Approved
Google
From The Times (UK)
December 23, 1999

Submitted by Robin Jones

HANK SNOW

Hank Snow, country singer, died in Madison, Tennessee, on December 20 aged 85. He was born in Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, on May 9, 1914
COUNTRY music's "Singing Ranger", Hank Snow was one the most flamboyant, successful and enduring figures of his genre. Over the course of half- a century, he had more than 80 hit singles in the country charts. He also recorded some 80 albums, which together sold more than 70 million copies.
He was famed for his expressive baritone, broad range, formidable guitar-playing and ability to infuse his music with mambo or jazz or blues without diluting its essential country feel. He was, perhaps most of all, renowned for his striking appearance, in his rhinestone and sequin-studded suits and legendary ill-fitting toupees.
His lyrics celebrated freedom and travel, often necessitated by the need to flee failed love. This recurring theme stemmed from Snow's own life, itself reminiscent of a country song: born in a small village, he endured family brutality before embarking on a journey from which he emerged triumphant.
He was born Clarence Eugene Snow in the fishing village of Brooklyn, Nova Scotia. When he was eight, his parents separated, sending him off to a cruel grandmother. He ran away to his mother, only now to be the focus of his hard-drinking stepfather's uncontrollable violence. At 12 he found work as a cabin boy on Arctic fishing schooners, where he would entertain crews with his singing. After being shipwrecked he decided to return to land, where he found inspiration in the music of the country blues yodeler Jimmie Rodgers.
He began singing in local clubs and bars, and for a Halifax radio station, styling himself the Yodeling Ranger (when his voice deepened, he became the Singing Ranger). He also took good advice from a radio station announcer who suggested that Hank, not Clarence, was a plausible name for a Country singer.







Snow signed a record contract in 1936, and over the next ten years had a string of hits in Canada. In the mid-1940s he left for Hollywood, where he tried to make good as a movie cowboy, singing and performing with his trick pony.
He secured an appearance on the Grand Ole Opry in January 1950. It was a forgettable performance, though success came to him later that year, when I'm Movin' On reached No 1 in the country charts. The song, about boarding a train to leave a lover, spent 21 weeks in the top spot and has since been recorded in 36 languages.
He built on this chart-topping success with Golden Rocket and Rhumba Boogie. In total, he spent 45 years with RCA records, enjoying seven No 1 hits in the country charts, the last of them being Hello Love in 1974, when he was 60.
In 1954 Snow - a shrewd enough businessman - met Colonel Tom Parker, the future manager of Elvis Presley. Together Snow and Parker formed a company promoting acts. He persuaded the Grand Ole Opry to book Presley that year. Presley later recorded music by Snow, as did other stars including Ray Charles, Emmylou Harris and the Rolling Stones.
In Robert Altman's 1975 film Nashville, Henry Gibson played a self-obsessed country star loosely based on Snow, who was known for his sometimes irritable disposition. Besides this, his toupee became the source of great mirth for many; some even thought he wore it off-centre deliberately. Legend has it that on one occasion on stage a fiddler removed it with his bow as a joke and Snow sacked him on the spot.
Hank Snow was abruptly dropped by RCA in 1981, though he continued to perform live, returning to the Grand Ole Opry in 1995. The year before that he had published his autobiography, The Hank Snow Story. In 1978 Snow formed an international foundation which campaigns for the prevention of child abuse.
He is survived by his wife, Minnie Alders Snow, and their son, the Rev. Jimmie Rodgers Snow, named after Hank Snow's idol.


Back

Acquiring image from ProHosting Banner Exchange