Died On This Date (August 10, 2011) Billy Grammer / Had Several Country Hits In The ’60s

Billy Grammer
August 28, 1925 – August 10, 2011

Billy Grammer (born Billie) was a country music singer and guitarist who scored several hits during the 1960s, including the million-selling “Gotta Travel On,” which ultimately reached the top 5 on both the country and pop charts.  After serving in the Army during WWII, Grammer settled in the Nashville area where he was signed to Monument Records. He went on to record such hits as “Gotta Travel On,” “The Real Thing,” and “I Wanna Go Home,” which became a hit again for Mel Tillis, but as “Detroit City.”  In 1965, Grammer co-founded RG&G Guitar Company where he launched his Grammer Guitar.  The company was later named Grammer Guitar, Inc. and continued to sell the popular model until 1970.  An original Grammer resides at the Country Music Hall of Fame.  On May 15, 1972, Grammer became an American politics footnote when he and his band performed at the political rally at which then Alabama Governor and Presidential candidate George Wallace was shot and paralyzed by an assailant.  Two years later, Grammer delivered the invocation at the opening of the Grand Ole Opry.  Billy Grammer was two weeks shy of his 86th birthday when he passed away on August 10, 2011.

To view an interview and performance by Billy Grammer, please visit his profile at the National Association of Music Merchants site.

Thanks to Dan Del Fiorentino at NAMM for the assist

What You Should Own

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Gotta Travel On - The Very Best of Billy Grammer - Billy Grammer

Died On This Date (October 28, 2007) Porter Wagoner / Country Music Icon

Porter Wagoner
August 12, 1927 – October 28, 2007

porter

Porter Wagoner was a three-time Grammy award-winning country singer who was instantly recognizable thanks to his sparkly suits and towering blond coif.  Wagoner signed to RCA Records during the early ’50, and in 1955, he was hired on to perform on ABC Television’s Ozark Jubilee, broadcasting out of Springfield, MO.  Two years later, he moved to Nashville and became a member of the Grand Ol Opry.  Over the next five decades, Wagoner charted 81 singles.  Songs like “A Satisfied Mind,” “Green Grass of Home,” and “The Cold Hard Facts of Life” are some of the greatest recordings country music has ever known.  In 1960, Wagoner began starring in his own nationally syndicated television show, The Porter Wagoner Show.   The program ran for twenty years and helped launch the careers of Norma Jean, Mel Tillis, and most famously, Dolly Parton.  It was Wagoner who Parton was writing about when she penned “I Will Always Love You,” which became a massive hit for Whitney Houston almost 20 years after it was first released by Parton.  Wagoner continued to work well into the 21st century, recording and making guest appearances on television.  In 2007 he released the Marty Stuart-produced Wagonmaster, the critically acclaimed album that helped him experience a renaissance much in the same way Johnny Cash had in the mid ’90s.  That same year, Wagoner opened for the White Stripes at Madison Square Garden.   Porter Wagoner died of lung cancer at the age of 80.

What You Should Own

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Wagonmaster - Porter Wagoner