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Hank Snow

 
Artist: Hank Snow
 
  • Born: May 09, 1914, Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • Died: December 20, 1999, Madison, TN
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Guitar, Vocals, Producer
  • Representative Albums: "The Essential Hank Snow," "The Singing Ranger, Vol. 3," "I'm Movin' On and Other Country Hits"
  • Representative Songs: "I'm Movin' On," "The Golden Rocket," "I Don't Hurt Anymore"

Biography

Canada's greatest contribution to country music, Hank Snow was famous for his "traveling" songs. It's no wonder. At age 12 he ran away from his Nova Scotia home and joined the Merchant Marines, working as a cabin boy and laborer for four years. Once back on shore, he listened to Jimmie Rodgers records and started playing in public, building up a following in Halifax. His original nickname, the Yodelling Ranger, was modified to the Singing Ranger when his high voice changed to the great baritone that graced his hit records. In 1950, the year he became an Opry regular, his self-penned "I'm Moving On" (the first of his many great traveling songs) became a smash hit, reaching number one and remaining there for 21 weeks. "Golden Rocket" (also 1950) and "I've Been Everywhere" (1962), two other hits, show his lifelong love for trains and travel. But he was as much at home with two other styles, the ballad and the rhumba/boogie. Among his many great ballads are "Bluebird Island" (with Anita Carter of the Carter Family), "Fool Such as I," and "Hello, Love," a hit when Snow was 60 years old. Snow appeared regularly on the Opry into the '90s, proving that his incredible voice suffered no loss of quality over the last half-century, as well as what a tasteful, understated guitar stylist he is. With small stature and huge voice, Snow was a country traditionalist who gave much more to the business than he took.

Born and raised in Nova Scotia, Snow (born Clarence Eugene Snow) moved in with his grandmother when he was eight years old, following the divorce of his parents. Four years later, he re-joined his mother when she re-married, but his stepfather was an abusive, violent man who frequently beat Hank. Tired of the abuse, Snow ran away from home when he was 12 years old, joining a fishing boat. For the next four years, he served as a cabin boy, often singing for the sailors onboard. When he was 16, he returned home, where he began working odd jobs and trying to launch a performing career. His mother had given him a stack of Rodgers records which inspired him greatly. Within a few weeks of hearing Rodgers, Snow ordered a cheap, mail-order guitar and tried to learn his idol's trademark blue yodel. For the next few years, he sang around Nova Scotia before finally mustering the courage to travel to Halifax in 1933. Snow landed a weekly unpaid appearance on CHNS' Down on the Farm, where he was billed as both the cowboy Blue Yodeller and Clarence Snow and His Guitar. The following year, CHNS' chief announcer, Cecil Landry, suggested to Snow that he should change his name to Hank, since it sounded more Western.

Snow continued to perform in Halifax for the next three years, often struggling to get by. The severity of the financial situation was compounded when he married Minnie Aaiders in 1936, but the couple was soon relieved when he landed a regular paid program on the network Canadian Farm Hour, billed as Hank the Yodelling Ranger. By the end of the year, Snow had signed a deal with RCA Victor's Montreal branch and recorded two original songs: "The Prsoned Cowboy" and "Lonesome Blue Yodel." The songs were hits, beginning a string of Canadian-only hit singles that ran for the next ten years; during that time, he recorded nearly 90 songs. In the early '40s, he had a regular show on CBC, based in Montreal and New Brunswick. In 1944, he switched to CKCW in New Brunswick. Around that time, he switched his stage name to Hank the Singing Ranger, since his voice had deepened and he could no longer yodel.

Though he had become a star in Canada, the American market remained untapped. Snow tried to break into the U.S.A. several times, playing The Wheeling Jamboree in West Virginia, briefly moving to Hollywood, and performing concerts with his trick pony Shawnee, but he was having no luck finding fans. The problem partially lies with the fact that he was trying to find an audience that wasn't there, since most citizens were concentrating on World War II. Another stumbling block was RCA Records themselves, who refused to let Snow release records in America until he was well-known in the country. By 1948, Snow was singing on The Big D Jamboree in Dallas, TX, where he befriended the honky tonk legend Ernest Tubb. ET pulled enough weight at the Grand Ole Opry to get Snow a slot on the show in early 1950, and by that time, RCA had agreed to record him for the American audience.

Snow's American debut single, "Marriage Vow," became a minor hit at the end of 1949, but it fell off the charts after a week. Similarly, his debut appearance at the Grand Ole Opry in January was not well-received, prompting him to consider moving back to Canada. However, those ideas were soon abandoned when his breakthrough arrived in the summer of 1950. That July, "I'm Moving On" began its remarkable ascent up the charts, eventually landing at number one and staying there for a full 21 weeks. In the year after the release of "I'm Moving On," "The Golden Rocket" and "The Rhumba Boogie" both hit number one (the latter staying there for eight weeks), establishing Snow as a genuine star. Between 1951 and the end of 1955, Snow had a remarkable 24 Top Ten hits, including the massive hit single "I Don't Hurt Anymore," which spent 20 weeks at number one in 1954. Snow not only played his trademark traveling songs, but also country boogie, Hawaiian music, rhumbas, and cowboys songs. By the middle of the decade, he was a star not only in the United States and Canada, but throughout the world, gaining a particularly strong following over the years in the United Kingdom.

Around 1954, Snow formed a booking agency with Colonel Tom Parker, who would later become infamous for being Elvis Presley's manager. Indeed, Snow played a formative role in Presley's early career, convincing the Grand Ole Opry to give the singer a chance in 1954. Though Elvis' appearance at the Opry was ill-received, Snow continued to push Presley to move toward country, and Hank was quite upset when Parker took complete control of Elvis' management around 1955. Still, Snow found a way to combat rock & roll -- he recorded some light rockabilly singles himself. "Hula Rock" and "Rockin', Rollin' Ocean" were attempts to capture the beat of rock & roll but diluted with the rhumbas and boogie that made his singles hits during the early '50s. Though he was experimenting with the new genre, he hadn't abandoned country and he continued to regularly chart in the country Top Ten until 1965 with hits like "Big Wheels" (number seven, 1958), "Miller's Cave" (number nine, 1960), "Beggar to a King" (number five, 1961), "I've Been Everywhere" (number one, 1962), and "Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street)" (number two, 1963).

During the latter half of the '60s, Snow's career slowed down considerably, as he wasn't able to make the transition to the new, heavily orchestrated country-pop sounds, nor was he able to keep pace with the twangy roll of Bakersfield. Instead, his singles placed in the lower reaches of the charts, while his concerts and Grand Ole Opry appearances continued to be quite popular. It wasn't until 1974 that another monster hit arrived in the form of "Hello Love," which unexpectedly climbed to number one. Instead of sparking a revival, "Hello Love" proved to be a last gasp; between its release in 1974 and 1980, Snow had only two other Top 40 hits, which both arrived the same year as "Hello Love." Despite his declining record sales, his profile remained high through his concerts and several lifetime-achievement awards, including his induction to the Nashville Songwriters International Hall of Fame in 1978 and the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1979.

In 1981, Snow's recording career ended when RCA dropped him after a 45-year relationship. Snow was very upset with the label's treatment of him, as well as the direction that country music was taking, claiming that "80 percent of today's country music is a joke and not fit to listen to." He was equally angry that country's roots were being diluted by pop and rock production values. Though he never recorded again, Snow remained active in the Grand Ole Opry into the '90s, and he spent a lot of time working for his Foundation for Child Abuse. In the late '80s, Bear Family began a lengthy retrospective of several multidisc box sets that chronicled his entire recording career. In 1994, Snow published his autobiography, The Hank Snow Story. Late the following year, he was stricken with a respiratory illness, yet he recovered in 1996, returning to the Grand Ole Opry in August of that year. Snow died December 20, 1999, at the age of 85. ~ David Vinopal, All Music Guide
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Discography: Hank Snow
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Snow in Hawaii [Compilation]

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Down at the Rainbow's End

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I've Been Everywhere: Encore Collection

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Snow on the Tracks

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Snow Under Western Skies

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Snow South of the Border

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Blues for My Blue Eyes

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Fool Such as I

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RCA Country Legends

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Famous Country Music Makers [Castle Pulse #2]

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Goldrush Is Over: Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight

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Best of the Best

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I'm Movin' On [Country Stars]

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We'll Never Say Goodbye: The Montreal Sessions 1937-1943

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I've Been Everywhere: Hank Snow Story

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Super Hits

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Louisiana Hayride Hall of Fame

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Greatest Hits & Favorites

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Paving the Highway with Tears: The Very Best of the Singing Ranger

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Great Hank Snow

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Plays Guitar

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Classic Country Favourites

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Legendary

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Country Music Legends

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Singing Ranger [ASV/Living Era]

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Hall of Fame: 1979

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All American Country

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Essential Hank Snow

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I Don't Hurt Anymore

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I'm Movin' On [Rajon]

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Proper Introduction to Hank Snow: I'm Moving On

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Singing Ranger, Vol. 4

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Wanderin' On: The Best of the Yodeling Ranger

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Best of Hank Snow [Paradiso]

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I'm Movin' On [Prism]

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Singing Ranger, Vol. 3

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Yodelling Ranger (1936-1947)

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Snow Country

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Thesaurus Transcriptions

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I'm Movin' On and Other Country Hits

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Singing Ranger, Vol. 2

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Singing Ranger: 1949-1953

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You're Easy to Love

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Hello Love

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Award Winners

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Hank Snow Sings in Memory of Jimmie Rodgers

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Hits Covered by Snow

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Snow in All Seasons

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Hits, Hits and More Hits

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Tales of the Yukon

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Christmas with Hank Snow

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Snow in Hawaii

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Spanish Fire Ball and Other Great Hank Snow Stylings

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Best of Hank Snow, Vol. 1

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Gospel Train

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Guitar Stylings of Hank Snow

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Sings Your Favorite Country Hits

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Gloryland March

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Heartbreak Trail - A Tribute to the Sons of the Pioneers

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Songs of Tragedy

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More Souvenirs

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Reminiscing

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I've Been Everywhere

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Railroad Man

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Together Again

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Big Country Hits

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Souvenirs

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Wikipedia: Hank Snow
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Hank Snow
Birth name Clarence Eugene Snow
Also known as Hank Snow
Born May 9, 1914
Origin Brooklyn, Queens County, Nova Scotia
Died December 20, 1999 (aged 85)
Genre(s) Country
Occupation(s) Singer and Songwriter
Years active 1936 – 1999
Label(s) RCA Victor
Website www.hanksnow.com

Clarence Eugene "Hank" Snow (May 9, 1914 – December 20, 1999) was a Canadian - American country music artist. In his career, he charted more than seventy singles on the Billboard country charts from 1950 until 1980. This total includes the Number One hits "I'm Movin' On", "The Golden Rocket", "I Don't Hurt Anymore", "Let Me Go, Lover!", "I've Been Everywhere", and "Hello Love", as well as several more Top Ten hits.

Contents

Biography

Snow was born in Brooklyn, Queens County, Nova Scotia, Canada. When he was 14, he ordered his first guitar from Eaton's catalogue for $5.95, and played his first show in a church basement in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia at the age of 16. He then travelled to the nearest big city, Halifax, where he sang in local clubs and bars. Hank married Minnie Blanche Aalders in 1935 and had one son, (Rev.) Jimmy Rodgers Snow. The couple would remain together for their whole lives.

Canadian Years

A successful appearance on a local radio station led to his being given a chance to audition for RCA Victor in Montreal, Quebec. In 1936, he signed with RCA Victor, staying with them for more than 45 years. A weekly Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) radio show brought him national recognition and he began touring Canada until the late 1940s when American country music stations began playing his records.

Nashville Calls

He headed to the "Country Music Capital of the World," Nashville, Tennessee,in 1945 and Hank Snow, the "Singing Ranger" (modified from the nickname "Yodelling Ranger" given him before his high voice changed to the baritone that graced his hit records), would be invited to play at the Grand Ole Opry in 1950. That same year he released his mega-hit, "I'm Movin' On." The first of seven Number 1 hits on the country charts, "I'm Movin' On" stayed at Number 1 for nearly half a year. The song, which stayed in the number 1 position for 21 weeks, holds the all time record for most weeks in the number 1 spot. While performing in Renfro Valley, Snow was walking with a young unknown performer by the name of Hank Williams when someone yelled out, "Hey, Hank," at which Williams turned around and Snow tapped Williams on the shoulder and said, "No, Hank, he means me." Hank remained Hank's idol for the rest of his career.

Along with this hit, his other "signature song" was "I've Been Everywhere," in which he portrayed himself as a hitchhiker bragging about all the towns he'd been through. This song was originally written and performed in Australia by Geoff Mack, and its re-write incorporating North American place names was brilliantly accomplished. Rattling off a well-rhymed series of city names at an auctioneer's pace has long made the song a challenge for any country-music singer to attempt.

Elvis

A regular at the Grand Ole Opry, in 1954 Hank Snow persuaded the directors to allow a new singer by the name of Elvis Presley to appear on stage. Snow used Elvis as his opening act, before introducing him to Colonel Tom Parker. In August 1955, Snow and Parker formed the management team Hank Snow Attractions. This partnership signed a management contract with Presley but before long, Snow was out and Parker had full control over the rock singer's career.

Legacy

Performing in lavish and colourful sequin-studded suits, Snow had a career covering six decades during which he sold more than 80 million albums. Although he became a proud American naturalized citizen in 1958, he still maintained his friendships in Canada and remembered his roots with the 1968 Album, "My Nova Scotia Home". That same year he performed at campaign stops on behalf of presidential candidate George Wallace.

In Robert Altman's 1975 film Nashville, Henry Gibson played a self-obsessed country star loosely based on Hank Snow.

Despite his lack of schooling, Snow was a gifted songwriter and in 1978 was elected to Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. In Canada, he was ten times voted that country's top country music performer. In 1979, Hank Snow was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and the Nova Scotia Music Hall of Fame. He was also inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 1985.

In 1994 his autobiography, "The Hank Snow Story," was published, and later The Hank Snow Country Music Centre would open near his ancestrial home in Liverpool, Nova Scotia.

A victim of an abusive childhood, he set up the Hank Snow International Foundation For Prevention Of Child Abuse.

Elvis Presley, The Rolling Stones, Ray Charles, Ashley MacIsaac, Johnny Cash and Emmylou Harris, among others, have covered his music. One of his last top hits, "Hello Love," was, for several seasons, sung by Garrison Keillor to open each broadcast of his Prairie Home Companion radio show. The song became Snow's seventh and final No. 1 hit on the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles chart in April 1974. At 59 years and 11 months, he became the oldest (to that time) artist to have a No. 1 song on the chart. It was an accomplishment he held for more than 26 years, until Kenny Rogers surpassed the age record in May 2000 (at 61 years and nine months) with "Buy Me a Rose." Snow remains the second-oldest artist to have a No. 1 song as a solo or primary artist, though Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson have subsequently reached the top of the chart at older ages as secondary duet partners on records fronted by other artists.

He was also mentioned in the film "Smokey and the Bandit". In the scene in the trucker's bar, Cletus Snow (The Snowman) asks to make a collect call and gives his name "Cletus Snow", what the operator says is not given, but Cletus replies "No, I'm not related to Hank Snow"

Passing

Snow died in 1999 at his Rainbow Ranch in Madison, Tennessee and was interred in the Spring Hill Cemetery in Nashville. Minnie passed away in 2003.

Discography

Albums

Year Album Chart Positions Label
US Country US
1952 Country Classics RCA Victor
Hank Snow Sings
1953 Hank Snow Salutes Jimmie Rodgers
1954 Hank Snow's Country Guitar
1955 Just Keep a-Movin'
Old Doc Brown and Other Narrations by Hank Snow
1957 Country & Western Jamboree
1958 Hank Snow Sings Sacred Songs
1959 Hank Snow Sings Jimmie Rodgers Songs
1961 Hank Snow Souvenirs
Big Country Hits (Songs I Hadn't Recorded Till Now)
1963 I've Been Everywhere
Railroad Man 7
1964 More Hank Snow Souvenirs 1
Songs of Tragedy 11
Reminiscing (w/ Chet Atkins)
1965 Your Favorite Country Hits
Gloryland March
Heartbreak Trail: A Tribute to the Sons of the Pioneers 26
The Best of Hank Snow
1966 The Guitar Stylings of Hank Snow 26
Gospel Train
This Is My Story 21
1967 Snow in Hawaii
Christmas with Hank Snow 72
Spanish Fire Ball and Other Hank Snow Stylings 35
1968 Hits, Hits and More Hits
Tales of the Yukon 35
1969 Snow in All Seasons 43
Hits Covered by Snow 35
C.B. Atkins & C.E. Snow by Special Request (w/ Chet Atkins)
1970 Hank Snow Sings in Memory of Jimmie Rodgers 45
Cure for the Blues
1971 Tracks & Trains 45
Award Winners
1972 The Jimmie Rodgers Story
The Best 2
1973 Grand Ole Opry Favorites
1974 Now Is the Hour
Hello Love 4
That's You and Me 35
1975 You're Easy to Love 48
1976 Live from Evangel Temple (w/ Jimmy Snow)
1977 #104 - Still Movin' On 47
1979 The Mysterious Lady
Lovingly Yours (w/ Kelly Foxton)
Instrumentally Yours
1981 Win Some Lose Some Lonesome (w/ Kelly Foxton)
1985 Brand On My Heart (w/ Willie Nelson) Columbia

Singles

Year Title Chart positions
US Country US CAN Country
1949 "Marrige Vow" 10
1950 "I'm Moving On" 1
"The Golden Rocket" 1
1951 "The Rhumba Boogie" 4
"Bluebird Island" (w/ Anita Carter) 4
"Down the Trail of Achin' Hearts" (w/ Anita Carter) 2
"Unwanted Sign Upon Your Heart" 6
"Music Makin' Mama from Memphis" 4
1952 "The Gold Rush Is Over" 2
"Lady's Man" 2
"Married by the Bible, Divorced by the Law" 8
"I Went to Your Wedding" 3
"The Gal Who Inventing Kissin'" 4
"(Now and Then, There's) A Fool Such As I" 3
1953 "Honeymoon on a Rocket Ship" 9
"Spanish Fire Ball" 3
"For Now and Always" 10
"When Mexican Joe Met Jole Brown" 6
1954 "I Don't Hurt Anymore" 1
"That Crazy Mambo Thing" 10
"Let Me Go, Lover!" 1
1955 "The Next Voice You Hear" 15
"Silver Bell" (w/ Chet Atkins) 15
"Yellow Roses" 3
"Would You Mind?" 3
"Cryin', Prayin', Waitin', Hopin'" 7
"I'm Glad I Got to See You Once Again" 7
"Mainliner (The Hawk with Silver Wings)" 5
"Born to Be Happy" 5
1956 "These Hands" 5
"I'm Moving In" 11
"Conscience I'm Guilty" 4
"Hula Rock" 5
"Stolen Moments" 7
1957 "Tangled Mind" 4
"My Arms Are a House" 8
1958 "Whispering Rain" 15
"Big Wheels" 7
"A Woman Captured Me" 16
1959 "Doggone That Train" 19
"Chasin' a Rainbow" 6
"The Last Ride" 3
1960 "Rockin', Rollin' Ocean" 22 87
"Miller's Cave" 9 101
1961 "Beggar to a King" 5
"The Restless One" 11
1962 "You Take the Future (And I'll Take the Past)" 15
"I've Been Everywhere" 1 68
1963 "The Man Who Robbed the Bank at Santa Fe" 9
"Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street)" 2 124
1964 "Breakfast with the Blues" 11
"I Stepped Over the Line" 21
1965 "The Wishing Well (Down in the Well)" 7
"The Queen of Draw Poker Town" 28
1966 "I've Cried a Mile" 18
"The Count Down" 22
"Hula Love" 21
1967 "Down at the Pawn Shop" 18
"Learnin' a New Way of Life" 20
1968 "I Just Wanted to Know (How the Wind Was Blowing)" 70
"Who Will Answer? (Aleluya No. 1)" 69
"The Late and Great Love of My Heart" 20 5
1969 "The Name of the Game Was Love" 16 1
"That's When the Hurtin' Sets In" 53
1970 "Come the Morning" 57 33
"Vanishing Breed" 52
1971 "(The Seashores) Of Old Mexico" 6
1972 "Governor's Hand" 34
1973 "North to Chicago" 71 20
1974 "Hello Love" 1 1
"That's You and Me" 36 5
"Easy to Love" 26
1975 "Merry-Go-Round of Love" 47 36
"Hijack" 79
"Colorado Country Morning" 95
1976 "Who's Been Here Since I've Been Gone" 87
"You're Wondering Why" 98
1977 "Trouble in Mind" 81
"I'm Still Movin' On" 80
"Breakfast with the Blues" 96
1978 "Nevertheless" 93
"Ramblin' Rose" 93
1979 "The Mysterious Lady from St. Martinique" 80 26
"A Good Gal Is Hard to Find" 91
"It Takes Too Long" 98
1980 "Hasn't It Been Good Together" (w/ Kelly Foxton) 78 39

See also

External links

References

  • Wolfe, Charles. (1998). "Hank Snow". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 494–5.

 
 

 

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