Wayne Paul Walker, (December 13, 1925 - January 2, 1979)
was a prolific songwriter, with no less than 526 titles in the BMI database, 23
of which have won BMI awards. He was less successful as a singer, though he
made some fine recordings, both in the rockabilly and the country field.

With Pierce he wrote the song "How Do You Think I
Feel", which was first recorded by Red Sovine in early 1954 (Decca 29068),
but the best known version is of course by Elvis Presley, on his second LP. It
was on the Louisiana Hayride (KWKH Studio in Shreveport) that Wayne recorded
his first single, "Now Is the Time For Love"/"You Got the Best
of Me (I Got the Worst Of You)" (Chess 4860), released in October 1954.
Also recorded for Chess in Shreveport (in January 1955) was "Love Me"
with Jimmy Lee (Fautheree), a genuine rockabilly classic.
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Jimmy Lee & Wayne Walker |
Also in July 1956, Wayne made his second solo recording,
the excellent rockabilly song "All I Can Do Is Cry" (ABC-Paramount
9735), which was also recorded by Johnny Bond (1957). He was now living in
Nashville where he had signed as a songwriter with one of the major publishing
houses, Cedarwood Publishing (co-owned by Jim Denny and Webb Pierce). But
Wayne's career as a singer was far from over yet.
In 1957 he signed a contract
with Columbia Records and had at least four singles released on the label, the
best of which were "Bo-Bo Ska Diddle Daddle" and "Just A Walkin'
Around". This was followed by stints at Coral (1958), Brunswick (1959) and
a few small labels in the 1960s.
As a songwriter, Walker had his first major hit in the autumn of 1956, with "I've Got A New Heartache", which Ray Price took to # 2 on the country charts. (Price would score another # 2 with a Wayne Walker
composition in 1964 : "Burning Memories"). Wayne's biggest pop success was "Are You Sincere", a # 3 hit for Andy Williams in 1958. Other notable songs from Walker's vast catalogue include "Teenage Wedding" (co-written with Mel Tillis and recorded by Johnny Angel - in reality Jimmy Lee Fautheree - Faron Young and

According to William Savage's "Singing Cowboys And
All That Jazz", Walker produced a song every three days. He saved none of
his most commercial songs for himself, though, and never scored a hit under his
own name. Perhaps one reason that he didn't make it as a singer was that he
never got over having stage fright and hated travelling. Writing songs was his
real passion.
Walker was married for fifteen years to Ernest Tubb's
daughter, Violet (nicknamed Scooter Bill), but they divorced in 1973. He died
of cancer six years later, on January 2, 1979. He had been inducted into the
Nashville Songwriters Hall Of Fame in 1975, along with (among others) Marty
Robbins and Marijohn Wilkin, with whom he wrote "Cut Across Shorty".