Arthur Smith (April 1, 1921 – April 3, 2014) was an American
musician, songwriter, and producer of records, as well as a radio and TV host
for decades. Smith produced radio and TV shows; The Arthur Smith Show was the
first nationally syndicated country music show on television. After moving to
Charlotte, North Carolina, Smith developed and ran the first commercial
recording studio in the Southeast.

Boogie." The song earned him the moniker Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith (to differentiate him from Tennessee fiddler and 1930s Grand Ole Opry star Fiddlin' Arthur Smith) and would be recorded by numerous others including as a rock and roll hit by Frank Virtue and The Virtues renamed the "Guitar Boogie Shuffle." Virtue served in the Navy with Smith and counted him as a major influence. Other musicians who have been influenced by Smith include Nashville studio ace Hank "Sugarfoot" Garland, Roy Clark, Glen Campbell and surf music pioneers The Ventures.
Smith was the son of Clayton Seymour Smith, a textile worker
and music teacher who also led the town band in Kershaw, South Carolina;
Smith's first instrument was the cornet. Arthur Smith, along with his brothers
Ralph and Sonny formed a Dixieland combo, the Carolina Crackerjacks.'
They who
appeared briefly on radio in Spartanburg, South Carolina; they had limited
success with their jazz format, and became a more popular Country Music group
before Arthur moved to Charlotte, North Carolina to join the cast of the WBT
Carolina Barndance live show and radio program. Before WWII, he was an
occasional member of the WBT Briarhoppers band.

After wartime service in the US Navy, Arthur returned to
Charlotte; joined by his brothers, his wife Dorothy and vocalist Roy Lear, he continued his recording career and started his own radio show "Carolina
Calling" on WBT. Arthur Smith emceed part of the first live television
program broadcast in 1951 by the new television station, WBTV, in Charlotte.
The Arthur Smith Show was also the first country music television show to be
syndicated nationally, and ran for 32 years in 90 markets coast to coast.



music compositions including million sellers "The Fourth Man" and "I Saw A Man." In total, his compositions have been recorded numerous times by artists including Chet Atkins, Glen Campbell, Johnny Cash, The Cathedrals, Al Hirt, Barbara Mandrell, Willie Nelson, The Gatlin Brothers, Oak Ridge Boys, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty, Boots Randolph,The Stamps, The Statler Brothers, Ricky Van Shelton and many more.


As of fall 2006,
Smith was retired. He died at his home on April 3, 2014, two days after his
93rd birthday. (info from Wikipedia)