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Bob Luman

 
Artist: Bob Luman
  • Born: April 15, 1937, Nacogdoches, TX
  • Died: December 27, 1978, Nashville, TN
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "American Originals," "Classic Country," "Still Rockin'"
  • Representative Songs: "Let's Think About Living," "Lonely Women Make Good Lovers," "Red Hot"

Biography

Bob Luman started out as a rockabilly performer, switched to country and then in the late '50s nearly ditched the music industry altogether; were it not for the interference of the Everly Brothers, Nashville would have lost a popular and talented performer to major league baseball.

He was born in Nacogdoches, Texas, and grew up loving both sports and music. As a teen, Luman was a high school baseball star, and was so good that he caught the eye of several major league baseball scouts. Through his teens, Luman was primarily interested in singing country music like his idol Lefty Frizzell, but then he saw Elvis perform at a country music show. This inspired him to try his hand at the rockabilly sound and found his own band, which soon began performing at school activities and for area clubs. Soon after graduating, Luman won a talent contest, leading to his debut on the Louisiana Hayride. He was well received and became a regular in the mid-'50s. He was handsome, young and talented to boot, so it was only natural that Luman begin appearing on television. In 1957, he had a small role in a Hollywood film, Carnival Rock. He also appeared in Las Vegas along with Tex Ritter and Johnny Cash. Still, his singles did nothing on the charts.

In 1959, the Pittsburgh Pirates offered young Luman a lucrative contract. Fed up with his lack of success, he decided to go for it and announced this during a concert one night. The Everly Brothers happened to be in the audience and after the show, they talked him into giving country music one more try. They suggested he record the Boudleaux Bryant song "Let's Think About Living," and sure enough, it was a Top Ten hit on both the country and pop charts. His follow-up, "The Great Snowman," was also a hit and Luman began organizing a promotional tour. Unfortunately he was drafted and spent the next two years in the military.He was discharged in 1964 and began recording for Hickory Records.

His debut single, "The File," made it to the Top 25. The following year, he became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Luman eventually signed with Epic Records and soon had a string of major hits on his hands beginning with the Top 20 "Ain't Got Time to Be Happy." Over the next ten years, Luman released many more singles that made it into the Top 25 or better, including the Top Five hit "Lonely Women Make Good Lovers" in 1972. During these years, Luman toured extensively and frequently. The first country performer to perform in Puerto Rico, he also appeared on national and international television shows and remained a regular on the Opry, where his lively performances raised the eyebrows of the old timers who thought his music veered dangerously close to rock & roll at times. Luman had a major heart attack in 1975, and it took him nearly five months to recover. (Afterwards, he joked about his enormous medical bills during his Opry performances.) His final chart appearance came in 1977 with the Top 15 hit "The Pay Phone." The following year he contracted pneumonia and died at the age of 41. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bob Luman
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Bob Luman
Birth name Robert Glynn Luman
Born April 15, 1937(1937-04-15)
Origin Nacogdoches, Texas
Died December 27, 1978 (aged 41)
Genres Country
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1959-1978

Bob Luman, (born as Robert Glynn Luman 15 April 1937 - December 27, 1978), was an American country and rockabilly singer.

Contents

Early life and career

Luman was born in Nacogdoches, Texas. His early interest in music was influenced by his father, an amateur fiddle, guitar and harmonica player. Bob Luman received his first guitar when he was thirteen years of age.[1]

Luman attended high school in Kilgore, where the family had moved after young Bob's birth. It was in high school that Luman started his first band.[1]

Bob Luman had been a baseball star in his high school, and he tried out with the Major League Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates, but when he didn't make it in professional baseball, he decided to concentrate on music. In 1956, he won a talent contest promoted by the Future Farmers of America, which earned him an appearance on the Louisiana Hayride.[1]

For the Hayride, Luman formed a backup band called the Shadows, including James Burton on guitar, James Kirkland on bass and Butch White on drums. In 1957, the band signed with Imperial Records, where they recorded "All Night Long" and "Amarillo Blues."[1]

That same year, the band appeared on the Town Hall Party in Los Angeles, and appeared in the movie Carnival Rock, where they backed up David Houston.[1]

The following year, having been dropped by Imperial Records, Luman signed with Capitol Records, where he released "Try Me" and "I Know My Baby Cares." Capitol Records wanted Luman to change his name, which he refused to do, so he left the record label and signed with Warner Bros. Records, recording "Class of '59" and "Loretta."[1]

In 1960, Luman was drafted into the United States Army. It was while still in the Army that Warner Bros. Records released Luman's best-known crossover hit, "Let's Think About Living," a novelty song that hit #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and #9 on the Billboard country music chart.[1]

After leaving the Army in 1962, Luman moved to Nashville, where he married. In 1965, he joined the Grand Ole Opry.[1]

Later career

Luman toured frequently in the 60s and 70s, and became popular in Las Vegas, with an act which combined country and rockabilly. He signed with Epic Records in 1968, and had several hits with them, including "Lonely Women Make Good Lovers" and "Still Loving You."[1] "Lonely Women Make Good Lovers" became his biggest country hit, hitting #4 on the country chart. (Steve Wariner, who had earlier been a member of Luman's band, later covered the song in 1984, and he, too, took it to #4 on the country charts.)

Luman's other country hits included "Ain't Got Time To Be Unhappy" (1968), "Ballad of Two Brothers" (with Autry Inman, 1968), "When You Say Love" (1972), "Neither One Of Us (Wants To Be The First To Say Goodbye)" (1973), "Proud Of You Baby" (1975), and "The Pay Phone" (1977).

Luman died in Nashville of pneumonia in 1978, at the age of forty-one. After his death, Bear Family Records released several compilations of his songs, including More of the Rocker, Still Rockin' and Carnival Rock.[1]

Luman is a member of both the Rockabilly Hall of Fame and the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame.[1]

Discography

Albums

Year Album US Country Label
1960 Let's Think About Livin' Warner Bros.
1965 Livin' Lovin' Sounds Hickory
1968 Ain't Got Time to Be Unhappy Epic
1969 Come On Home and Sing the Blues to Daddy
1970 Gettin' Back to Norma
1971 Is It Any Wonder That I Love You
Chain Don't Take to Me
1972 When You Say Love 38
Lonely Women Make Good Lovers 10
1973 Neither One of Us 26
1974 Bob Luman's Greatest Hits 26
Still Loving You 42 Hickory/MGM
Red Cadillac and Black Moustache Epic
1976 A Satisfied Mind
1977 Alive and Well
1978 Bob Luman 49 Polydor

Singles

Year Single Chart Positions Album
US Country US
1959 "My Baby Walks Over Me" single only
"Dreamy Doll" Let's Think About Livin'
1960 "Let's Think About Livin'" 9 7
"Why Why Bye Bye"
1961 "Great Snowman" singles only
"Private Eye"
1962 "Rocks of Reno"
"Belonging to You"
"Hey Joe"
"You're Everything"
1963 "You're Welcome"
"I'm Gonna Write You a Song"
"I Like Your Kind of Love"
1964 "The File" 24 Livin' Lovin' Sounds
"Lonely Room" singles only
"Fire Engine Red"
1966 "Five Miles from Home (Soon I'll See Mary)" 39
"Poor Boy Blues" 39
"Come On and Sing" 42
1967 "Hardly Anymore" 59
"If You Don't Love Me (Then Why Don't You Leave Me Alone)" 61
"Running Scared"
1968 "Ain't Got Time to Be Unhappy" 19 Ain't Got Time to Be Unhappy
"I Like Trains" 50 Come On Home and Sing the Blues to Daddy
"Woman Without Love"
1969 "Come On Home and Sing the Blues to Daddy" 24
"It's All Over (But the Shouting)" 65 single only
"Every Day I Have to Cry Some" 23 Gettin' Back to Norma
"The Gun" 60
1970 "Gettin' Back to Norma" 56
"Still Loving You" 56 single only
"Honky Tonk Man" 22 Is It Any Wonder That I Love You
"What About the Hurt" 44
1971 "Is It Any Wonder That I Love You" 60
"I Got a Woman" 40 Chain Don't Take to Me
"A Chain Don't Take to Me" 30
1972 "When You Say Love" 6 When You Say Love
"It Takes You" 21 Lonely Women Make Good Lovers
"Lonely Women Make Good Lovers" 4
1973 "Neither One of Us" 7 Neither One of Us
"A Good Love Is Like a Good Song" 23
"Still Loving You" (re-recording) 7 Bob Luman's Greatest Hits
1974 "Just Enough to Make Me Stay" 23
"Let Me Make the Bright Lights Shine for You" 25 Red Cadillac and Black Moustache
1975 "Proud of You Baby" 22 A Satisfied Mind
"Shame On Me" 48
1976 "A Satisfied Mind" 41
"The Man from Bowling Green" 82
"How Do You Start Over" 89
"Labor of Love" 94 Alive and Well
1977 "He's Got a Way with Women" 63
"I'm a Honky-Tonk Woman's Man" 33 Bob Luman
"The Pay Phone" 13
"A Christmas Tribute" 92 single only
1978 "Proud Lady" 47 Bob Luman

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "LUMAN, ROBERT GLYNN [BOB]". The Handbook of Texas Online, Texas State Historical Association. September 2, 2008. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/LL/flu22.html. Retrieved September 2 2008. 

Further reading

  • Davis, W.P. (1998). "Bob Luman" In Encyclopedia of Country Music. P. Kingsbury, Ed. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 308-309.
  • "Robert Glynn (Bob) Luman," In "Handbook of Texas Online." Texas State Historical Association.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Bob Luman at Town Hall Party (1959 Music Film)
Town Hall Party: November 29, 1958 (Music Film)
Carnival Rock (Album by Various Artists)

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