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The son of a fiddle player, he learned
guitar as a child and was given parental encouragement to sing. After high school,
he attended Georgetown College, Kentucky, where he was discovered by a scout for the noted WLS
'National Barn Dance' in Chicago. In 1930, he joined John Lair's
Cumberland Ridge Runners and returned to Kentucky with Lair in 1937, to help him establish
the now famous Renfro Valley Barn Dance. He returned to Chicago in 1941, co-starred with Red Skelton in
the network country radio show 'Avalon Time' and signed with Decca. The first
number he recorded was Old Shep, a song he had
written in 1933, about a dog he had owned as a child. (Actually the dog,
sadly poisoned by a neighbour, had been a German
Shepherd named Hoover.) The song, later recorded by many artists including
Hank Snow and Elvis Presley, has become a country classic.
His first chart success came in 1944, when the patriotic wartime song Smoke
On The Water was a US pop chart number 7 and a 13-week
occupant of the number 1 position in the country charts. On 17
January 1945,
Foley had the distinction to make the first modern country records recorded
in Nashville. In April 1946, Foley became a regular
member of the Grand Ole Opry, replacing Roy Acuff as the star of NBC's prestigious 'Prince Albert
Show'. When he left Chicago for Nashville, he took with him a young guitar player
called Chet Atkins, one of the many artists he helped. During the next eight
years Foley established himself as one of the most respected and versatile
performers in country music. He acted as master of ceremonies, the straight
man for Opry comedians Rod Brasfield
and Minnie Pearl, and proved himself a vocalist who could handle all types of
material. In 1954, he moved to KWTO Springfield, as the host of the 'Ozark
Jubilee', which, in 1956, became one of the first successful network
television shows.
Between 1944-59, Foley charted 41 solo country
entries of which 38 were Top 10 hits. There were six more country number 1s,
including his 1950, million-selling Chattanoogie
Shoe Shine Boy, which also topped the pop charts. Several others achieved
cross-over pop chart success. During this time he also had many major hit
duets with various artists including Evelyn Knight, his daughter Betty Foley,
Ernest Tubb, (Goodnight Irene) and six with Kitty
Wells, including country number 1, One By One, which remained charted for 41
weeks. His performances of gospel numbers were so popular that recordings of
Steal Away (1950) (recorded by Hank Williams as The Funeral), Just A Closer
Walk With Thee (1950) and Peace In The Valley (1951) all became
million-sellers. He also recorded with the Andrews Sisters and in the late
'50s, even cut some rock 'n' roll recordings such as Crazy Little Guitar Man.
Although he continued to tour and appear on network television shows, he also
moved into acting in the early '60s and co-starred with Fess Parker in the
ABC-TV series 'Mr. Smith Goes To Washington'. His daughter, Shirley, married
one-time pop and later gospel singer Pat Boone and some ten years after
Foley's death his granddaughter, Debby Boone, had both country and pop
success. Foley never lost his love for country music and, unlike Eddy Arnold,
never sought success as a pop artist, even though many of his recordings did
attain pop chart status. His voice was mellow and had none of the raw or
nasal style associated with many of his contemporaries, some have even
likened it to Bing Crosby. His importance to the country music scene is often
overlooked and little has been written about him but he was rightfully
elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1967.
A great friend of Hank Williams Sr., he was ironically headlining a touring Opry show that included the young Hank Williams, Jr.,
when, after playing the matinee and evening shows, Foley suffered a heart
attack and died in his sleep at Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA on 19 September
1968. This prompted Hank Jr., seemingly the last person to speak to him, to
write and record, as Luke The Drifter, Jr., the tribute narration I Was With
Red Foley (The Night He Passed Away), which charted for him in November 1968.
In the song, Hank Jr. relates, that after reminiscing about the problems
faced by a country singer, such as himself and Hank Sr., Red's final words
were 'I'm awful tired now, Hank, I've got to go to bed'.
From a Red Foley Fan-Dedicated Website.
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