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Lefty Frizzell

 

(born March 31, 1928, Corsicana, Texas, U.S. — died July 19, 1975, Nashville, Tenn.) U.S. singer and songwriter. He was a fan of Jimmie Rodgers from childhood. Also a semiprofessional boxer (the source of his nickname), Frizzell sang in honky-tonks and on radio in the Southwest and had his first hit with "If You've Got the Money, I've Got the Time" (1950). He had several hits over the next two years, including "Always Late (with Your Kisses)," but his last and biggest hit was "Saginaw, Michigan" (1963).

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Lefty Frizzell

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Singer

"When I sing," Lefty Frizzell told Country Music, "every word has a feeling about it. I have to linger, have to hold it. I don’t want to let go of it. I want to hold one word through a whole line of melody, to linger with it all the way down. I don’t want to let go of that no more than I want to let go of the woman I love." And indeed, Frizzell never let go of his unique style. More than just a hit-maker, he was an innovator and much-imitated pillar of country music. Country greats Willie Nelson and George Jones, among many others, have recorded his songs (Nelson released an entire album of Frizzell compositions). According to Charles Wolfe in his liner notes to The Best of Lefty Frizzell, honky-tonk favorite Merle Haggard called Frizzell’s voice "the most unique thing that ever happened to country music, and Randy Travis and Keith Whitley learned to sing by copying his records note for note." Haggard told Los Angeles Times music critic Robert Hilburn, "To my mind he had a greater voice that Elvis. … He delivered every line in a song like [actor] Henry Fonda … absolutely believable. … Every breath was authentic."

On the release of the Bear Family record company’s definitive Frizzell compilation, Hilburn noted, "Lefty Frizzell only had 17 Top 10 singles during his lifetime" and asked, "So why has a German record company, … put together a 12-disc box set of his work?" Placing Frizzell’s stature in context, Hilburn answered himself thus: "Frizzell was arguably the greatest male singer in post-World War II country music—yes, even more influential than Hank Williams, his main honky-tonk rival in the early 1950s." Revered Nashville songwriter Harlan Howard, who has expressed amazement—as have many in the music industry—at Frizzell’s lack of recognition, also invoked Hank Williams in his comments to Hilburn about Frizzell: "He was a wonderful guy, someone who was just about as loose and free as any rock star you ever saw—on stage and off. He was really flamboyant, a good-looking guy with curly hair, always chasing after women and drinking a lot, like Hank."

Born William Orville Frizzell on March 31, 1928, in Corsicana, Texas, Frizzell lived in Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas as a youngster. To the family, he was "Sonny," but by the time he was 14 everyone else called him Lefty. Popular legend has it that he won the name as a "Golden Gloves" champ, but it was actually the result of a schoolyard brawl in El Dorado, Arkansas.

Influenced by the "Singing Brakeman"
From an early age, Frizzell wanted to be a singer, and despite the dominance at that time of Western swing,

the vocalist he most emulated was the "Singing Brake-man," father of country music Jimmie Rodgers. "We had an old victrola that my Dad had traded for a milk cow when I was about six," Frizzell recalled in Country Music, "and I remember some old thick records of Jimmie Rodgers. It was an inspiration."

By the time he was 12, Frizzell was singing on the radio, in talent shows, and at dances. Too young for World War II, he played the honky-tonk circuit in Texas, New Mexico, and Arkansas, honing a style influenced by Ernest Tubb, Ted Daffan, and Rodgers. He married his wife Alice in the late 1940s, and in 1950 he began a long-term engagement at the Ace of Clubs in Big Spring, Texas. Before this, though, according to Hilburn, he had spent six months in county jail for barroom fisticuffs, a setback that resulted in the termination of his previous job, at a Roswell, New Mexico, radio station. In fact, it was his incarceration that inspired a later hit, "I Love You a Thousand Ways," a song that first found form in a letter to Frizzell’s wife.

Frizzell drew big crowds at the Ace of Clubs. In Dallas, producer Jim Beck got word of the young singer with the unusual style. Beck, who ran a studio and had contacts with record labels and music publishers, asked Frizzell to come up to Dallas and make some demos. In April of 1950, Frizzell made the trip, bringing several of his own songs. Beck was especially impressed with a tune called "If You’ve Got the Money, I’ve Got the Time." He took the song to Nashville hoping to get Little Jimmy Dickens, then Columbia’s hottest artist, to record it. Dickens passed, but Columbia producer Don Law heard something special in Frizzell’s voice and by July 25th of that year had gotten the singer a contract and his first real recording session.

Rocketed to Stardom
Columbia released "If You’ve got the Money" on September 4, 1950; within days, it became one of the fastest-selling records in country music history. The song sprung from a remark Frizzell had made to a jukebox route man in Big Springs. "He was wanting me to go somewhere with him," Wolfe quoted Frizzell as saying, "and I said, ’Well if you’ve got the money, I’ve got the time’ and it just hit me, that’d be a heck of a title for a song.’" The other number recorded during the landmark session that summer was "I Love You a Thousand Ways," a ballad that allowed Frizzell to show off his fondness for splitting and extending syllables, slurring notes, and inserting catches, glides, and grace notes into his lines. As LA Times writer Hilburn described his style, "Frizzell combined the energy of the blues with the Everyman grace of country music … [creating] a tension and drama that heightened the themes of heartache, longing and celebration that ran through his music." Both "Money" and "I Love You" flew to the Number One spot on the charts, instantly making Frizzell an industry heavyweight.

Frizzell was soon back in the studio with his Texas backing musicians beginning what was to be a pattern of touring with his band, the Western Cherokees, and recording every four or five months. At one point in 1951, he hit Numbers One, Two, Six, and Eight on the Billboard Country Top 10; no one before or since has landed four singles in the Top 10. One of his biggest hits of that year, "Always Late (With Your Kisses)," was inspired by an all-night drive through the back roads of Louisiana. It was also in 1951 that Lefty began paying tribute to his idol Jimmy Rodgers, covering "Traveling Blues," a hit that was eventually collected with other Rodgers songs on Lefty Frizzell Sings the Songs of Jimmie Rodgers. That year saw Frizzell lock up the Number One chart position for 26 weeks.

Although Frizzell had three big hits in 1952—"Don’t Stay Away (’Till Love Grows Cold)," "Forever (and Always)," and "I’m an Old Old Man (Tryin’ to Live While I Can)"—that year was generally one of bad luck: Frizzell split with his manager, broke with his original band, and ran into money problems. Feeling burnt out, he headed for California to work on the Town Hall Party radio show, which was something of a mini Grand Ole Opry. For the next six years he worked and recorded steadily but partly because of the arrival of rock and roll—which took the steam out of many a country performer’s career—he could not score a Top 10 hit.

In 1959 Frizzell began looking for material from other writers. Danny Dill and Marijohn Wilkin of Cedarwood Publishing Company in Nashville pitched him a song based on the real-life murder of a New Jersey priest and news accounts of a mysterious woman in a black veil who visited the grave of silent movie star Rudolph Valentino. Designed to resemble a folk song, "Long Black Veil," became Frizzell’s biggest hit in years and was recorded in 1968 by the Band on their universally lauded debut album Music From Big Pink. Other rock notables, including Bob Dylan, John Fogerty, and John Prine have covered Frizzell compositions as well.

Stubborn Problems
Buoyed by his success with Nashville writers and session musicians, Frizzell relocated to Music City in 1961 (a move many insiders felt should have come much earlier). Two years later, he had a hit with Buddy Killen’s "Saginaw, Michigan," which became his first Number One song since he’d hit with "Always Late" 11 years earlier. But, during the remainder of the 1960s, Frizzell was plagued by excessive drinking, insensitive producers, managerial disputes, and changing musical tastes.

In the early 1970s, however, his career again took an upturn; in 1970 he had a hit with "Watermelon Time in Georgia," a backhanded reference to Rodgers’s "Peach Pickin’ Time in Georgia." Frizzell then made two albums for ABC/Dunhill, which Bill C. Malone, author of Country Music U.S.A., called, "some of his greatest performances, with a voice now richer, deeper, and more sensitive." According to Hilburn, "One of the highlights [of that period was] "I Never Go Around Mirrors," a song co-written by Frizzell whose disillusioned tone could be seen in part as a reflection on his own troubled life."

And then, suddenly, Lefty Frizzell died of a massive stroke, on July 19, 1975. He was 47 years old. He had suffered form high blood pressure but had refused to take any medication that he feared would interact unfavorably with his cherished vodka, which he abso-

lutely would not give up. In the months preceding his death, he had given a series of interviews to Geoff Lane of Country Music. Lane remembered fondly that the first time he met Lefty, the two had stayed up all night drinking and talking about Lefty’s marital problems. The interviewer ultimately came to view Frizzell as a troubled man finally coming to peace with his talent. The singer still wore a relic of his initial success—a massive ring with his initials spelled in diamonds over a solid-gold setting. It was about all he had left from those heady early years. "I’m lucky to have that," he told Lane wistfully, "when I consider all the back alleys it’s been up and down."

Selected discography
American Originals (recorded 1950-1965), Columbia, 1990.
The Best of Lefty Frizzell, Rhino, 1991.
Lefty Frizzell/Life’s Like Poetry, Bear Family (Germany), 1992.
Lefty Frizzell Sings the Songs ofJimmie Rodgers.

Sources
Books
Byworth, Tony, The History of Country & Western Music, Exeter Books, 1984.
Malone, Bill C, Country Music U.S.A., University of Texas Press, 1985.
Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Landon, The Encyclopedia of Folk, Country & Western Music, St. Martin’s, 1983.

Periodicals
Country Music, August 1975.
Los Angeles Times, May 9, 1993.
Additional information for this profile was obtained from liner notes by Charles Wolfe to The Best of Lefty Frizzell, Rhino, 1991.
  • Genres: Country

Biography

Lefty Frizzell was the definitive honky tonk singer, the vocalist that set the style for generations of vocalists that followed him. Frizzell smoothed out the rough edges of honky tonk by singing longer, flowing phrases -- essentially, he made honky tonk more acceptable for the mainstream without losing its gritty, bar-room roots. In the process, he changed the way country vocalists sang forever. From George Jones, Merle Haggard, and Willie Nelson to George Strait, John Anderson, Randy Travis, and Keith Whitley, hundreds of artists have emulated and expanded Lefty's innovations. Frizzell's singing became the foundation of how hard country should be sung.

Despite his influence, there was a time when Lefty wasn't regarded as one of country's definitive artists. Unlike Hank Williams -- the only contemporary of Lefty that had greater influence -- he didn't die young, leaving behind a romantic legend. After his popularity peaked in the early and mid-'50s, Frizzell continued to record, without having much success. However, his recordings continued to reach new listeners and his reputation was restored by the new traditionalists of the '80s, nearly ten years after Lefty's death.

Lefty (born William Orville Frizzell) was born in Corisicana, TX, in 1928, a son of an oiler; he was the first of eight children. During his childhood, his family moved to El Dorado, AR. As a child he was called Sonny, but his nickname changed to Lefty when he was 14, because he won a schoolyard fight; it was later suggested that he earned his nickname after winning a Golden Gloves boxing match, but that was eventually proven to be a hatched publicity stunt by his record company. Initially, Lefty was attracted to music through his parents' Jimmie Rodgers records. He began singing professionally before he was a teenager, landing a regular spot on KELD El Dorado.

Frizzell spent his teenage years playing throughout the region, singing on radio shows, in nightclubs, for dances, and in talent contests. He traveled throughout the South, playing in Arkansas, Texas, New Mexico, and even Las Vegas. During this time, he was refining his style, drawing from influences like Rodgers, Ernest Tubb, and Ted Daffan. Lefty's career was going fine until he was arrested in the mid-'40s, serving a jail sentence for statutory rape.

Frizzell's run-in with the law led him away from music, as he temporarily worked in the oil fields with his father. However, his time as an oiler was brief and he was soon performing in clubs again. By 1950, he had landed a regular job at the Texas club Ace of Clubs, where he developed a dedicated following of fans. At one of his concerts at the Ace of Clubs he caught the attention of Jim Beck, the owner of a local recording studio. Beck recorded music for several major record labels, and he also had connections within the publishing industry. Impressed with Lefty's performance, he invited the singer to make some demos at the studio. In April of 1950, Frizzell cut several demos of his original songs, including a new song called "If You've Got the Money, I've Got the Time," which Beck took to Nashville. Beck intended to pitch the song to Little Jimmy Dickens, but Dickens disliked the song. However, Columbia record producer Don Law heard the tape and liked Frizzell's voice. After hearing Lefty live in concert, Law signed the singer to Columbia; within a few months, he had his first recording session.

"If You've Got the Money, I've Got the Time," Lefty's first single, climbed to number one upon its release. It was a huge hit -- its B-side, "I Love You a Thousand Ways," even hit number one -- with other artists hurrying into the studio to cut their own versions; over 40 performers wound up recording the song. Within 17 days of the single's release, Columbia had Frizzell record another single. The result, "Look What Thoughts Will Do"/"Shine, Shave, Shower (It's Saturday)," wasn't as big a hit, but it did reach the Top Ten.

By now, the Lefty Frizzell sound was being perfected by the vocalist and Law. Frizzell was working with a core group of Dallas-based studio musicians, highlighted by pianist Madge Sutee. In the beginning of 1951, he formed the Western Cherokees, which was led by Blackie Crawford. Soon, the Western Cherokees became his primary band for both live and recording situations. Lefty was in the studio frequently, recording singles. His third single, "I Want to Be With You Always," was number one for 11 weeks, and its follow-up, "Always Late (With Your Kisses)," spent 12 weeks at number one. At one point in early 1951, he had a total of four songs in the country Top Ten, setting a record that was never broken. Frizzell was a popular concert attraction, playing shows with the Louisiana Hayride and the Grand Ole Opry. He had three more Top Ten hits in 1951 -- "Mom and Dad's Waltz," "Travelin' Blues," and the number one "Give Me More, More, More (Of Your Kisses)."

The hits continued throughout 1952, as "How Long Will It Take (To Stop Loving You)," "Don't Stay Away (Till Love Grows Cold)," "Forever (And Always)," and "I'm an Old, Old Man (Tryin' to Live While I Can)" all went to the Top Ten. Even though he was at the peak of his popularity, things began to unravel for Lefty behind the scenes. Frizzell fired both his manager and his band. He joined the Grand Ole Opry, but he decided he didn't like it and left almost immediately. Lefty was earning a lot of money but was spending nearly all of it. He worked with Wayne Raney, but the sessions were a failure. In early 1953, he moved from Texas to Los Angeles, where he got a regular job on Town Hall Party. That year, he had only one hit, the Top Ten "(Honey, Baby, Hurry!) Bring Your Sweet Self Back to Me."

Early in 1954, he reached the Top Ten with "Run 'Em Off," but it would be his last Top Ten record for five years. During the mid-'50s, Frizzell felt burned out and didn't have the energy to invest in his career. He had a total of two hits between 1954 and 1959 -- "I Love You Mostly" in 1955, "Cigarettes and Coffee Blues" -- because he decided to stop recording. Lefty was frustrated that Columbia wasn't releasing what he believed to be his best material, so he simply stopped writing and recording songs. However, he did tour sporadically, occasionally with his brother, David Frizzell.

Deciding it was time for a change, he began working with Jim Denny's Nashville-based Cedarwood publishing company in 1959. Cedarwood gave him "The Long Black Veil," a song written by Danny Dill and Marijohn Wilkin that had overt folk music influences. Lefty recorded the song, and it became a surprise Top Ten hit in the summer of 1959. Encouraged by its success, Frizzell moved to Nashville in 1961, after Town Hall Party closed in 1960. He began touring and recording at a more rapid rate, although it only resulted in a couple of minor hits. Lefty's last big hit arrived early in 1964, when "Saginaw, Michigan" climbed to number one and spent four weeks on the top of the charts. After that, he came close to the Top Ten with 1965's "She's Gone Gone Gone," but he usually struggled to have any of his songs break the Top 20 for the next decade.

Frizzell didn't stop recording, but he did develop a debilitating alcohol problem that came to plague him throughout the late '60s and '70s. However, alcohol wasn't the only thing holding his career back -- Columbia was only releasing handfuls of albums and singles, though Lefty was recording an abundance of material. Since his records weren't as successful, he drastically cut back the number of concerts he performed. In 1968, he cut some songs with June Stearns under the name Agnes and Orville, but none of the tracks became hits. The lack of success helped him sink deeper into alcoholism.

In 1972, Lefty left Columbia, signing with ABC Records. Though the change in labels helped revitalize him artistically, he didn't sell that many more records. However, he did have the enthusiasm to record albums, as well as play concerts and television shows. Frizzell's alcohol addiction worsened and he developed high blood pressure, but he wouldn't take the medication because he thought it would interfere with his drinking. As a result, he looked older than his 47 years when he died of a stroke in 1975.

Years of mediocre and mis-marketed records had diminished Lefty's reputation, but after his death, a new generation of artists hailed him as an influence and an idol. Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, and George Jones had all sung his praises before, but in the mid-'80s, the kind words of George Strait and Randy Travis were supported by a series of reissues, beginning with Bear Family's 14-LP set, His Life His Music (later replaced by the 12-CD Life's Like Poetry). In 1982, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, but the greatest testament to his music remains the fact that his voice can be heard in every hard country singer that followed. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Lefty Frizzell

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Lefty Frizzell
Birth name William Orville Frizzell
Also known as Lefty Frizzell
Born March 31, 1928(1928-03-31)
Died July 19, 1975(1975-07-19) (aged 47)
Genres Country Music
Occupations musician, songwriter
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1942 – 1975
Notable instruments
1949 Gibson J-200 (customised)

Lefty Frizzell (March 31, 1928–July 19, 1975), born William Orville Frizzell, was an American country music singer and songwriter of the 1950s, and a proponent of honky tonk music. His relaxed style of singing was an influence on later stars Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, George Jones and John Fogerty. He is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Contents

Biography

Frizzell was born in Corsicana, Texas, but shortly after his birth he moved with his family to El Dorado in southern Arkansas, where the Frizzells remained until the early 1940s. Frizzell began playing the guitar as a young boy. By age 12, he was appearing regularly on a children's show at local radio station KELD-AM. The family returned to Texas when Frizzell was still a teenager, his music career receiving a significant boost when he won a talent contest in Dallas.

Called Sonny by his family, Frizzell got the nickname Lefty at age 14 after a schoolyard scrap, although his record company falsely suggested he had won a Golden Gloves boxing match.[1]

In his late teens, Frizzell was performing at fairgrounds and other venues, developing a unique, soulful voice. Like his father, he worked in the oilfields, but his growing popularity as a singer soon provided regular work on the honky tonk nightclub circuit. At the age of 19, he had a half-hour show on a small Texas radio station, getting a major break when record producer Don Law heard him sing live at the Club Ace of Clubs in Big Spring, Texas. Signed to Columbia Records, he immediately had a string of hits that broke into country music's top ten; several of them reached number one.

In 1950, Frizzell was invited to perform at the Grand Ole Opry; the following year he appeared on Louisiana Hayride in Shreveport, Louisiana, and then he and close friend "Cowboy" Ralph Spicer began touring with country music's biggest star of the era, Hank Williams. Handbills of the time referred to them as "Kings of the Honky Tonks." A prolific songwriter, Frizzell had four songs in the country top ten at the same time in 1951—a feat that would not be repeated on any chart until The Beatles had five songs on the pop chart in 1964.

In 1952, while speeding through Minden, Frizzell crashed his Cadillac into the Elm Street residence of R. Harmon Drew, Sr., the municipal judge and later a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives.

By the end of the 1950s, rock and roll was dominating the American music scene, and although no one would mistake Frizzell's music for anything but country, his 1959 hit, "Long Black Veil", gained wide acceptance with a variety of music fans and was the first recording of this "standard."[citation needed] In 1964, Frizzell recorded "Saginaw, Michigan", which took the top spot on the country music charts and broke into the pop charts as well (No. 85 pop, Joel Whitburn's Top Country Singles). The song earned him a Grammy Award nomination.

In the early 1970s, Frizzell changed record labels and moved to Bakersfield, California, where he recorded several more country music hits and became the first country singer to perform at the Hollywood Bowl. Alcoholism by then, however, was a problem: mood swings and irrational anger became a trademark, and his constant failure to meet recording commitments strained his relationship with his recording company.

In 1972, Frizzell was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and his song "If You've Got the Money I've Got the Time" earned him a Grammy Hall of Fame Award. Success and money only added to Frizzell's alcohol addiction, and on July 19, 1975, at age 47 he died after a massive stroke. He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens in Goodlettsville, Tennessee. In October 1982, Frizzell was posthumously inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Guitar

Frizzell's custom guitar

Frizzell's signature guitar was a Paul Bigsby customized 1949 Gibson J-200 (Model SJ-200). Originally built by the Gibson Guitar Company, it was retrofitted in early 1951 with a custom neck and pickguard by guitar maker and innovator Paul Bigsby. In a 2003 interview Merle Haggard recalled, "When I was a teenager, Lefty got me onstage [at the Rainbow Garden in Bakersfield, California] and handed me that guitar. That is the first guitar I played on a professional stage." For many years it had been on loan to and displayed at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee. In January 2005 it was returned to the Frizzell family.

Legacy and influence

Frizzell statue at Beauford H. Jester Park in his birthplace of Corsicana, Texas

Frizzell's style of singing influenced a great many singers, particularly Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Keith Whitley, and Dwight Yoakam.[2] In addition, he was widely recognized for his songwriting talents. In the foreword to a biography of Frizzell by his younger brother David Frizzell, Merle Haggard said "The impact Lefty had on country music is not even measurable. ... No one could handle a song like Lefty. He would hold on to each word until he finally decided to drop it and pick up the next one. Most of us learned to sing listening to him." [3]

George Strait recorded a Sanger D. Shafer song called "Lefty's Gone" on the album Something Special. In addition, Willie Nelson's 1977 album, To Lefty From Willie was a tribute to Frizzell and consisted entirely of cover versions of Frizzell songs. Frizzell was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1982 and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He is also in the Rockabilly Hall of Fame. Frizzell ranked number 31 on CMT's 2003 40 Greatest Men of Country Music.

Fellow Texan Roy Orbison was a devout fan of Frizzell's sound, and in 1988, as a part of the Traveling Wilburys, he chose the name "Lefty Wilbury" to honor his musical hero.

His younger brother, David Frizzell, is also a country singer. His biggest hits were 1982's "I'm Gonna Hire a Wino (To Decorate Our Home)" and "You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma", a 1981 duet with Shelly West. The youngest brother, Allen Frizzell followed in his older brothers' footsteps in the country field. He opened for Dottie West. He was also married to Shelly West, daughter of Dottie West[citation needed]. Allen also played with Keith Whitley. He now plays country gospel music.

In 2006, J.D. Crowe and The New South released the album Lefty's Old Guitar. The song "Lefty's Old Guitar" was written about his custom Gibson J-200.

Jamey Johnson and Jerrod Niemann have both referenced to Lefty in various songs.

Discography

Albums

Year Album US Country Label
1951 Songs of Jimmie Rodgers Columbia
1952 Listen to Lefty
1959 One and Only
1964 Saginaw, Michigan 2
1965 Sad Side of Love
1966 Greatest Hits
Great Sound
1967 Mom and Dad's Waltz
1968 Puttin' On
Signed, Sealed and Delivered
1973 Lefty Frizzell Sings the Songs of Jimmie Rodgers 27
Mark of Time ABC
1974 The Legendary Lefty Frizzell 37
1975 Classic Style
Remembering... The Greatest Hits of Lefty Frizzell 43 Columbia
1977 ABC Collection ABC

Singles

Year Single Chart Positions Album
US Country US CAN Country
1950 "If You've Got the Money I've Got the Time" 1 Listen to Lefty
"I Love You a Thousand Ways" 1
1951 "Look What Thoughts Will Do" 4
"Shine, Shave, Shower (It's Saturday)" 7 single only
"I Want to Be With You Always" 1 29 Listen to Lefty
"Always Late (With Your Kisses)" 1
"Mom and Dad's Waltz" 2
"Travellin' Blues" 6 Songs of Jimmie Rodgers
1952 "Give Me More, More, More (Of Your Kisses)" 1 singles only
"How Long Will It Take (To Stop Loving You)" 7
"Don't Stay Away (Till Love Grows Cold)" 2 Listen to Lefty
"Forever (And Always)" 6 singles only
1953 "I'm an Old, Old Man (Trying to Live While I Can)" 3
"(Honey, Baby, Hurry!) Bring Your Sweet Self Back to Me" 8
1954 "Run 'Em Off" 8
1955 "I Love You Mostly" 11
1958 "Cigarettes and Coffee Blues" 13
1959 "The Long Black Veil" 6
1963 "Forbidden Lovers" 23
"Don't Let Her See Me Cry" 30 Saginaw, Michigan
1964 "Saginaw, Michigan" 1 85
"The Nester" 28 singles only
1965 "'Gator Hollow" 50
"She's Gone Gone Gone" 12 Sad Side of Love
"A Little Unfair" 36
"Love Looks Good On You" 41
1966 "Mama" Mom and Dad's Waltz
"I Just Couldn't See the Forest (For the Trees)" 51 Puttin' On
1967 "You Gotta Be Puttin' Me On" 49
"Get This Stranger Out of Me" 63
1968 "The Marriage Bit" 59 35 singles only
1969 "An Article from Life" 64
1970 "Watermelon Time in Georgia" 49
1972 "You, Babe" 59
1973 "Let Me Give Her the Flowers" Mark of Time
"I Can't Get Over You to Save My Life" 43 The Legendary Lefty Frizzell
1974 "I Never Go Around Mirrors" 25
"Railroad Lady" 52
"Lucky Arms" 21
1975 "Life's Like Poetry" 67 Classic Style
"Falling" 50 49

Notes

References

  • Cooper, Daniel. (1998). "Lefty Frizzell". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Ed. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 184–6. Lpdiscography.com
  • Frizzell, David. (2011) "I Love You a Thousand Ways: The Lefty Frizzell Story". California: Santa Monica Press, 2011.

External links


 
 
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Somewhere Between (1981 Album by J.D. Crowe & the New South)
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Lefty Frizzell's Greatest Hits (1966 Album by Lefty Frizzell)

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