Thursday 3 September 2015

Hank Thompson born 3 September 1925


Henry William "Hank" Thompson (September 3, 1925 – November 6, 2007) was an American country music entertainer whose career spanned seven decades. 
 
Born September 3, 1925, in Waco, TX, Henry William Thompson was the son of immigrants from Bohemia and grew up idolizing Western swing and country musicians like Bob Wills, Jimmie Rodgers, and Gene Autry. He began learning harmonica and guitar as a child, and appeared in local talent shows as a teenager, which eventually led to his own local radio program (billed as Hank the Hired Hand).

After graduating from high school in 1943, Thompson joined the Navy as a radio technician and often wrote songs to entertain his fellow soldiers. Following his discharge, Thompson studied electrical engineering at Princeton through the G.I. Bill, but eventually decided to pursue music as a career.  

He returned to Waco and to the radio business, and set about putting together a band he dubbed the Brazos Valley Boys. They quickly became a popular live act around the area and recorded their first single, "Whoa Sailor" for the Globe label in 1946. A few more singles followed for Bluebonnet, by which time Tex Ritter had become a Thompson admirer. Ritter helped Thompson land a record deal with Capitol in 1947, an association that would last for the next 18 years.

Thompson scored his first major hit for Capitol in 1949 with the smash "Humpty Dumpty Heart," the biggest of his six charting singles that year. In 1951, he hooked up with producer Ken Nelson, who would helm many of his most successful records. Those records included "The Wild Side of Life," a monster hit from 1952 (over three months at number one) that became Thompson's signature song. Its cynical attitude inspired an answer record by Kitty Wells called "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels," which made her the first female artist in country music history with a million-selling record.  
 
  



Thompson continued to score hit after hit during the '50s, including 21 songs that reached the Top 20 on the country charts and five Top Ten’s in the year 1954 alone. A savvy promoter, Thompson devised a number of ways to make himself stand out from the crowd (even past his suave cowboy wardrobe): his early-'50s television show in Oklahoma City was the first variety show broadcast in colour and he was the first country artist to tour with a sound and lighting system,  the first to receive corporate sponsorship, and the first to record in high-fidelity stereo.  

 
He also gave early breaks to musicians like guitar legend Merle Travis and female rockabilly pioneer Wanda Jackson. Toward the end of the '50s, Thompson began to create LPs that were more cohesive than just mere collections of singles plus filler. In 1961, Thompson recorded the first live album ever released in the history of country music, the classic At the Golden Nugget.  

After that burst of inspired creativity, Thompson's luck
began to change: the public's taste was moving toward slick country-pop and the electrified Bakersfield sound and despite several more fine records, Thompson's relationship with Capitol ended in 1965. He first moved to Warner Bros., then ABC/Dot in 1968 (which became part of MCA in 1970).  
Thompson continued to record and tour and his singles charted regularly during the '70s all the way up to 1983, though he never matched the level of success he'd enjoyed in the '50s and early '60s. Even after the hits dried up, Thompson maintained a demanding concert tour schedule, playing all over the world. He was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1989.  

Thompson's last public performance had been on October 8, 2007 in his birthplace of Waco, Texas. Like many men of his generation, Thompson had been a smoker for most of his adult life, and had been admitted into a Texas hospital in mid-October for shortness of breath. After having been diagnosed with a particularly aggressive form of lung cancer, Thompson cancelled the rest of his 2007 "Sunset Tour" on November 1, 2007, two days after being released, and retired from singing. He then went into hospice care at his home in Keller, Texas and lost his battle with the disease five days later on November 6, 2007, aged eighty-two.
 
(info edited from All Music Guide & Wikipedia)
 

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Hank Thompson – In The Mood For Hank” go here:

http://www81.zippyshare.com/v/lQo4eVUd/file.html

1. YOU'RE TOO YOUNG TO CRY NOW
2. I KNOW EXACTLY HOW YOU FEEL
3. PROSPERITY SPECIAL
4. TOMORROW NIGHT
5. DOWN YONDER
6. GATEWAY TO YOUR HEART
7. ROCK IN THE OCEAN
8. A CAT HAS NINE LIVES
9. A FOOLER, A FAKER
10. WILDWOOD FLOWER
11. TODAY
12. SIMPLE SIMON
13. YOU'RE WALKING ON MY HEART
14. TOPEKA POLKA
15. YESTERDAY'S MAIL
16. SET YOUR HEART FOR LOVE
17. IN THE MOOD
18. WHAT ARE WE GONNA DO ABOUT THE MOONLIGHT
19. HUMPTY DUMPTY HEART
20. STANDING ON THE OUTSIDE
21. MOST OF ALL
22. REDSKIN GAL
23. RUB-A-DUB-DUB
24. I FIND YOU CHEATIN' ON ME
25. WE'VE GONE TOO FAR
26. BREAKIN' IN ANOTHER HEART

codeg said...

The link is dead. Can you kindly repost it? Many thanks!