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Sheldon - Bob Wills: hubbin it

Here you can read online Sheldon - Bob Wills: hubbin it full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1995, publisher: Country Music Foundation Pr., genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Unavailable for decades, this pioneering biography of the King of Western Swing returns to print in a handsome new edition with photographs, index, and a new critical introduction.Few figures in country musics history have left as distinctive and lasting an impression as Bob Wills (1905-1975). An expert fiddler and a magnetic showman, Wills popularized a style of Southwestern dance music known as western swing, a rhythmic hybrid of Texas fiddle music, blues, and big band swing that set dance halls alight across the Southwest in the thirties and forties. Despite his passing, his legacy has been carried forward in the music of such modern stars as Merle Haggard and George Strait.In 1938, when Wills was thirty-three and nearing the height of his fame, journalist Ruth Sheldon chronicled the rags-to-riches rise of this talented musician, showing remarkable foresight in her choice of subject. Working with the complete cooperation of Wills, Sheldon produced a biography that fully captures the ebullient personality of Wills and reflects the bandleaders vision of himself.Noted country music historian Bill C. Malone has praised Hubbin It as a pioneering biography, a landmark in the recording of country music history. Now restored to print for the first time since its initial 1938 publication, Hubbin It provides a fascinating window into the daily life of a working musician during the Depression. It is a rich source of historical detail on the life of one of Americas great musical innovators.Distributed for the Country Music Foundation Press

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Bob Wills Hubbin It By Ruth Shelton INTRODUCTION BY CHARLES R - photo 1
Bob Wills Hubbin' It
By
Ruth Shelton
INTRODUCTION BY CHARLES R. TOWNSEND
Country Music Foundation Press
Nashville, Tennessee

title:Bob Wills Hubbin' It
author:Sheldon, Ruth.
publisher:Vanderbilt University Press
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9780915608188
ebook isbn13:9780585132488
language:English
subjectWills, Bob,--1905-1975, Western swing (Music).
publication date:1995
lcc:ML422.W6S54 1995eb
ddc:780.92
subject:Wills, Bob,--1905-1975, Western swing (Music).
Page ii
Country Music Foundation Press
4 Music Square East
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
1995 by Country Music Foundation Press
All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America
Published privately in 1938 as Hubbin' It: The Life of Bob Wills by Ruth Sheldon
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 95-068520
ISBN 0-915608-18-9
Page iii
Contents
Introduction
Charles R. Townsend
V
Author's Note
1
Prelude
3
Chapter One
A Fiddler Is Born
5
Chapter Two
Escape From Cotton
13
Chapter Three
Kicking The Traces
27
Chapter Four
A Barber and His Fiddle
41
Chapter Five
Iron Bars Free a Prisoner
49
Chapter Six
Black Face and Black Times
52
Chapter Seven
A Taste of Fame Turns Sour
60
Chapter Eight
Before the Dawn
75
Chapter Nine
"Paths of Glory"
84
Songs
92
Index
97

Page v
Introduction
First of all, I want to thank the Country Music Foundation for asking me to write a few pages that will introduce you to Ruth Sheldon's Hubbin' It: The Life of Bob Wills (as originally titled). I thank the Foundation, mainly, because this new edition affords me the opportunity to mention how Ms. Sheldon's book influenced my own life. The story is remarkable but a bit eerie. If there is such a thing as destiny, then I was destined to read her biography of Bob Wills. You might say the first book I ever read was Sheldon's life of Wills. By the age of eight I had read Dick, Jane and Spot, and I had given a cursory reading to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. I just did not like to read. In 1938, Hubbin' It was advertised on Wills's noon radio broadcasts over KVOO in Tulsa. Our entire family loved Bob Wills's music and would have loved to have seen the book, perhaps even own it. But the price for the book and a framable photo of Bob was $1.00. That was a day's work in 1938, and my father was out of work, dying of tuberculosis. My oldest sister had married a lawyer in Louisianaand had money. She bought the book for my father, and he read it before he died, in the year of its publication, 1938. Other than the Bible and some World Books, Sheldon's was the only book in our home. Oh, I hated to read, but for Bob Wills I risked the pain. Happily, it was not painful at all. I loved it! Little did I know that thirty-nine years later, I would write the next biography of Wills, San Antonio Rose: The Life and Music of Bob Wills (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976). Enough to make one believe there is destiny.
I still own that family treasure that I read at age eight while growing up on my granddad's ranch near Nocona, Texas. Hubbin' It has long been out of print, and we are all indebted to the Country Music Foundation for making it available once again. Ruth Sheldon was decades ahead of the times in writing this book. If she was not the first to write a biography of a popular musical figure, she was among the first. This is especially true for biographies in what was later called country and western music. That she could have anticipated Wills's star rising to the extent it did and that she judged the thirty-three-year-old
Page vi
bandleader worthy of a biography is phenomenal. Yet with the exception of the fans who purchased it in the late thirties and early forties, the book, which had been privately published in Tulsa, was almost forgotten until the revival of western swing music in the seventies. Interest in Hubbin' It since that time reflects a growing sophistication in both fans and scholars of American music.
It is not clear why Ruth Sheldon wrote the book. Her "Author's Note" says that she was a reporter for the Tulsa Tribune and had become interested in Wills when she wrote a feature article on him. Out of that initial article came the idea for Hubbin' It. Like many writers, she may have been looking for a subject for a book and had the intelligence and vision to see in Wills the ideal subject. When I was researching my biography of Wills in the early seventies, she told me that she and Wills had collaborated on the work as an image-builder to enhance Wills's career. It could be that fans, family, and friends suggested the need for a biography. From my own knowledge of Wills's mind, I think one thing is certain. The idea did not come from him. He was much too humble to have even thought of a biography of himself and most certainly would never have suggested it. Even in the early seventies after he had become an internationally known figure, at the time I was interviewing him for my biography, he never once indicated he was worthy of a biographical study. I have always believed the reason he allowed me to interview him on numerous occasions and write the book was that he wanted someone to talk with him about American music (he had suffered a stroke and was bedfast at the time).
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