got in Town" represent Texas rockabilly at its best), Philips, United Artists, MGM and a host of smaller labels.

He signed with Hickory in 1970 and had an almost hit with 'Ladonna'. This, and other Hickory and MGM sides, were gathered up on the Discus album, 'Best Of Bill Mack (If There Is Such A Thing)'. His best known songs include 'Clinging To A Saving Hand' (Connie Smith) and 'Drinking Champagne' (Cal Smith, Jerry Lee Lewis, George Strait).

In March 1969, Mack joined Fort Worth's WBAP which beamed its 50,000 watt, clear channel signal all over the USA and was probably the most listened to country station of them all. His all-night 'Open Road' show attracted a fanatical audience of truckers, who anointed him “the midnight cowboy,” airline pilots and country entertainers. Its opening theme music was an instrumental rendition of "Orange Blossom Special", performed by Felix Slatkin and his orchestra. Because of WBAP's clear channel signal range via skywave at night, Mack's show was heard over most of the continental United States. In addition, Mack hosted the syndicated radio show Country Crossroads, heard on more than 800 stations across the country, and a similar cable television show on FamilyNet.

He also hosted the Overdrive Top Ten Countdown, a weekly one-hour country music countdown geared toward truckers, in syndication. 'Country Music Magazine' called him the last real radio star. While at WBAP Radio, Mack initiated the Bill Mack Million Mile Club for truckers achieving one million miles of accident-free over-the-road driving. Mack left WBAP to join XM Satellite Radio on its Open Road channel (XM 171). Two of the other main personalities on Open Road, Dave Nemo and Dale "The Truckin' Bozo" Sommers, were Mack's primary competitors before all three left their AM radio stations to join XM. Mack's radio program was heard weekdays on XM channel 13 from 12 Noon to 3 PM Eastern, and rebroadcast from Midnight to 3 AM Eastern. On April 29, 2011, Mack announced that Sirius/XM had terminated his contract to make room for a merger of two of the channels The Roadhouse and Willie's Place into one channel and that this was his final show.

Merle Haggard, Charlie Pride & Bill Mack

In the country music industry, Mack was also a songwriter. His best-known song is "Blue," one of LeAnn Rimes' biggest hits. The song won Mack the Grammy Award for Best Country Song in 1997. He encouraged the much-seized upon media hook that the song was intended for Patsy Cline who never got to record it although lots of people had including Roy Drusky, Kathryn Pitt, Polly Stevens and yodelling Kenny Roberts. Mack also wrote "Drinking Champagne," which has been recorded by numerous artists. The song was a hit for Cal Smith in 1968, and again for George Strait in 1990 on his album Livin' It Up. Some of his other songs have been recorded by Dean Martin, Ray Price, Jerry Lee Lewis and George Jones.

In 2000, Mack won the media category award given by the Grand Ole Opry. He was named to the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame in 1999, and the Country Music DJ and Radio Hall of Fame in 1982. His autobiography, 'Spins And Needles', was published by Travis Press in New York in 1970 (now out of print). He received keys to various cities, there were two “Bill Mack Days” in his city of Fort Worth, he was an “Honorary Kentucky Colonel.” and, now, there is “Bill Mack Street” in his hometown, Shamrock, Texas.

In his later years Mack been suffering from dementia and lived in a memory care facility when he was diagnosed with COVID-19. He was rushed to the Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, Irving, Texas, where he died two days later om July 31, 2020. He was 91 years old.

(Edited from This Is My Story, Wikipedia, New York Times & 5NBC) 

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

For "Bill Mack – Play My Boogie (2010 Jasmine)" go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/FGsFYn2J

1 CRAZY BABY BOOGIE
2 WHEN THE SUN GOES DOWN
3 IF YOU DON'T CHANGE YOUR NAME
4 THAT'S THE WAY I LIKE YOU
5 BIG BAD DADDY
6 OH PLEASE BLUE MOON
7 WEDDING BLUES
8 MAMA, DON'T LOCK THE DOOR
9 THAT'S HOW I FEEL
10 I CRIED ALL THE WAY HOME
11 MEMORIES AND TEARS
12 I'LL STILL BE WAITING
13 PLAY MY BOOGIE
14 IT'S YOUR TURN TO CRY
15 I'M TALKING TO YOU
16 THAT'S WHAT I GET FOR LOVING YOU
17 OH, HOW IT HURTS ME
18 I STILL DREAM ABOUT YOU
19 AIN'T IT A SHAME
20 I'M MISSIN' LOTS OF LOVIN'
21 I'M NOT FREE
22 SUE-SUZIE BOOGIE
23 CRAZY FOR LOVE
24 A FOOL YOU ARE

Bill Mack, is a larger than life character, a Country singer, successful songwriter, respected radio personality, much loved Country music DJ. On this compilation the spotlight is on his early material, the recordings on this compilation range from Hillbilly Boogie, Hillbilly Bopper's and Hank Williams, flavoured Honky Tonk ballads and the odd neo Rockabilly offering.
For over sixty years he has worked with the greats of Country music and during that time he recorded and penned numerous hits that have gone on to bring success to many other artists. This is a fantastic compilation for all fans of Country music.

Please note this Jasmine CD was re-released as a digital album on iTunes in 2023 by AMB under the name of Crazy Baby Boogie with different artwork yet track listing is exactly the same.

Here's my own compilation of 25 singles taken from various digital albums and 45's so quality will vary. All @192.

For " Bill Mack - Golden Selection. The Best of the Rest 1952-1967 singles (2026 From the Vaults)" go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/2iovS8FR

01) Bill Mack - Jole Blon on the Farm.mp3"
02) Bill Mack - When the Sun Goes Down.mp3"
03) Bill Mack - Forever I'll Wait for You.mp3"
04) Bill Mack - We Waltzed in My Dreams.mp3"
05) Bill Mack - I Love You All over Again.mp3"
06) Bill Mack - She Found Somebody New.mp3"
07) Bill Mack - It's Just Like a Dream Come True.mp3"
08) Bill Mack - Fat Woman.mp3"
09) Bill Mack - Cat Just Got into Town.mp3"
10) Bill Mack - It's Saturday Night.mp3"
11) Bill Mack - Long, Long, Train.mp3"
12) Bill Mack - I'll Come Back.mp3"
13) Bill Mack - Waiting For The River To Rise.mp3"
14) Bill Mack - The Smoke, the Bottle and the Wine.mp3"
15) Bill Mack - Adding To My Misery.mp3"
16) Bill Mack - Your Letter`s Overdue.mp3"
17) Bill Mack - You're Not The Kind.mp3"
18) Bill Mack - Sing Another Sad Song.mp3"
19) Bill Mack - Blue Side of Lonesome.mp3"
20) Bill Mack - Where Were You (When The Doorbell Rang).mp3"
21) Bill Mack - Everything's Getting Bigger (But Our Love).mp3"
22) Bill Mack - Honky Tonk Band.mp3"
23) Bill Black - Six Big Men.mp3"
24) Bill Mack - Paper Doll.mp3"
25) Bill Mack -Drinking Champagne.mp3"

Recording dates from Praguefrank
1-2 (1952), 3-5 (1953), 6-7 (1954), 8-10 (1956), 11 (1958), 12-14 (1960)
15 (1961), 16-20 (1962, 21-22 (1964), 23- 24 (1965), 25 (1967)

Aussie said...

big thank you 4 this

Lester said...

Many thanks

Rob Kopp said...

Thanks