Signed Pee Wee King Redd Stewart & More Song Hits Songbook
Pee Wee King Folio of Popular & Country Song Hits Signed by multiple people, including Pee Wee King, Redd Stewart, Donnie White, "Don", and another person, June or Jim Mc something, I cannot make out the name some of the signatures are smeared vintage songbook published by Ridgeway Music, Inc.
Book is in fair condition, obvious age/shelf wear
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Piano3.
here's a nice bit of biography on Pee Wee King:
A flamboyant and influential figure during his heyday, Pee Wee King
remains somewhat underappreciated as a performer, though his fame as a
songwriter is assured thanks to the smash hit "Tennessee Waltz." King
helped modernize the sound and style of country music; he introduced
electric instruments, drums, and horns to the notoriously conservative
Grand Ole Opry, and dressed his band in sharply tailored, Western-style
Nudie suits that looked anything but backwoods. Despite his affinity for
Western swing and cowboy songs, King actually came from Polish
extraction, which helped account for his eclectic approach to country
music. He was born Julius Frank Anthony Kuczynski on February 18, 1914,
in Milwaukee, and grew up in the northern Wisconsin town of Abrams (or
possibly vice versa, according to some sources). His father headed a
polka band, and young Frank (as he was called) eventually joined up,
learning both fiddle and accordion but concentrating on the latter
instrument. He made his professional radio debut at age 14, and
eventually started leading his own band, adopting the name Frank King
(in tribute to polka bandleader Wayne King) and playing a mixture of
polkas and cowboy songs. Starting in 1933, his band played regularly on
the Milwaukee radio show The Badger State Barn Dance, where they were
discovered by an up-and-coming Gene Autry. Autry hired them as his
backup band, and nicknamed King "Pee Wee" for his five-foot six-inch
height. In 1934, Autry and King became regulars on Louisville radio, but
Autry soon departed for Hollywood.
King elected to stay behind in Louisville, and played with the Log
Cabin Boys in 1935; the following year, he formed his own band, the
Golden West Cowboys, which initially featured fiddler Abner Sims,
guitarist Curly Rhodes, and singer Texas Daisy. In 1937, fiddler Redd
Stewart joined the lineup, and would later become King's songwriting
partner. Just as importantly, the group was invited to join the Grand
Ole Opry. They were an unorthodox selection that made traditionalists
uncomfortable: not just for their wardrobe, but also for their flashy,
professional showmanship and for the polka and waltz rhythms that drove
some of their songs. They remained regulars over the next ten years,
during which time King also hosted his own radio show in Knoxville; they
also evolved into more of a Western swing band. King first used an
amplified electric guitar on-stage at the Opry in 1940, and introduced
drums to the Opry stage in 1947. During that run, several prominent
vocalists passed through the ranks of the Golden West Cowboys, including
Eddy Arnold, Cowboy Copas, Milton Estes, Tommy Sosebee, and Becky
Barfield. The Golden West Cowboys recorded and toured as Minnie Pearl's
backing band over 1941-1942, and worked with Ernest Tubb as well.
Additionally, King appeared in several Westerns playing himself as a
bandleader; the first was 1938's Gold Mine in the Sky, starring his old
friend Gene Autry.
A new era for the band started in 1947. King left the Grand Ole Opry
to return to Louisville and host his own TV show, which ran for the
next ten years and was picked up nationally by ABC in the final two
seasons. King also signed a recording contract with RCA, and Redd
Stewart took over the lead vocal chores. Inspired by Bill Monroe's hit
"Kentucky Waltz," King and Stewart penned lyrics to an instrumental tune
they'd been playing; recorded in December 1947, "Tennessee Waltz"
became a number three hit for King the following year. Pop singer Patti
Page cut her own version in 1950 and it was an enormous hit, topping the
pop charts and selling several million copies; it ranked as one of the
biggest country crossovers ever. King followed it in 1951 with "Slow
Poke," a novelty tune that topped both the country and pop charts,
spending over three months at number one. Other hit King compositions
included "Silver and Gold" (1952), "Changing Partners" (1954),
"Bonaparte's Retreat," "You Belong to Me," "Walk By the River,"
"Busybody," and "Bimbo," among others. King also returned to the movies,
appearing in a couple of Charles Starrett Westerns during the early
'50s.
King's run of commercial success tailed off after 1954; his TV show
went off the air in 1957, and he continued to record for RCA until 1959.
From then until 1963, he reunited with Minnie Pearl and led the Golden
West Cowboys as her supporting band. In 1965, Tennessee adopted
"Tennessee Waltz" as its official state song. King broke up the Golden
West Cowboys in 1969 and went to work for the Country Music Foundation,
at one point serving as its director. He was elected to the Country
Music Hall of Fame in 1974, later serving on its board of directors, and
also made it into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. King passed
away in Louisville on March 7, 2000, after suffering a heart attack. ~
Steve Huey, Rovi Book is in fair condition, obvious age/shelf wear
See my other listings for TONS more!
16-10 moved from Piano3
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