Carl Smith
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- This article is about a musician. For the computer scientist, see Carl Herbert Smith.
Carl Smith | ||
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![]() Carl Smith publicity photo.
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Background information | ||
Birth name | Carl Smith | |
Born | March 15, 1927 | |
Origin | Maynardville, Tennessee | |
Genre(s) | Country, Rock & Roll, Rockabilly | |
Occupation(s) | Singer, Songwriter | |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, Guitar, String Bass | |
Years active | 1950–Present | |
Label(s) | Columbia Records Hickory Records |
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Associated acts |
Hank Snow, Marty Robbins, June Carter, Goldie Hill |
Carl Smith (born March 15, 1927 in Maynardville, Tennessee) is an American Country Music Singer. Known as Mister Country, Smith is the former husband of June Carter Cash and drinking buddy of Johnny Cash. He racked up a string of Country hits in the 1950s, and was one of Country's most successful male artists during that decade.
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[edit] Early Life & Rise to Fame
Carl Smith was one of Country Music's most remembered singers during the 1950s. Over the course of the decade, he racked up 30 Top 10 hits, and his success continued well into the 1970s, where he had a charting single ever year, except for one.
Smith was born in Tennessee in 1927. The town he grew up in (Maynardville) was the hometown of another Country singer, Roy Acuff. During his childhood, he idolized Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubb, and Bill Monroe. In his teenage years, he taught himwself how to play the guitar. According to legend, he bought his first guitar with money he earned by selling flower seeds. [1] At age 15, he started performing in a band, called Kitty Dibble and Her Dude Ranch Ranglers. By the age of 17, he learned how to play the srting bass, and spent his summer vacation, working at a radio station in Knoxville, Tennessee. After graduatiing from high school, he briefly served in the U.S. Navy. He went back to the rasdio station (WROL) and played string bass for Country singers, Molly O Day and Skeets Williamson. He started to sing too at this time. One his colleagues at the station sent an acetate of Smith singing. It was sent to WSM (the radio station of the Grand Ole Opry) in Nashville, Tennessee, and WSM soon signed Smith to a contract, ans he was soon working for WSM and the Grand Ole Opry.
In 1950, Smith finally got signed with a recording contract, with Columbia Records by producer Don Law.
[edit] The Height of His Career In the 50s
The year 1950, showed no success for Smith, but 1951, was the year he made it big, when his song "Let's Live a Little" was a big hit that year. The song just missed topping the Country charts. His career took off afterwards. During the course of 1951, he racked up three other hits, including "If the Teardrops Were Pennies" and his first #1 hit called "Let Old Mother Nature Have Her Way". All three of the songs made Smith a household name in Country Music.
In 1951, Smith also met and married June Carter (who would later become June Carter Cash when she would later marry Johnny Cash). She was the daughter of Maybelle Carter, who was part of the legendary Country band the Carter Family. Smith and June had a daughter shortly after marrying named Carlene Carter, who would later become a Country singer in her own right.
Throughout the rest of the 1950s, Smith would make regular appearances on Billboard's Country charts, racking up many more hits, including 30 Top 10 hits. His biggest hits include "Loose Talk", "Wicked Lies", "Hey Joe!", and "You Are the One". He only had 5 #1 hits though in his career. "Loose Talk" was his last #1, when it hit #1 in 1955. Some of his songs had sharp edges to it, had fast words, and a strog drumbeat to them that made them hits. It was evn in fact similar to that of some Rockabilly material that was being recorded an made hits back in the mid-50s. Atr some points, it made Smith closer to Rock & Roll] than Country. Some of his songs, in fact made the Pop charts. His biggest Pop entry was the song "Ten Thousand Drums" in 1959, which went to #43 on the Pop charts, which came close to making the Top 40.
In 1956, as a way of changing pace, Smith quit the Grand Ole Opry, and moved out to California and appeared in a couple of movies. Soon after he joined the Phillip Morris Country Music Show, and spent more than a year touring the United States. He soon appeared on the Ozark Jubilee show, hosted by Red Foley. His success continued as a Country singer during this time also.
In 1957, Smith and June Carter divorced. That same year, he married Country Music singer Goldie Hill, who was a successful Country singer herself, best known for the #1 hit "I Let the Stars Get In My Eyes". The couple was married until Goldie's death in 2005. By the late 50s, Smith's success began to dwindle on the Country charts, and soon his on-going string of Top 10s soon turned into Top 20 hits.
[edit] Decline & Life Today
By the 1960s, Smith's success as a Country Music singer began to slow down. He soon stopped making the Top 10, and only making the Top 20, among these being "Air Mail To Heaven" in 1962 and "Take My Ring Off Your Finger" in 1964. His biggest hit of the decade was "Deep Water" in 1967, which peaked at #10 and became his first top 10 in 8 years and the last time he would make the Top 10. During the 60s, he continued to stay in Country's Top 40. In 1961, he appeared in the ABC television series called Four Star Jubilee. He soon began hosting in Canada Carl Smith's Country Music Hall. The series was even syndicated in the United States. In the 60s and 70s, Smith incorporated more Western swing into much of his recorded material, that can be seen on many of his albums from that time.
Carl remained with Columbia Records for almost 25 years, when he left the record company in 1975, and signed on with Hickory Records. By this time though, his singles were no longer making the Country Top 40, in fact, they were barely making the charts. In the late 70s, he decided to retire from the music business. In 1983 though, he recorded again for the Gusto label. By this time though, his performing days were over. He spent time with his wife, Goldie Hill on their horse farm south of Nashville. Goldie herself retired from the music business after she married Smith in 1957.
In 2003, Smith was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
[edit] Charted Singles
Year | Single | U.S. Country Singles | U.S. Pop Singles | Album | |
1951 | "Let's Live a Little" | #2 | - | Carl Smith | |
1952 | "Let Old Mother Nature Have Her Way" | #1 | - | Carl Smith | |
1952 | "(When You Feel Like You're In Love) Don't Just Stand There | #1 | - | Essential Carl Smith | |
1952 | "Are You Teasing Me" | #1 | - | Essential Carl Smith | |
1953 | "Hey, Joe" | #1 | - | Essential Carl Smith | |
1955 | "Don't Tease Me" | #11 | - | Satsifaction Guaranteed | |
1955 | "Loose Talk" | #1 | - | This Lady Loving Me | |
1955 | "More Than Anything Else In the World" | #5 | - | Satisfaction Guaranteed | |
1955 | "Old Lonesome Times" | #11 | - | Satisfaction Guaranteed | |
1955 | "There She Goes" | #3 | - | The Essential Carl Smith | |
1955 | "Wait a Little Longer, Please Jesus" | #12 | - | Satisfaction Guaranteed | |
1956 | "Before I Met You" | #6 | - | Satisfaction Guaranteed | |
1956 | "Doorstep to Heaven" | #6 | - | Satisfaction Guaranteed | |
1957 | "You Are The One" | #3 | - | Essential Carl Smith | |
1959 | "Ten Thousand Drums" | #5 | #43 | The Essential Carl Smith | |
1962 | "Air Mail To Heaven" | #11 | - | Carl Smith's Columbia Hits of the 60's | |
1964 | "Take My Ring Off Your Finger" | #14 | - | Carl Smith's Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 | |
1967 | "Deep Water" | #10 | - | Deep Water | |
1968 | "Foggy River" | #18 | - | Deep Water | |
1969 | "Faded Love and Winter Roses" | #25 | - | Faded Love and Winter Roses | |
1969 | "Good Deal Lucille" | #18 | - | Faded Love and Winter Roses | |
1969 | "I Love You Because" | #14 | - | Faded Love and Winter Roses | |
1970 | "Pull My String And Wind Me Up" | #18 | - | Carl Smith and the Tunesmiths | |
1970 | "How I Love Them Old Songs" | #20 | - | Carl Smith and the Tunesmiths | |
1971 | "Red Door" | #21 | - | Don't Say You're Mine | |
1972 | "Don't Say You're Mine | #34 | - | Don't Say You're Mine | |
1975 | "The Way I Lose My Mind" | #67 | - | The Way I Lose My Mind | |
1975 | "Roly Poly" | #97 | - | The Way I Lose My Mind | |
1976 | "If You Don't, Somebody Else Will" | #97 | - | A Way With Words | |
1976 | "A Way With Words" | #98 | - | A Way With Words | |
1977 | "Show Me A Brick Wall" | #96 | - | This Lady Loving Me | |
1978 | "This Lady Loving Me" | #81 | - | This Lady Loving Me |