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Don't Go Near The Eskimos

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Stereo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDZUWRU9sUI&fmt=18 BCB Band sings "Don't Go Near The Eskimos" by Ben Colder/Sheb Wooley. Among pop culture scholars, Sheb Wooley is best remembered for his late-'50s rock & roll/comedy hit "Purple People Eater," which sold over three million copies. But among country music afficianados, especially fans of cowboy songs, Sheb Wooley is the real article, or as near as one gets to it in modern times. A rodeo rider from the time that he was a boy, he was making a living on the circuit as a teenager, before he ever turned to music as a career. He turned to music and then acting, appearing in such Westerns as High Noon, before he was ever well-known as a singer, and later spent six seasons playing cowhand Pete Nolan on the television series Rawhide, even as he pursued a career in country music. In addition to cowboy songs, his repertory includes traditional country music and hillbilly tunes, along with the ubiquitous "Purple People Eater." Later on in the 1960s, he also developed a drunken comic persona named Ben Colder, whose success in satirizing various elements of country music, its audience, and its sensibilities actually threatened to eclipse Sheb Wooley. Sheb Wooley was born in Erick, OK, on April 10, 1921. An avid rider from an early age, he was competing in local rodeos before he was ten years old, and by the time he was a teenager was one of the best young riders on the circuit. Music was also one of his interests, and Wooley got his first guitar when his father swapped a shotgun for the instrument. The family was poor, and living was very tough during the 1930s; more than once their crops were virtually blown away by the dry dust bowl winds. Wooley led his own country band in high school, but music didn't offer the prospect of a living, and he made his living for a time working the oil fields of Oklahoma as a welder. As with many Oklahomans looking for a better future, Wooley headed to California in the late '30s and nearly earned a living at a packing plant, moving crates of oranges. By then Wooley was married to Melba Miller, the older sister of future country music star Roger Miller. When World War II broke out, Wooley found himself labeled 4-F (ineligible for military service) because of injuries he'd suffered as a rodeo rider, and he spent much of the war working in defense plants. In 1945, he made his first records for the Bullet label in Nashville, and began appearing as a singer/guitarist on WLAC; the job paid nothing, but allowed him to get paid work elsewhere. His Bullet sides were cut at WSM, home of the Grand Ole Opry, but they saw almost no play or exposure of any kind. A year later he moved to Fort Worth, TX, and got a regular spot on radio there, sponsored by Calumet Baking Powder. Finally, in 1949, at the suggestion of a friend at WSM, Wooley decided to take the plunge and head for California in hope of getting some movie work. Around this same time, he was signed as a songwriter to Hill & Range, the publishing company, which, in turn, led to his being signed by the newly founded MGM Records in 1950. MGM already had a legendary figure in its roster, in the person of Hank Williams, but country music was booming, and there was room for as many worthwhile talents as the label could find. He also took acting lessons in the hope of getting some work on the screen. Wooley succeeded more than he could have hoped in this capacity, appearing in small parts in 40 feature films, beginning with Rocky Mountain, Errol Flynn's final Western, in 1949. His most notable screen came two years later in the classic High Noon (1952), in which he played Ben Miller, the leader of the outlaw gang gunning for town marshal Gary Cooper. He also played an important supporting role in the historical drama Little Big Horn (1951), starring Lloyd Bridges and John Ireland, and was seen in The Man Without a Star (1955), Giant (1956), and Rio Bravo (1959), starring John Wayne.

Channel: Music
Uploaded: September 17, 2008 at 4:49 am
Author: BCBband

Length: 0:03:50
Rating: 5.00
Views: 984

Tags: BCB Band Classic Country Sheb Wooley

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Video Comments:
izzyf0shiz (Friday 5th of December 2008 03:38:48 PM)
you guys.. ROCK!!
BCBband (Friday 5th of December 2008 08:30:30 PM)
Thanks very much.
vns24330 (Saturday 20th of September 2008 01:46:18 PM)
GREAT ONE!!
BCBband (Saturday 20th of September 2008 02:39:13 PM)
Thanks very much.
stewballmax (Thursday 18th of September 2008 07:50:31 AM)
Say Gents... This was so much fun to listen to! beautifully and light-heartedly presented,you gents have the knack for injecting a tune with your own distinctive musical stylings. I'm once again impressed with your ability to remember all of them thar lyrics! Pax, Stewball
BCBband (Thursday 18th of September 2008 11:29:49 AM)
Shaga Magga Muccuao, ie Thanks much Stewball.
4846steven (Thursday 18th of September 2008 02:53:37 AM)
fantastic guys all the stars here
BCBband (Thursday 18th of September 2008 11:29:58 AM)
Thanks Steven.
tuktukskagal (Thursday 18th of September 2008 02:35:13 AM)
Great track...Brrr!!!!
BCBband (Thursday 18th of September 2008 11:30:07 AM)
LOL, Thanks.


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