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Happy Birthday Don Reid, of
the Statler Brothers. Named after a brand of tissues, the four
members of the
Statler
Brothers did not in fact share a fraternal bond; what they did
share, however, was the distinction of being one of the most
successful vocal harmony groups in the history of country
music.
Formed in the group’s home
base of Staunton, VA, in 1955, the
Statlers
were originally a church trio comprised of bass vocalist
Harold Reid (born August 21, 1939), baritone Phil
Balsley
(August 8, 1939), and tenor
Lew
DeWitt (March 8, 1938). In 1960, Reid’s younger brother Don
(born June 5, 1945) signed on to take the lead vocal reins,
and the quartet performed gospel music under the name the
Kingsmen.
After arranging a meeting with
the promotional department for a local Johnny Cash concert,
the
Kingsmen
were asked to open the performance. Cash was so impressed that
he invited the group to join the tour, and after changing
their name to the
Statler
Brothers, they remained on the road with Cash from 1963 to
1971.
The
Statlers
signed to Columbia Records in 1964 and a year later scored a
huge country and pop hit with DeWitt’s “Flowers on the Wall,”
which also lent its name to their 1966 debut album. 1967’s The
Statler
Brothers Sing the Big Hits held true to its title’s promise,
generating a pair of Top Ten singles in “Ruthless” and “You
Can’t Have Your Kate and Edith, Too.”
In 1969, the quartet moved to Mercury Records, where they
remained for over two decades; their first single for the
label, 1970’s “Bed of Rose’s,” was a Top Ten hit. In the same
year, they held their first Fourth of July picnic; for
decades, the celebration remained an annual holiday staple,
drawing tens of thousands of fans each summer.
Throughout the first half of
the 1970s, the
Statlers
remained fixtures on the Top 40 charts thanks to a string of
nostalgic singles like 1972’s “Do You Remember These” and “The
Class of ‘57,” 1973’s “Carry Me Back,” and 1974’s “Whatever
Happened to Randolph Scott.”
Their LPs of the period were
often concept records: 1972’s The
Statler
Brothers Sing Country Symphonies in E Major was whimsically
formatted like an orchestral performance (complete with
side-break “intermission”), while 1975’s joint release Holy
Bible/Old Testament and Holy Bible/New Testament fulfilled a
long-standing dream to record a gospel project. 1973’s Alive
at the Johnny Mack Brown High School, on the other hand, was a
tongue-in-cheek effort recorded under the group’s comic alias
Lester “Roadhog”
Moran & the Cadillac Cowboys.
The sentimental “I’ll Go to My
Grave Loving You” was a Top Five hit in 1975 and was included
on the
Statlers’
first best-of compilation, released later in the same year.
After a series of Top Ten hits that included 1977’s “The
Movies” (another recurring
Statler
theme) and “I Was There,” they earned their first chart-topper
in 1978 with “Do You Know You Are My Sunshine,” from the album
Entertainers...on & off the Record. In 1980 the
Statler
Brothers celebrated their first decade on Mercury with 10th
Anniversary, which featured the smash “Charlotte’s Web,” taken
from the film Smokey and the Bandit, Pt. 2, in which the group
also co-starred.
After 1982’s The Legend Goes On, DeWitt was forced to leave
the group as a result of
Crohn's
disease; the illness ultimately killed him on August 15, 1990.
The remaining
Statlers
tapped Jimmy Fortune as his successor, and immediately Fortune
earned the group its second number one with his “Elizabeth”
(an homage to actress Elizabeth Taylor), from the album Today.
Their next two LPs, 1984’s
Atlanta Blue and 1985’s
Pardners
in Rhyme, were credited to simply the
Statlers;
each record generated a number one hit — “My Only Love” and
“Too Much on My Heart,” respectively — again composed by
Fortune. They returned as the
Statler
Brothers for the 1986 inspirational release Radio Gospel
Favorites, followed later in the year by
Four
for the Show. 1987’s Maple Street Memories produced the Top
Ten single “Forever”; 1989’s “More Than a Name on the Wall,”
which peaked at number six, was their last significant hit.
They continued releasing albums, however, and in addition to
remaining a popular touring act in the 1990s, the
Statler
Brothers also hosted a long-running variety show on TNN.
Jason Ankeny
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