Charlie Daniels, a member of the Country Music
Hall of Fame who sang "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," recorded with
Bob Dylan and was a vocal supporter of U.S. veterans, died Monday
morning after suffering a hemorrhagic stroke. He was 83.
Daniels' death was confirmed by his publicist, Don Murry Grubbs. He is survived by his wife, Hazel, and son, Charlie Daniels Jr.
By
the time the Charlie Daniels Band topped the charts with “Devil” in
1979, the instrumentalist, singer and songwriter had long established a
remarkable, multifaceted career in Nashville. As a session musician, he
played on three of Bob Dylan’s albums — including the revolutionary “Nashville Skyline” — as well as recordings for Ringo Starr and Leonard Cohen.
He
was a fixture of the touring circuit for the next 40 years, became
a tireless advocate for servicemen and women, and entered the
information age as one of country music's most outspoken conservative
voices.
Born Oct. 28, 1936, in Wilmington, North Carolina, Charles Edward
Daniels grew up inspired by church music and local bluegrass bands. He
listened to Nashville’s WSM and WLAC, which streamed country and R&B
music from Music City all the way through Daniels’ radio speaker in
North Carolina.
Daniels merged those sounds in the mid-1950s to
create rock band The Jaguars, which most notably recorded instrumental
single “Jaguar,” in Fort Worth, Texas, for national distribution via
Epic Records. In Texas, he’d connect with producer Bob Johnston, who —
years later — Daniels would credit with helping him find his way as a
songwriter and sought-after session player in Nashville.
In
1964, Daniels and Johnston co-wrote “It Hurts Me,” a single cut by
Elvis Presley that proved the first victory in decades of songwriting
success to come.
“(Elvis) recorded it, and it was by far … the biggest thing that had ever happened to me in my life,” Daniels once said.
Three
years passed before Daniels and his distinct country-rock influence
would pull into Music City. Living in Newport, Kentucky, with his wife,
Hazel, and 2-year-old son, Charlie Daniels Jr., the seasoned stage
player headed South with ideas of substituting beer joint stages for
session work in Nashville.
And Daniels rolled into Nashville — literally, as
he told The Tennessean in 2014 — beginning a five-decade stay in Middle
Tennessee.
"I came to Nashville in 1967, with
the clutch out of my car and a ($20) dollar bill," Daniels told The
Tennessean in 2014. "I didn't fit the Nashville type very well. I'd come
out of 12 years of playing bang-slang, balls-to-the-wall music in
clubs, and I played too loud and too bluesy.
...The life of a session sideman wouldn't stick,
though. He'd cut a self-titled debut album in 1970, forming the Charlie
Daniels Band — or CDB, as it was known for decades at concert theaters,
state fairs and race tracks — in 1971.
A
bearded embodiment of fast-fiddlin' Southern life, Daniels cut a handful
of solo efforts in the early 1970s, none more notable than "“Fire on
the Mountain” — the Platinum-selling release that spilled into
mainstream country success. Daniels would proceed to sell more than 13.5
million records, per the RIAA, logging nine Gold, Platinum or
multi-Platinum releases.
1 comment:
Music sharing is fun and you download the latest ringtones with +20,000 newest ringtones.
Post a Comment