Grady Martin

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Grady Martin
Martin in the 1950s
Martin in the 1950s
Background information
Birth nameThomas Grady Martin
Born(1929-01-17)January 17, 1929
Chapel Hill, Tennessee, U.S.
DiedDecember 3, 2001(2001-12-03) (aged 72)
Lewisburg, Tennessee, U.S.
Genrescountry music, rockabilly
Occupation(s)guitarist, session musician
Instrument(s)guitar, fiddle
Years active1946–1994
LabelsDecca, Monument

Thomas Grady Martin (January 17, 1929 – December 3, 2001)

session guitarist in country music and rockabilly
.

A member of

Country Music Hall of Fame
in March 2015.

Biography

Grady Martin was born in Chapel Hill, Tennessee, United States.[3] He grew up on a farm with his oldest sister, Lois, his older brothers, June and Bill, and his parents, Claude and Bessey;[4] and had a horse he named Trigger. His mother played the piano and encouraged his musical talent.[4]

At age 15, Martin was invited to perform regularly on

WLAC-AM in Nashville, Tennessee, and made his recording debut two years later on February 15, 1946[5] with Curly Fox and Texas Ruby in Chicago, Illinois.[6]

That same year, he joined Paul Howard's Western swing-oriented Arkansas Cotton Pickers as half of Howard's twin guitar ensemble with Robert "Jabbo" Arrington and performed on the Grand Ole Opry. When Howard left, Opry newcomer Little Jimmy Dickens hired several former Cotton Pickers, including Martin, as his original Country Boys road band.[3] He later joined Big Jeff Bess and the Radio Playboys followed by a stint with the Bailes Brothers Band.

By 1950, Martin was a part of the rising Nashville recording scene as a studio guitarist and fiddler, and his guitar hooks propelled Red Foley's "Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" and "Birmingham Bounce".[3] In 1951, he signed with Decca Records with his own country-jazz band, Grady Martin and the Slew Foot Five.[7] In addition to backing mainstream acts like Bing Crosby and Burl Ives, they began to record in their own right, with later sessions under the name Grady Martin and his Winging Strings[8] when he introduced his twin-neck Bigsby guitar.[9] The band, with Hank Garland, Bob Moore, Tommy Jackson and Bud Isaacs made regular appearances on ABC-TV's Ozark Jubilee in the mid-1950s.

The Nashville A-Team

It was as a session musician starting in the late 1950s that Martin made his greatest mark on country and rockabilly music.[3]

As a guitarist with

".

Martin is credited with accidentally stumbling onto the electric guitar "fuzz" effect during a recording session with Robbins at Nashville's Quonset Hut Studio; his guitar was run through a faulty channel in a mixing console, generating the fuzz sound on "Don't Worry".[3]

In the 1960s, he played on sessions with Joan Baez, J. J. Cale and others, and played on Sammi Smith's 1971 hit, "Help Me Make it Through the Night", among the most successful country singles of all time. In the early 1970s, Martin played on many records by Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty, worked with Kris Kristofferson and produced the country-rock band Brush Arbor.

With Patsy Cline

Martin appeared on almost all of Cline's Decca sessions, from August 1961 to her last session in February 1962, during which time he backed her on songs such as:

[11]

Later years

In 1978, with his studio career over, Martin returned to the life of a touring musician, first with

honky tonk album, Just One Love
.

The Nashville Entertainment Association gave him its first Master Award in 1983, and he was the 83rd inductee into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. On April 5, 2000, he received a Chetty award for significant instrumental achievement at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium during the Chet Atkins Musician Days festival. Health problems prevented Martin from attending; Nelson, Vince Gill and Marty Stuart presented the award—named after Atkins, who attended—to Martin's son, Joshua. Grady Martin was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame in 2007.

He was married three times and had three daughters, Alisa, Angie and Julie; and seven sons, Grady Jr., Joe, Tal, Jason, Joshua, Justin and Steve.

Martin died from a heart attack on December 3, 2001, in Lewisburg, Tennessee, and was interred at Hopper Cemetery in Marshall County, Tennessee.

Selected discography

Grady Martin and the Slew Foot Five

  • Powerhouse Dance Party (Decca, 1956)
  • Juke Box Jamboree (Decca, 1956)
  • The Roaring Twenties (Decca, 1957)
  • 'Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio ' (1957 LP) - (July 5 session: long believed all to be by Paul Burlison) - Recorded at Quonset Studio, 16th Avenue South, Nashville, Tennessee, July 2–5, 1956; lp includes songs recorded in 1957, at Pythian Temple (New York City)
  • Hot Time Tonight (Decca, 1959)
  • Big City Lights (Decca, 1960)
  • Swingin' Down the River (Decca, 1962)
  • Songs Everybody Knows (Decca, 1964)

Grady Martin

  • Instrumentally Yours (Decca, 1965)
  • A Touch of Country (Decca, 1967)
  • Cowboy Classics (Decca, 1977)

Slewfoot Five

  • The Happy Sound of the Slewfoot Five (Decca, 1967)
  • Man Alive! It's the Slew Foot Five (Decca, 1968)

As sideman

With Eric Andersen

With Hoyt Axton

  • American Dreams (Global Records, 1984)

With Joan Baez

With J. J. Cale

  • Okie (Shelter Records, 1974)

With Don Everly

  • Brother Jukebox (Hickory Records, 1977)

With Arlo Guthrie

With Ronnie Hawkins

  • Rock and Roll Resurrection (Monument Records, 1972)
  • Giant of Rock 'n' Roll (Monument Records, 1974)

With Roy Orbison

With John Prine

With Leon Russell

With Buffy Sainte-Marie

With Kai Winding

References

  1. ^ "Grady Martin | Artist Bio". Countryhalloffame.org. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  2. Nashville Tennessean
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ a b Martin, Josh. "Biography of Grady Martin". Nashvillesound.net. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  5. ^ Martin, Tal. "Grady Martin". Nashvillesound.net. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  6. ^ Roland, Tom. "Grady Martin". Nashvillesound.net. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  7. ^ "Independent Online obituary". Archived from the original on 2007-10-01. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
  8. ^ Wadey, Paul "Obituaries: Grady Martin'" (December 7, 2001), The Independent, p. 6
  9. ^ Jessen, Wade "Good Works 'A-Team' Sessionist Grady Martin Dies" (December 15, 2001) Billboard, p. 66
  10. ^ "CMT.com : Grady Martin : Biography". 20 June 2004. Archived from the original on 2004-06-20. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  11. ^ "Patsy Cline's Recording Sessions - The Decca Years". Patsified.com.

External links