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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Country music singer Hank Snow dead at 85
By Ian Bruce
31 December 1999
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this version to print
The death of country singer Hank Snow marks the passing of
a major figure in the history of popular music. Snow, who died
December 20 in Nashville at age 85, played a key role in helping
transform country music from a localized, largely rural musical
style to an internationally popular form. In a 45-year recording
career, he sold an estimated 70 million records and influenced
performers from Elvis Presley to Bob Dylan.
Clarence Eugene Snow was born in Liverpool, Nova Scotia in
1914. He ran away from home at the age of 12 to escape an abusive
stepfather. For the next four years he worked as a cabin boy on
fishing boats, entertaining the crews with his singing. When he
returned home at sixteen, he bought a $5.95 mail order guitar
and began performing around Liverpool. Like many performers of
his generation, he was heavily influenced by the blue yodelling
style of American country star Jimmie Rodgers. Rodgers' influence
remains clear throughout all of Snow's work, particularly in the
so-called travelling songs that were the mainstays
of his repertoire.
By 1933 Snow had his own 15-minute weekly radio show in Halifax.
Three years later, he signed to RCA's Canadian division and recorded
his first two sides, Lonesome Blue Yodel and The
Prisoned Cowboy (his first royalty statement, he later recalled,
was for $2.96). Over the next decade or so, he established his
reputation throughout Canada, touring endlessly under a variety
of names: the Yodelling Ranger (later the Singing Ranger, after
his voice changed), the Blue Yodeller and Clarence Snow and His
Guitar. Around 1944 he changed his name to the more Western
sounding Hank. He appeared frequently on both regional radio stations
and the national CBC network and recorded almost 90 songs. However,
it was almost impossible to support himself and his family through
music in the small Canadian market. His son was born in the charity
ward of a Salvation Army hospital.
Snow began to tour the U.S. in the mid-1940s, appearing on
both the Wheeling Jamboree in West Virginia and the Big D Jamboree
in Dallas. He tried unsuccessfully to find work in Hollywood,
and finally settled in Nashville in 1949. His career was hampered
by RCA's initial refusal to record him for the American market,
despite his success in Canada; only after he had achieved regional
popularity in Texas did the company relent.
Snow's first American single, Marriage Vow, was
released in November 1949, and became a minor hit. Two months
later he made his debut at the Grand Ole Opry, largely through
the intervention of his friend Ernest Tubb. Still, his position
was tenuous, and by the spring of 1950 he contemplated returning
to Canada.
His career took a dramatic turn that summer, however, with
the release of the single I'm Movin' On, which quickly
reached number one and remained there for 21 weeks. As much as
anything he ever recorded, I'm Movin' On embodies
Snow's style. With its insistent rhythm and hard-edged vocal delivery,
it is unmistakably a product of the postwar era. At the same time,
both musically and lyrically it is a work deeply grounded in the
style of Jimmie Rodgers and other country music pioneers.
Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s Snow had a remarkable
series of hits, including The Golden Rocket and Rhumba
Boogie (both number one in 1951) and I Don't Hurt
Anymore, which stayed at number one for 20 weeks in 1954.
Later hits included I've Been Everywhere, A
Fool Such As I and Bluebird Island. In all,
he had more than 40 songs place in the country music Top Ten,
including an incredible 24 Top Ten hits between 1951 and 1954
alone. As well, more than any other performer of the era, he helped
popularize country music internationally; as music historian Chas
Wolfe says, He was the first truly international country
music star, with a huge following in Britain, Australia
and the Far East.
As well as possessing one of the most beautiful and distinctive
voices in popular music, Snow was a skilled songwriter and a very
capable guitarist. Particularly in his rhumba boogie
songs, he was also a witty and inventive lyricist (While
Madame Lasonga was teaching La Conga/ In her little cabana in
old Havana/We were doin' the Charleston and Ballin' the Jack/
And then that old Black Bottom til they started the Jitterbug
Rag). His songs have been covered by hundreds of performers,
including Ray Charles and the Rolling Stones.
Snow also played a small but important role in helping to establish
the career of Elvis Presley. In 1954, after forming a partnership
with Elvis' future manager Colonel Tom Parker, Snow
arranged for Presley to appear on the Grand Ole Opry. Later, at
the request of RCA, he convinced Presley's mother to get her son
to sign with the label. Many other important singers would later
cite Snow's influence, including Bob Dylan, who said one of his
most important early influences was one of Snow's several albums
of Jimmie Rodgers songs.
By the mid-'60s, Snow's popularity as a recording artist had
diminished considerably, particularly as his record company showed
less and less interest in promoting an aging and essentially traditional
performer. He had an unexpected number one record, Hello
Love, in 1974, but never again reached the upper reaches
of the Top Forty. In 1981, RCA dropped him from its roster. He
had been with the label for 45 years.
Even after his recording career ended, Snow enjoyed considerable
popularity. He was inducted into the halls of fame of the Country
Music Association ,the Nashville Songwriters Association and the
Canadian Songwriters Association, and in 1997 a country music
centre was opened in his honour in Liverpool.
As a headliner at the Grand Ole Opry, he continued to perform
regularly until well into the present decade. His style remained
fundamentally unchanged throughout his career, and even in his
eighties he delivered his distinctive blend of travelling songs,
sentimental ballads and rhumba boogies in the same beautifully
modulated baritone that was first captured on record more than
a half-century ago.
All too typically, Snow is very poorly served by North American
record labels. Although he recorded more than 140 albums for RCA,
apparently the only original release currently available is The
Singing Ranger (1959) . Of the several greatest
hits collections, both I'm Moving On and Other Country
Hits and The Essential Hank Snow offer a decent selection
of some of his better known songs. Fortunately, Snow's entire
recording career is documented in six multi-CD boxed sets from
the German label Bear Family.
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