Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys - Steel Guitar Rag (1936) descargar videos gratis


60,798
Duración: 03:25
Subido: 2011/05/30

I have had several requests lately to post some more Music by Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys, and I am more than happy to oblige...Enjoy!!!

Bob Wills was the driving force behind Western Swing, a form of Country &

Western that fuses Jazz, Hillbilly, Blues, Big Band Swing, and many more

rhythm forms together creating a truly Unique, Diverse and Unforgettable

sound. Wills' shrewd mix of horns, fiddles and steel guitar made for a

swinging sound that grabbed the public's ear during the mid 1930s and 1940s.

Bob Wills was born into a family of fiddlers on March 6, 1905. His father,

John Wills regularly won Texas fiddling competitions. Bob learned how to

play fiddle and mandolin from his father. As a young man, Wills performed at

house dances, medicine shows and in 1929 made his debut on the radio. With commercial sponsorship, Wills' bands performed on radio in the early 1930s as "Aladdin's Laddies" (for the Aladdin Lamp Co.) and "The Light Crust

Doughboys" (for Light Crust Flour). Following a salary dispute, Wills

renamed his band the Texas Playboys and relocated to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where he had a live radio show. This exposure led to a contract with the American Recording Corporation - later absorbed into Columbia Records.

In September 1935, Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys recorded their first

songs in a makeshift recording studio in an old Dallas Warehouse. From that

point on, The Texas Playboys became an overnight sensation and recorded

prolifically and made such classics as "Steel Guitar Rag", "Maiden's

Prayer", "Take Me Back to Tulsa" and Wills' signature song, "San Antonio

Rose". Their biggest hit, was "New Spanish Two Step", which topped the

country charts for 16 weeks in 1946. The Texas Playboys always had fine

singers like Tommy Duncan and Leon McAuliffe, and Wills punctuated the tunes with jive talking, falsetto asides and cries of "Ah-ha!" He'd call out

soloists by name and instrument, good-naturedly goading them on to

rollicking solo performances.

In terms of personnel, The Texas Playboys expanded and contracted over the

years, according to Wills' desires and the whims of the market. At one point

the Texas Playboys were 22 pieces strong, although the band more typically

numbered between 9 and 18 members. There were personnel changes and musical shifts as Wills struggled to adapt to the changing face of America in the postwar era. Nonetheless, there was always a solid core of loyal regulars in The Texas Playboys. After leaving Columbia in 1947, Wills continued to

record prolifically for such labels as MGM, Decca, Longhorn and Kapp. The

group also toured the country and often performed at a Wills-owned dancehall in Sacramento, California.

In 1968, Wills was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. A year

later, he suffered a debilitating stroke. There were reunions and recording

sessions with many of the old Texas Playboys in 1971 and 1973. Wills' final

stroke came in his sleep following the first day of a recording session in

December 1973 that resulted in the double album "For the Last Time".

Confined to a wheelchair, he'd reprised his role as bandleader that day with

a group of musicians that included former Texas Playboys. He never regained

consciousness and died 18 months later on May 13, 1975.

Wills has been revered by such country-music legends as Waylon Jennings,

Willie Nelson, George Straight, and Merle Haggard who made a 1976 remake of Bob's 1941 hit "Cherokee Maiden". The contemporary Western Swing group, Asleep at the Wheel has also cut a pair of tribute albums that have kept Wills' name before the public. Every year, Bob Wills Day is celebrated on

the last Saturday in April in Turkey, Texas.

Comentarios

11 years ago

2000toddowen

Folks were saying that before you or I were born more than likely.

11 years ago

Mike Burch

They don't make country music like Bob Wills anymore. It's a sad sad state

11 years ago

dick12235

Beautiful. thanks.

11 years ago

Library Pervert

Wow! Hearing this makes me feel that it is too bad Bob never got much of a chance to exercise his own vocal skill in a lot of his other works. When he really got down to it, there was a piercing quality to his vocal skills that would give even someone like Robert Plant a run for their money.

11 years ago

Justin Martell

God I was just thinking that as I was listening. This is the first time I have heard this and am a huge Allman Brothers fan...on point for sure.

12 years ago

2000toddowen

Like hearing Duane Allman minus 35 years. Leon's pitch and dynamic are incredible.

12 years ago

Scott Wilson

"Steel Guitar Rag"/ Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys/ 36/ American Western Swing/ TX

12 years ago

bruiser

This is the original hit version. The sax break presages the rock and roll sax.

12 years ago

subg88

The telharmonium of 1897 used the tonewheel generated additive synthesis that was later incorporated by the Hammond B3 organ.

12 years ago

Jonny James

Leon played this on a "frying pan" one of the earliest steel guitars, no pedals back then. This tune was the defining anthem for steel guitar players from then on. Leon McAuliffe and Bob Dunn were the first to record electric steel guitar in history - likely the first electric instruments in history.

12 years ago

decoycarver17

Take It away Leon.

Videos Relacionados

Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys -- Milk Cow Blues

Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys -- Milk Cow Blues - 1946

Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys

Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys - Cotton Eyed Joe