Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Gene Autry For Western Wednesday...!

If there was ever a man that was an example of a western star, Gene was the guy.

Besides making over a 100 movies, every time you hear songs like Frosty the Snowman and Rudolf the Red-nosed reindeer Mr Autry has to come to mind. Here is a short version of his history.

The great singing cowboy, Gene Autry, is born in Texas

Gene Autry, perhaps the greatest singing cowboy of all time, is born on this day in 1907, in Tioga, Texas.

While still a boy, Autry moved with his family to a ranch in Oklahoma where he learned to play the guitar and sing. The young Autry was quickly attracted to a new style of music that was becoming popular at the time, which combined the traditional cowboy music popular in Texas and Oklahoma and the folk songs, ballads, and hymns of southern-style country music. Known as country-western, the new sound was popularized by musicians from the East Coast and the South who had never been near a horse and couldn’t tell a stirrup from a lariat. Donning cowboy hats and boots and affecting what they thought were western drawls, hundreds of these newly minted “cowboys” were soon crooning popular western ballads like “Tumbling Tumble Weeds” all around the nation.

While Autry was also no cowboy, he was, at least, a genuine westerner who had lived on a ranch. After a chance encounter with cowboy-humorist Will Rogers, who encouraged his dream of singing professionally, Autry made his first recording in 1929, and for several years performed as “Oklahoma’s Yodeling Cowboy” on a Tulsa radio program. Following a stint as the star of the Chicago-based National Barn Dance radio show, he signed a recording contract with the Sears label, which also marketed a Gene Autry guitar through its famous catalog.

Autry’s lasting fame, though, came from his career as the film industry’s favorite singing cowboy. His first movie, In Old Santa Fe, was eventually followed by nearly 100 other films that made him one of the most popular stars in America and vastly expanded the audience for country-western music around the world.

He died in October 1998 at the age of 91.

There are so many more aspects of Gene's life that we haven't begun to talk about,so it would be a good study to get one of the many books about his life. He was a good business man as well as a great entertainer.

Coffee out on the cooler patio this morning!

8 comments:

Chickenmom said...

One of our generation's heroes! What kid didn't have one (or two) of his genuine six-shooter cap guns?

linda m said...

I loved him as a child - never missed an episode of his TV show. True American hero. i think my older brother had a set of Gene's cap guns.

Rob said...

Sears? Learn something new every day! Thank you!!

JO said...

Yes he was the best but of course Roy was the love of my life.

Patio sound good very humid here wonder if we are going to get more rain.

wayne moureau said...

you can still see some of his movies on the western channel on direct tv channel 538

HermitJim said...

Hey Phyllis...Yeah, he was certainly one of the good guys.
Thanks for stopping by today!


Hey Linda...
I think he made a good impression on a lot of kids at the time.
Thanks for coming by today!


Hey Rob...
You used to be able to use Sears for a lot of good stuff. They even sold DYI house kits at one time!
Thanks for coming over this morning!


Hey Jo...
Roy and Dale were some of the good crowd, for sure. And who could forget pat Brady and Nelly Belle?
Thanks for dropping by today!


Hey Wayne...
Comcast still shows some of his shows on the western channel from time to time.
Thanks for the visit this morning.

Dizzy-Dick said...

I like all the old cowboy shows. Remember Sky King, Rawhide (where Clint Eastwood got his start), Hopalong Cassidy, etc, etc. I also remember listening to Straight Arrow on the radio before we got our first TV. No, that makes me really old, being born before everyone had TV. I can also remember the first time I saw color TV. It was the Bonanza show.

HermitJim said...

Hey Dizzy...
I don't remember the first color television I watched, but I can remember the first b&w show on my family's tv. Attack of the Cat People! Scary for back then.
My Dad was a big cowboy fan and Bonanza was one of his favorites.
Thanks for the visit this morning!