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Buck Owens was named Alvis Edgar Owens, Jr.
when he was born in Sherman, Texas on August 12, 1929. 3 or 4
years later, he nicknamed himself, “Buck” after a mule on the
family farm. The family moved west in 1937, settling in Mesa,
Arizona. Buck taught himself to play the guitar, and by 1951
had moved to Bakersfield, California, where he eventually
found success in nightclubs in this thriving country music
town. After a few fizzled attempts at recording for small
labels, Buck Owens found his first hit for Capitol Records in
1957, “Second Fiddle.”
Buck developed
into a great lead guitarist with a unique style. You remember
the song Tommy Collins recorded in 1953, called “You Better
Not Do That”? That’s Buck Owens playing lead guitar. But
things were not going right, so Buck moved to Tacoma,
Washington. He teamed up with Donald Eugene Ulrich, a name
shortened to Don Rich. Don’s voice was a perfect blend,
singing harmony with Buck, and the two became inseparable,
churning out hit after hit. However, Buck lost his right-hand
man tragically when Don died in a motorcycle accident in
1974. One of the songs they did together was “Under Your
Spell Again.”
It’s not unusual
for an artist to struggle in the beginning years of his
career. Buck Owens is no exception. In 1958, Buck found
himself working in Tacoma, Washington as a disk jockey. Also,
he was selling ads for the station and playing clubs around
the area. He had a live radio show and featured a new local
singer named Loretta Lynn. Convinced that his recording career
was over, he decided to do one more recording session for
Capitol Records, this time using a steel guitar and a fiddle.
It wasn’t long before he was stringing out the hits, like this
one, “Love’s Gonna Live Here.”
Buck, along with Merle Haggard, is given credit
for developing the Bakersfield sound, which is described as a
“twangy, electrified, rock-influenced version of hardcore
honky tonk” that emerged in the 1960’s. Buck was the very
first of the Bakersfield bunch to really “hit it big,” racking
up 15 consecutive number one hits in the mid-1960s. One of the
songs that propelled Buck Owens into prominence was a song
written by Johnny Russell, “Act Naturally.”
You’ve heard about people who can’t take success, and wind up
broke after making a fortune. That is not the case with Buck
Owens. Encouraged by his manager, Jack McFadden, Buck began
investing in entertainment properties. In 1964 they formed a
booking agency and began handling artists like Merle Haggard,
Wynn Steward and Freddie Hart. In 1967 Owens started Blue Book
Publishing, which he sold to Tree Publishing in the 1980s. He
added radio stations to his small empire, an empire worth
hundreds of millions of dollars. The poor boy from Texas
certainly made his mark in the business world as well as with
his singing career. Another big Buck Owens hit was “My Heart
Skips A Beat.”
Another part of the Owens Empire came with the establishment
of a company called Buck Owens Productions. This enterprise
produced his syndicated television series, The Buck Owens
Ranch Show. Starting in 1966, the show was shot in Oklahoma
City. In all, 78 half-hour color shows were taped and
distributed in 100 markets. Owens’ topnotch band, The
Buckaroos, won CMA’s instrumental group of the year awards in
1967 and ’68. They recorded “Buckaroo” and the instrumental
was widely played.
In
1969, Buck Owens teamed up with singer and guitarist Roy Clark
to host Hee Haw, which as you know by now became a very
popular show. However, CBS-TV only carried it about 2 years,
but the show continued as a syndicated project. Owens and
Clark had a “pickin’ and ginnin’” part in each show, and both
sang and recorded in the popular Hee Haw Gospel Quartet. Buck
continued in the show until 1986 when he withdrew from his
hosting duties. He was never replaced although the show
continued to air well into 1994. “I’ve Got A Tiger By The
Tail”
In
1996, Buck Owens was elected to both the Country Music Hall of
Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. In the same
years, he opened his beautiful Crystal Palace in Bakersfield,
where it still operates today. Most of Buck’s songs were
up-tempo and pretty much novelty songs, like “I’ve Got A Tiger
By The Tail.” But one of Buck’s best ballads was “Together
Again.”
On March 25, 2006, Buck
Owens passed away peacefully in his sleep at home in
Bakersfield, California, the place where he started his
illustrious and fabulous career. The cause of his death was
not immediately known, but he was treated for cancer in 1993
and pneumonia in 1997.
Dusty Owens
TCM Radio News
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