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Spade Cooley

 
Artist: Spade Cooley
See Spade Cooley Lyrics
  • Born: December 17, 1910, Grand, OK
  • Died: November 23, 1969, Vacaville, CA
  • Active: '40s, '50s
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Fiddle
  • Representative Albums: "Spadella: The Essential Spade Cooley," "Sagebrush Swing," "Columbia Historic Edition"
  • Representative Songs: "Shame on You," "Crazy 'Cause I Love You," "Steel Guitar Rag"

Biography

A musician and actor whose often sordid private life tended to overshadow his career as an entertainer, Spade Cooley was the self-proclaimed King of Western Swing, an innovator who at his peak led the largest band ever assembled in the annals of country music. The product of a multi-generational family of fiddle players, Donnell Clyde Cooley was born in Oklahoma in 1910, and at the age of four, his family moved to Oregon. Despite his impoverished background, Cooley was a classically trained fiddler, and by the time he was eight years old, he was performing professionally at square dances with his father John. In 1930, Cooley (who received his nickname thanks to his poker skills) moved to Los Angeles, playing with a number of western-oriented acts. By the mid-'30s, he was working as an actor, with bit parts in several Westerns; for Republic Studios, he served as Roy Rogers' stand-in. He also toured with Rogers as a fiddle player, and handled vocal duties with the Riders of the Purple Sage.

Cooley did not begin a recording career until 1941, when he entered the studio while a member of Cal Shrum's band. A year later, he took control of bandleader Jimmy Wakely's group, the house band at Santa Monica, CA's Venice Pier Ballroom, and their Western swing music began attracting thousands of fans each Saturday night. The densely populated band, home to as many as three vocalists and fiddlers at a time, featured singer Tex Williams and guitarists Joaquin Murphey and John O. Weis. In 1945, Spade Cooley & His Orchestra's first single, "Shame on You," lasted nine weeks atop Billboard's country charts. The first in an unbroken string of six Top Ten singles (including "Detour" and "You Can't Break My Heart"), "Shame on You" would remain Cooley's theme song for years to come. Also in 1945, he married his second wife, Orchestra backup singer Ella Mae Evans. Ultimately, the Orchestra's success led to the dissolution of its most popular lineup; by 1946, Williams, the vocalist on all of the group's hits, was demanding more money, and Cooley refused to pay it. As a result, Williams quit, taking much of the Orchestra with him to form the Western Caravan. In 1947, Cooley began a career in television, hosting a program in Los Angeles titled The Hoffman Hayride. The show's popularity grew quickly, and within months an estimated 75 percent of all televisions in the L.A. area tuned into the show each Saturday night. He also resumed his film career, this time with much higher visibility; in addition to significant roles in a number of Westerns, he also starred in two 1949 short subjects, King of Western Swing and Spade Cooley & His Orchestra.

Throughout the early '50s, Cooley continued to record, but the group's popularity waned as public tastes changed; after a time, he even fired the Orchestra to replace its members with an all-female band. A heavy drinker, Cooley descended into alcoholism as his career declined, and he suffered a series of minor heart attacks. Furthermore, he was facing financial ruin as a result of problems with a planned water theme park to be located in the Mojave Desert. In 1961, his wife Ella Mae left him; after an argument on April 3, he stomped her to death while the couple's 14-year-old daughter Melody looked on in horror. The resulting trial, a media circus during which Cooley suffered another heart attack, culminated in a sentence of life imprisonment. Throughout his term, he was a model prisoner, and thus was allowed to perform at a sheriff's benefit in Oakland, CA, on November 23, 1969. After playing in front of a crowd of over 3,000, Cooley returned to his dressing room, suffered yet another heart attack, and died. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Spade Cooley
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Spade Cooley
Birth name Donnell Clyde Cooley
Also known as King of Western Swing
Born December 17, 1910(1910-12-17)
Origin Pack Saddle Creek, Oklahoma
Died November 23, 1969 (aged 58)
Genres Western Swing
Occupations Big band leader
Actor
Television personality

Donnell Clyde 'Spade' Cooley (December 17, 1910November 23, 1969) was an American Western Swing musician, big band leader, actor, and television personality. His career ended when he was arrested and convicted for the murder of his second wife, Ella Mae Evans.[1]

Contents

Show business career

One of the groups which played at the Venice Pier Ballroom was run by Jimmy Wakely and they had Spade Cooley on fiddle. Several thousand dancers would turn out on Saturday night to swing and hop. "The hoards of people and jitterbuggers loved him." When Jimmy Wakely got a movie contract at Universal, that had Spade replacing Jimmy as head of the band.[2]

To capitalize on the success of the Bob Wills/Tommy Duncan pairing, Cooley hired vocalist Tex Williams who was capable of the mellow deep baritone sounds made popular by Duncan. Cooley's eighteen-month engagement at Santa Monica's Venice Pier Ballroom was record-breaking for the early half of the 1940s. His "Shame On You," released on Columbia's OKeh label, was recorded in December 1944, and was No. 1 on the country charts for two months.[1] "Shame on You" was the first in an unbroken string of six Top Ten singles including "Detour" and "You Can't Break My Heart."

Cooley appeared in thirty-eight westerns, both in bit parts and as a stand in for cowboy actor Roy Rogers. He also hosted a Los Angeles based syndicated television show from 1949 until 1959. The Hoffman Hayride was so popular that an estimated 75 percent of all televisions in the L.A. area were tuned into the show each Saturday night. In 1950 Cooley had significant roles in several films, and starred in two film shorts: "King of Western Swing" and "Spade Cooley & His Orchestra."

After a "Battle of the Bands" with Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys at the Venice Pier Ballroom, which Cooley won, he began to promote himself as the "King of Western Swing."[3] Evidently Western swing, not used prior to 1942 for this style of music, was a term thought up by Cooley's then promoter, Forman Phillips.[4] Following Waylon Jennings' 1975 #1 hit, "Bob Wills Is Still The King," Wills's fans transferred the title "King" to Wills.

Cooley's sound was closer to, and isolated in the style of, conventional big band dance-oriented pop orchestras. Whereas Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys used far more diverse fusions of multi-genres, through which they popularized, defined, and evolved what is now recognized as true Western Swing. This diversity allowed for Wills to reach wider audiences, as was found in Cain's Ballroom culture. Cooley's specialized, 'city sound' of the period popular culture accounts for his work having been popular with limited mainstream audiences during his 1940s and 1950s heyday, but at the same time not having enjoyed the diverse and continuing popularity of Wills.

Murder of Ella Mae Evans

In 1961, his wife expressed her wish to be divorced, and a drunken Cooley responded by beating her and stomping on her body until she died. During the trial Cooley suffered a heart attack while he was delivered his prison sentence. After serving eight years of his sentence, the state of California gave him a temporary furlough in order to play a benefit concert for the Deputy Sheriffs Association of Alameda County at the Paramount Theater in Oakland. After the performance, he suffered a fatal heart attack in the backstage area.

Discography

Selected Discography
Date Title Label
1941 Tell Me Why Westernair 801
05/03/46 Oklahoma Stomp Columbia 20573
05/03/46 Steel Guitar Rag Columbia 39054
06/06/46 Spadella Columbia 37585
06/06/46 Swingin' the Devil's Dream Columbia 28253
04/25/47 All Aboard for Oklahoma RCA 20-2552
01/31/47 Minuet in Swing RCA 20-22181
05/09/47 You Can't Take Texas out of Me RCA 20-3547
05/29/52 One Sweet Letter from You Decca 28344
Top 40 Hits.[5]
Year Position Title Label
1945 1 Shame On You OKeh 6731
8 A Pair of Broken Hearts "
4 I've Taken All I'm Gonna Take from You OKeh 6746
1946 2 Detour Columbia 36935
3 You Can't Break My Heart "
1947 4 Crazy 'Cause I Love You Columbia 37058


In popular culture

John Gilmore has written an in-depth portrait of Spade Cooley's life and tragic end in Shame on You, a segment of Gilmore's non-fiction work, L.A. Despair.

Cooley is a recurring character in James Ellroy's fiction, including in the story Dick Contino's Blues, which appeared in issue number 46 of Granta magazine (Winter 1994) and was anthologized in Hollywood Nocturnes.

It has been reported that Dennis Quaid plans to make a bio-pic about Cooley.

Spade Cooley is the grandfather of Mike Cooley, singer, guitarist, song writer and founding member of the rock band Drive-By Truckers.

Referenced in one of the classic 39 Honeymooners episodes (from Art 'Ed Norton' Carney to Jackie 'Ralph Kramden' Gleason): "They wouldn't-a won that except some guy slipped in a Spade Cooley record."

Ry Cooder's 2008 album 'I, Flathead' features a reference to Spade Cooley on the track 'Steel Guitar Heaven' ("There ain't no bosses up in heaven / I heard Spade Cooley didn't make the grade"), as well as a track named 'Spayed Kooley', in which Spayed Kooley is the name of the singer's dog.

References

  1. ^ a b Crimelibrary.com
  2. ^ L.A. Despair: A Landscape of Crimes & Bad Times. John Gilmore. 2005. Amok Books. Page 313. ISBN 9781878923165 ISBN 1878923161
  3. ^ Komorowski, Spade Cooley, p. 4: "It was around this time [1942] that Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys come out West, and when Cooley fell out with Phillips, the promoter sacked him and hired Bob Wills in his place. A cocksure Cooley demanded a 'Battle of The Bands' before he vacated the Venice Pier, and in a contest held over two weekends, emerged the undisputed winner. He promptly proclaimed himself the 'King of Western Swing', the first time the term was used to describe this style of music, and it was one that stuck."
  4. ^ Logsdon, "The Cowboy's Bawdy Music," p.137: "The term 'western swing' was not used until Foreman Phillips, a promoter-disc jockey, used it to describe Spade Cooley in 1942."
  5. ^ Whitburn, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits, p. 89.

Bibliography

  • Logsdon, Guy. "The Cowboy's Bawdy Music." The Cowboy: Six-Shooters, Songs, and Sex (pp. 139–138) edited by Charles W. Harris and Buck Rainey. University of Oklahoma Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8061-1341-3
  • Komorowski, Adam. Spade Cooley: Swingin' The Devil's Dream. (Proper PVCD 127, 2003) booklet.
  • Whitburn, Joel. The Billboard Book of Top 40 Country Hits. Billboard Books, 2006. ISBN 0-8230-8291-1

External links


 
 
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Western Swing, Vol. 3 (Album by Various Artists)
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