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BUCK OWENS-AMSTERDAM


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BUCK OWENS-AMSTERDAM

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Alvis Edgar Owens Jr. was born in Sherman, Texas, on Aug. 12, 1929, and at age 3 or 4 nicknamed himself "Buck" after a mule on the family farm. The family moved west in 1937, settling in Mesa, Ariz., after their trailer hitch broke in Phoenix. Dropping out of school at 13, he taught himself to play guitar. By 1951, he had moved to Bakersfield, Calif., and eventually found success in its thriving country music scene. In the clubs of Bakersfield, Owens developed a trademark twisted-note style on his solid body Fender Telecaster. Initially recording as lead guitarist for Tommy Collins in 1953 (on "You Better Not Do That") and then singing for the small Pep and Chesterfield labels, Owens landed on Capitol Records in 1957. When his first single for Capitol fizzled, Owens moved to Puyallup, Wash., (a Tacoma suburb) to pursue a radio career. There he met Don Rich (real name Donald Eugene Ulrich), whose high, nasalized harmony vocals would combine with Owens' singing and chugging 2/4 freight train rhythm to make Owens' recordings distinctive. (Rich remained Owens' charismatic right-hand man until he died in a motorcycle accident in 1974.) In 1959, Owens hit with a recording of "Second Fiddle" in the Ray Price "shuffle" style. Later that year, the success of "Under Your Spell Again" led Owens to return to Bakersfield and form a band, the Buckaroos. In 1963, his recording of Johnny Russell's "Act Naturally" stayed at No. 1 for four weeks, and "Love's Gonna Live Here" spent 16 weeks atop the charts. Throughout the '60s, his recordings regularly topped the country chart including "My Heart Skips a Beat," "I Don't Care (Just As Long As You Love Me)," "I've Got a Tiger by the Tail," "Before You Go," "Waitin' in Your Welfare Line," "Think of Me," "Open Up Your Heart" and "Where Does the Good Times Go." Encouraged by his manager, Jack McFadden, Owens began investing in entertainment properties. In 1964, they formed the OMAC booking agency, which eventually handled such clients as Merle Haggard, Joe and Rose Maphis, Wynn Stewart, Freddie Hart and Rose Maddox. In 1967, Owens launched Blue Book Publishing. (He sold the company to Tree in the 1980s, and his catalog is now a part of the giant Sony/ATV firm.) Moreover, Owens began to acquire and develop radio stations. (In 1999, Clear Channel bought his KNIX-FM in Phoenix for $84 million and his jointly-owned KESZ for $58 million.) Yet another feature of the Owens empire came through Buck Owens Productions, which produced his syndicated television series, The Buck Owens Ranch Show. Starting in 1966, the show was shot in "batches" in Oklahoma City, much as Hee Haw would later be done in Nashville. In all, 78 half-hour color shows were taped, and the show at its peak aired in around 100 markets. Several of these shows are now available on home video, and excerpts from them were used as country music videos in the late 1980s. Owen's top-notch band, The Buckaroos, won CMA's instrumental group of the year awards in 1967 and '68. Owens teamed with singer/multi-instrumentalist Roy Clark in 1969 to host Hee Haw, originally a show for CBS-TV. CBS dropped it in 1971, but the show continued as a syndicated effort. Besides introducing acts, telling jokes and appearing in skits, Owens and Clark had a "pickin' and grinnin'" spot in each show, and both sang and recorded in the popular Hee Haw Gospel Quartet. Owens withdrew from his Hee Haw hosting duties in 1986 and was never replaced although the show continued into 1994. With his recording career sagging, Owens was essentially reduced to being a face of Hee Haw until Dwight Yoakam came along in the mid-1980s. Like Owens, Yoakam was passionate about West Coast country music, and he was loud in his praise of the old master. In fact, Yoakam made so much noise -- including making a personal plea to his idol -- that Owens recorded (and made a music video of) "The Streets of Bakersfield" with him. It went No. 1 in 1988, the last time Owens has viewed the chart from that vantage point. Also in 1988, Owens re-signed to his old label, Capitol Records. That union resulted in two albums and five charted singles, none of which reached the Top 20. However, his "Act Naturally" duet with Ringo Starr did make it to No. 27 in 1989. It was accompanied by an amusing Old West-inspired music video in which Owens' manager, McFadden, played the sheriff and actor Vic Tayback (Mel on TV's Alice) played the bartender. In 1996, he was elected to both the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Earlier that same year, he opened his opulent Crystal Palace in Bakersfield. He died on March 25, 2006.

Author:
oldcountrytunes

Tags:
Buck, Buckaroos, country, music, Owens,

Related Videos:

I've Got a Tiger by the Tail
Buck Owens at the CP
Buck Owens and his Buckeroos - Together Again (country)
Another country & western classic by the great Buck Owens and his almighty Buckeroos. This song was released on 7" single in 1964. Line-up: Buck Owens (lead vocals/guitar), Don Rich (2nd lead vocals/guitar), Tom Brummly (steel guitar), Willie Cantu (drums) and Doyle Holly (bass guitar - a few years later, in 1970, he would win the Bass Player Of The Year Award from the Academy Of Country And Western Music)
Buck Owens - 1966 - Loves Gonna Live Here
Buck Owens - 1966 - Loves Gonna Live Here. From the Jimmy Dean Show.
buck owens and don rich - foolin' around
buck owens and don rich - foolin' around
Buck Owens - Buckeroo - Act Naturally - Memphis Tennesee
More vintage Buck Owens stuff here with the classic Buckaroo theme, Act Naturally and Chuck Berry's Memphis Tennesee. Act Naturally is written by Johnny Russell & Voni Morrison and was originally recorded by Buck Owens, whose version reached number 1 on the Billboard Country Singles chart in 1963. The song became really populair among all sorts of audiences worldwide and was even once covered by the Beatles (who were huge Buck Owens' fans) for their 1965 Help album. In 1989 Beatles drummer Ringo Starr and the legendary Buck Owens teamed up together to do a brand new version of the song. Act Naturally They're gonna put me in the movies They're gonna make a big star out of me We'll make a film about a man that's sad and lonely And all I have to do is act naturally [CHORUS] Well, I bet you I'm gonna be a big star Might win an Oscar you can never tell The movie's gonna make me a big star, 'Cause I can play the part so well Well, I hope you come and see me in the movie Then I'll know that you will plainly see The biggest fool that ever hit the big time And all I have to do is act naturally We'll make a film about a man that's sad and lonely Begging down upon his bended knee I'll play the part but I won't need rehearsing All I have to do is act naturally [CHORUS]
Dwight Yoakam & Buck Owens
Country Music Hall Of Fame 96
Tiger By The Tail
BCB Band sings Tiger By The Tail By Buck Owens. Alvis Edgar Owens Jr. was born in Sherman, Texas, on Aug. 12, 1929, and at age 3 or 4 nicknamed himself "Buck" after a mule on the family farm. The family moved west in 1937, settling in Mesa, Ariz., after their trailer hitch broke in Phoenix. Dropping out of school at 13, he taught himself to play guitar. By 1951, he had moved to Bakersfield, Calif., and eventually found success in its thriving country music scene. In the clubs of Bakersfield, Owens developed a trademark twisted-note style on his solid body Fender Telecaster. Initially recording as lead guitarist for Tommy Collins in 1953 (on "You Better Not Do That") and then singing for the small Pep and Chesterfield labels, Owens landed on Capitol Records in 1957. When his first single for Capitol fizzled, Owens moved to Puyallup, Wash., (a Tacoma suburb) to pursue a radio career. There he met Don Rich (real name Donald Eugene Ulrich), whose high, nasalized harmony vocals would combine with Owens' singing and chugging 2/4 freight train rhythm to make Owens' recordings distinctive. (Rich remained Owens' charismatic right-hand man until he died in a motorcycle accident in 1974.) In 1959, Owens hit with a recording of "Second Fiddle" in the Ray Price "shuffle" style. Later that year, the success of "Under Your Spell Again" led Owens to return to Bakersfield and form a band, the Buckaroos. In 1963, his recording of Johnny Russell's "Act Naturally" stayed at No. 1 for four weeks, and "Love's Gonna Live Here" spent 16 weeks atop the charts. Throughout the '60s, his recordings regularly topped the country chart including "My Heart Skips a Beat," "I Don't Care (Just As Long As You Love Me)," "I've Got a Tiger by the Tail," "Before You Go," "Waitin' in Your Welfare Line," "Think of Me," "Open Up Your Heart" and "Where Does the Good Times Go." Encouraged by his manager, Jack McFadden, Owens began investing in entertainment properties. In 1964, they formed the OMAC booking agency, which eventually handled such clients as Merle Haggard, Joe and Rose Maphis, Wynn Stewart, Freddie Hart and Rose Maddox. In 1967, Owens launched Blue Book Publishing. (He sold the company to Tree in the 1980s, and his catalog is now a part of the giant Sony/ATV firm.) Moreover, Owens began to acquire and develop radio stations. (In 1999, Clear Channel bought his KNIX-FM in Phoenix for $84 million and his jointly-owned KESZ for $58 million.) Yet another feature of the Owens empire came through Buck Owens Productions, which produced his syndicated television series, The Buck Owens Ranch Show. Starting in 1966, the show was shot in "batches" in Oklahoma City, much as Hee Haw would later be done in Nashville. In all, 78 half-hour color shows were taped, and the show at its peak aired in around 100 markets. Several of these shows are now available on home video, and excerpts from them were used as country music videos in the late 1980s. Owen's top-notch band, The Buckaroos, won CMA's instrumental group of the year awards in 1967 and '68. Owens teamed with singer/multi-instrumentalist Roy Clark in 1969 to host Hee Haw, originally a show for CBS-TV. CBS dropped it in 1971, but the show continued as a syndicated effort. Besides introducing acts, telling jokes and appearing in skits, Owens and Clark had a "pickin' and grinnin'" spot in each show, and both sang and recorded in the popular Hee Haw Gospel Quartet. Owens withdrew from his Hee Haw hosting duties in 1986 and was never replaced although the show continued into 1994.
Every Single Album (on vinyl!) That I Own
Outlandos dAmour, The Police Liz-Files, Joe Jackson Led Zeppelin II, Led Zeppelin Dont Say No, Billy Squier The Magic of ABBA, ABBA Abacab, Genesis Thirds, James Gang The Unforgettable Fire, U2 Never Let Me Down, David Bowie Greatest Hits, Queen Moving Pictures, Rush Smash Hits, Jimi Hendrix Experience Genesis, Genesis Crowded House, Crowded House Billy Idol, Billy Idol Their Greatest 1971-1975 Get the Knack, the Knack Dream Police, Cheap Trick Out of the Blue, ELO The Best of The Guess Who, the Guess Who One More From the Road, Lynyrd Skynyrd Houses of the Holy, Led Zeppelin Prisoner in Disguise, Linda Ronstaldt Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, Soundtrack Minute By Minute, the Doobie Brothers Illegal Stills, Stephen Stills The B-52s, the B-52s Damn the Torpedoes, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Deepest Purple: The Very Best of Deep Purple., Deep Purple Jesus Christ Superstar, Soundtrack On the Border, the Eagles Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd The Pretender, Jackson Browne Hotel California, the Eagles This Years Model, Elvis Costello Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen The River, Bruce Springsteen Piano Man, Billy Joel Thriller, Michael Jackson A Very Merry Christmas, Vol. VIII, Various Artists Pat Benatar, Pat Benatar Lifes Rich Pageant, REM Building the Perfect Beast, Don Henley Ghost in the Machine, the Police The Heart of Rock, Various Artists Little Creatures, Talking Heads The Nylon Curtain, Billy Joel One On One, Cheap Trick American Fool, John Cougar Mellencamp Still Standing, Jason and the Scorchers Maverick, George Thorogood and the Destroyers Electric Honey, Partland Brothers The Romantics, The Romantics Richard Marx, Richard Marx Dont Stop, Billy Idol Beauty and the Beat, Go-Gos Precious Time, Pat Benatar Live From Earth, Pat Benatar Funky Beat, Whodini Loves Got a Line On You, Scandal Born in the USA, Bruce Springsteen Changesonebowie, David Bowie The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys, Traffic Chronology, Jackson 5 Ummagumma, Pink Floyd Fonzies Favourites, Fonzie After the Gold Rush, Neil Young This is the Original First Recording of Joan Baez, Joan Baez Robbie Nevil, Robbie Nevil Twelve Greatest Hits, Vol. II., Neil Diamond 52nd Street, Billy Joel Toto, Toto Fleetwood Mac, Fleetwood Mac Greatest Hits, Billy Joel American Stars n Bars, Neil Young Live!, Commodores The Jazz Singer, Neil Diamond One Hit (To the Body), The Rolling Stones Made in the Shade, the Rolling Stones Walk On the Wild Side, the Best of Lou Reed, Lou Reed Purple Rain, Prince Whos Next, The Who Rarities, The Beatles So Far, Crosby, Stills, Nash (& Young) Frampton Comes Alive!, Peter Frampton Revolver, The Beatles The Cars, The Cars Gold, Steely Dan The Best of Carly Simon, Carly Simon Getting Ready, Freddie King At Budokan, Cheap Trick Otis Redding & Jimi Hendrix Experience, Otis Redding & the Jimi Hendrix Experience Grease, Soundtrack The Best of the Jackson 5, the Jackson 5 Creedence Gold, Creedence Clearwater Revival Whos Greatest Hits, the Who Tejas, ZZ Top Ziggy Stardust the Motion Picture, David Bowie Midnight Love, Marvin Gaye Xanadu!, Various Artists Led Zeppelin IV, Led Zeppelin The Long Run, the Eagles The Way It Is, Bruce Hornsby and the Range American Beauty, The Grateful Dead Synchronicity, the Police Tommy, Soundtrack Greatest Hits, the Byrds Brothers in Arms, Dire Straits Its Hard, the Who Undercover, the Rolling Stones War, U2 City to City, Gerry Rafferty The Best of The Allman Brothers Band, the Allman Brothers Band Scarecrow, John Mellencamp Get Lucky, Loverboy Strength, Alarm Double Fantasy, John Lennon & Yoko Ono Soul to Soul, Stevie Ray Vaughn The Crossing, Big Country Under a Blood Red Sky, U2 Peter Gabriel III, Peter Gabriel Empty Glass, Pete Townshend Under a Raging Moon, Roger Daltrey Cornerstone, Styx Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, the Beatles Pet Sounds, the Beach Boys Selling England By the Pound, Genesis The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Pink Floyd Exile On Main Street, the Rolling Stones Are You Experienced?, Jimi Hendrix
Buck Owens and the Buckeroos - I've Got A Tiger By The Tail
A classic video from country legend Buck Owens who used to be very populair among many a Indorock musician back in the day. Skilled guitar work and fine (harmonized) vocals certainly contributed to this fact.The true Bakersfield sound.
Squire Parsons - "That Moment"
Squire Parsons singing in his home church Trinity Baptist, Asheville NC. 11/29/89 Squire Parsons, a native of West Virginia was raised in a Christian home and was introduced to gospel music as a baby by his parents. His father, Squire Parsons Sr., was a choir director in their home church and taught shaped note gospel music. Squire attended West Virginia Institute of Technology, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in music in 1970. He has served as interim music director, church soloist, elementary school music teacher, high school band director and in 1975 he became the baritone singer for the Kingsmen Quartet. In 1979 Squire went into solo ministry. Since 1978, Squire Parsons has been nominated by the SINGING NEWS' fans for "Favorite Baritone", "Favorite Gospel Songwriter" and "Favorite Gospel Singer". He was named "Favorite Baritone" in 1986 and 1987. In 1986, 1992, 1993, 1994, and 1995 - "Favorite Gospel Songwriter". In 1988 he was named "Favorite Southern Gospel Male Singer." He has also been nominated for the DOVE AWARD for male vocalist and songwriter. In 1990, he was presented the coveted MARVIN NORCROSS AWARD, given for devotion to family, service to church, involvement in community affairs, and contributions to the gospel music industry. In addition to being one of America's best loved soloists, Squire is a prolific songwriter. In 1981, his song, "Sweet Beulah Land" was voted "Favorite Song Of The Year" by the SINGING NEWS. Some of the other gospel classics written by Parsons include: "Master Of The Sea", "Oh What A Moment", "The Broken Rose", "He Came To Me", "I Call It Home", "I Sing Because", "Hello Mama", "I'm Not Giving Up", and "I Go To The Rock". Many gospel recording artists and groups have recorded at least one of his songs. In 1999 Squire was honored by his alma mater, West Virginia Institute of Technology with an honorary Doctorate of Humanities. He has been the guest soloist at: First Baptist Church of Atlanta, GA., with Dr. Charles Stanley. Thomas Road Baptist Church of Lynchburg, VA., with Dr. Jerry Falwell. Little Rock Crusade in Little Rock, AR, with Dr. Billy Graham on September 19, 1989. Since 1975 Squire has been a part of the Singing At Sea Cruise and the January Bible Study Cruise with Templeton Tours of Boone, NC.Squire has also been a part of the popular "Gaither Homecoming" video series.Mr. Parsons was ordained at his home church, Trinity Baptist, in Asheville, North Carolina, in 1979.Squire and his wife Linda, live in Leicester, NC. They have four adult children. http://www.squireparsons.com/