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Don Walser

 
Artist: Don Walser
 
Don Walser

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Worked With:

Howard Kalish, Jason Roberts
  • Born: September 14, 1934, Brownfield, TX
  • Died: September 20, 2006
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Texas Top Hand," "Dare to Dream: The Best of Don Walser," "Rolling Stone from Texas"
  • Representative Songs: "Rolling Stone from Texas," "Cowpoke," "I'll Hold You in My Heart (Ti"

Biography

Even in Texas folk and country music circles, singer and guitarist Don Walser is regarded as unique. The songs Walser specializes in aren't exactly current; he sings classic old Western swing tunes. In a sense, he's a man on a mission: keeping the old Texas country songs alive. Songs like "Cowpoke," "Tumbling Tumbleweeds," and "Mexicali Rose" are signature tunes for Walser, who is also one of the country's premier yodelers. Songs penned and popularized by Bob Wills, the Sons of the Pioneers, Hank Williams, Faron Young, Merle Travis, and Johnny Horton are all part and parcel of what you're likely to hear in the course of a typical Walser show.

Walser's mother died when he was 12 and his father worked nights, so to keep himself company, he listened to the radio in his childhood home of LaMesa in West Texas. He formed his first band at 16, and a year later, he was playing the few clubs and roadhouses around LaMesa. At the same time Walser was playing country music, a west Texas neighbor of his, Buddy Holly, was raising the roofs at local roadhouses playing rock & roll. As rock & roll came into fashion in the late '50s, Walser and other country musicians were nearly run out of business.

With the rise of rock & roll, Walser put his budding music career on hold in 1957 and joined the National Guard. Through a procession of day jobs with the National Guard, Walser's musical adventures remained an avocation. Most recently, he worked as an internal auditor for the state Adjutant General's office in Austin. But through the 39 years with the National Guard, he always played music with various bands, mostly as a hobby. He retired in 1994 and picked up where he'd left off in his youth, taking his act on the road full-time.

Walser's albums for Watermelon Records include a few of his originals, like "Rolling Stone from Texas." Many fans are awestruck upon first hearing Walser's unique voice. His albums for Watermelon include Texas Top Hand, Rolling Stone from Texas, and Down at the Sky-Vue Drive-In. Walser tours around Texas and the U.S. with a group called the Pure Country Band, and he's also quick to credit Ray Benson's group, Asleep at the Wheel, with helping to keep old, often obscure Western swing tunes alive. Now in his late sixties, Walser has lived in Austin since 1984, where he's found legions of supportive fans who believe in and understand the "real country" music he performs.~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Don Walser
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Don Walser

Background information
Birth name Donald Ray Walser
Also known as Yodelin' Donnie Walser
Born September 14, 1934(1934-09-14)
Brownfield,Texas, United States
Died September 20, 2006 (aged 72)
Genre(s) Country, Western swing
Occupation(s) Singer, Songwriter, Mechanic, Auditor
Instrument(s) Singing
Guitar
Years active 1950–2003
Label(s) Watermelon, Texas Music Group
Associated acts The Panhandle Playboys, The Texas Plainsmen, The Pure Texas Band
Website www.donwalser.com
Former members
Floyd Domino, Phil Fajardo, Howard Kalish, Don Keeling, Scott Walls

Donald Ray Walser (September 14, 1934 - September 20, 2006) was an American country music singer. He was known as a unique, award-winning yodeling "Texas country music legend." [1]

Contents

Music career

Walser was born in Brownfield, Texas. A roots musician since he was 11 years old, Walser became an accomplished guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter. He started his first band, The Panhandle Playboys, at age 16, and shared bills with another aspiring Texas singer, Buddy Holly.

As rock'n'roll began to skyrocket in popularity, Walser opted to stay in the Texas Panhandle, raise a family and work as a mechanic and later as an auditor for the National Guard, rather than move to Nashville and pursue a recording career. As a result, he had little following outside Texas for the first part of his career. However, he never stopped playing and became widely known in Texas. From 1959-61 Walser had a group called The Texas Plainsmen and a weekly radio program. For the next three decades he was always in bands and played a heavy schedule. He wrote popular original songs such as "Rolling Stone from Texas", which received a four-star review in 1964 from Billboard magazine.

As time went on, Walser also became known for maintaining a catalog of older, obscure country music and cowboy songs. He kept alive old 1940s and 1950s tunes by country music pioneers such as Bob Wills and Eddie Arnold, and made them his own in a style that blended elements of honky tonk and Western swing. He also was known for his extraordinary yodeling style in the tradition of Slim Whitman and Jimmie Rodgers.

In 1984, the Guard transferred Walser to Austin, a center of the burgeoning alt-country music scene. He put together his Pure Texas Band and developed a strong local following. Walser opened for Johnny Cash in 1996. In 1990, Walser was "discovered" by musician and talent scout TJ McFarland [2].

In 1994, aged 60, Walser retired from the Guard. Able to devote himself fully to music for the first time in his life, he was immediately signed by Watermelon Records, and released his first LP, Rolling Stone From Texas, produced by Ray Benson of Asleep at the Wheel. His extraordinary vocal abilities earned him the nickname "the Pavarotti of the Plains" by a reviewer for Playboy magazine. Because of his Austin base, he attracted fans from country music traditionalists, and alternative music and punk fans. His band later became the opening act for the Butthole Surfers.

Don Walser was voted "Best Performing Country Band" at the Austin Music Awards, was voted top country band of the year by the Austin Chronicle in 1996, and received an Association for Independent Music "Indie" Award in 1997. He also received recognition in mainstream country, and played the Grand Ole Opry on October 30, 1999, and again in 2001. In 2000 he received a lifetime "Heritage" award from the National Endowment for the Arts, and he and the Pure Texas Band played at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. He also received cameo roles in feature movies with honky-tonk settings, such as The Hi-Lo Country (1998), starring Woody Harrelson.

In September, 2003, Don Walser retired from live performances due to health issues. Three years later, Walser died due to complications from diabetes on September 20, 2006, 6 days after his 72nd birthday.

Walser is also the great uncle of Manteca, Ca., sportswriter, Ike Dodson.

Quotes about Don Walser

  • "perhaps the last of God's great pure country singers, with a national and international following among those who like the real deal" — John Morthland [3]
  • "this man's voice is a national treasure and qualifies as high Texas folk art. ... When it comes to evocative, classic country music, it doesn't get much better than this" — Erik Hage, Allmusic[4]
  • "nothing less than pure country music incarnate" — David Courtney, Austin City Search[5]
  • "Country music's greatest yodeler" — Texas Music Group[6]]
  • "A Texas country music institution" — Jerry Renshaw, Austin Chronicle[7]
  • "simply one of the great voices and nice guys of our day" — tunefan.com[8]

Discography

  • Texas Souvenir (1992)
  • Rolling Stone From Texas (1994)
  • The Archive Series: Volume 1 (1995)
  • The Archive Series Volume 2 (1995)
  • Texas Top Hand (1996)
  • Down At The Sky-Vue Drive-In (1998)
  • Here's To Country Music (1999)
  • I'll Hold You In My Heart (2000)
  • Dare To Dream: The Best of Don Walser (2001)
  • Texas Legend (2006)

Notes

http://donwalser.com

  1. ^ Don Walser circa 1964
  2. ^ http://www.houstonpress.com/Issues/mostrecent/music/racket.html
  3. ^ Liner Notes
  4. ^ Don Walser Reviews on Yahoo! Music
  5. ^ Don Walser
  6. ^ http://www.txmusicgroup.com/artists/d_walser.htm
  7. ^ The Austin Chronicle: Music: Review - Don Walser
  8. ^ DonWalser

See also

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Don Walser" Read more

 

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