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- Duration: 4:15
- Published: 2007-12-29
- Uploaded: 2010-12-16
- Author: BransonMusicFactory
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Name | George Jones | |
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Landscape | | |
Background | solo_singer | |
Birth name | George Glenn Jones | |
Alias | No Show Jones The Possum Thumper Jones "Buns" McGuirk | |
Born | September 12, 1931 Saratoga, Texas, USA | |
Origin | Vidor, Texas, USA | |
Instrument | acoustic guitar vocals | |
Genre | country | |
Occupation | singer-songwriter | |
Years active | 1954 – Present |
Label | Starday Mercury United Artists Musicor Epic MCA Nashville Asylum Bandit |
Associated acts | Tammy Wynette | |
Url | www.GeorgeJones.com | |
Over the past 20 years, Jones has frequently been referred to as "the greatest living country singer." Country music scholar Bill C. Malone writes, "For the two or three minutes consumed by a song, Jones immerses himself so completely in its lyrics, and in the mood it conveys, that the listener can scarcely avoid becoming similarly involved."
Throughout his long career, Jones made headlines often as much for tales of his drinking, stormy relationships with women, and violent rages as for his prolific career of making records and touring. His wild lifestyle led to Jones missing many performances, earning him the nickname "No Show Jones." With the help of his fourth wife, Nancy, he has been sober for many years. Jones has had more than 150 hits during his career, both as a solo artist and in duets with other artists. The shape of his nose and facial features have given Jones the nickname "The Possum." Jones said in an interview that he has chosen to tour only about 60 dates a year.
Jones left home at 16 and headed for Jasper, Texas where he found work singing and playing on a local radio station. Before he was out of his teens he married his first wife, Dorothy, but their union didn't last a full year and Jones joined the United States Marine Corps. Despite the Korean War being fought at the time Jones was not sent overseas; instead, he sang in bars near his base in California. After leaving the Marine Corps his music career took off.
The riding mower incident was not a one-time event. Former wife Tammy Wynette recalled in her 1979 autobiography.
Jones later jokingly sang of the lawn mower incident in his 1996 single "Honky Tonk Song", and parodied his own arrest in the song's music video.
In the 1970s, Jones was introduced to cocaine by a manager before a show in which he was too tired to perform. This accelerated his already unpredictable actions. His self-destructive bent brought him close to death and to the inside of a psychiatric hospital in Alabama at the end of the decade. Although somewhat celebrated by some of his fans as the hard-drinkin', fast-livin' spiritual-son of his idol, Hank Williams, he missed so many booked engagements that he became known as "No-Show Jones." (The song "No-Show Jones" makes fun of the foibles and weaknesses of Jones and other country singers.) He was often broke and later admitted that friends Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash came to his aid financially during this period.
Poking fun at his past, two country music videos would feature Jones arriving on a riding lawn mower. The first was Hank Williams, Jr's "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight" in 1984 while the second was Vince Gill's "One More Last Chance" in 1993. Gill's song mentioned the mower with the lines "She might have took my car keys, but she forgot about my old John Deere." At the end of Gill's video, he is leaving the golf course on a John Deere tractor and greets Jones with "Hey, possum." Jones, arriving at the golf course driving a John Deere riding lawn mower with a set of golf clubs mounted behind him, replies to Gill "Hey, sweet pea."
Jones has received many awards during his long career, from Most Promising New Country Vocalist in 1956 to being named a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2008.
Jones was also a judge for the 8th annual Independent Music Awards to support independent artists' careers.
Category:1931 births Category:Living people Category:Baptists from the United States Category:American buskers Category:American country musicians Category:American country singers Category:American male singers Category:Country Music Hall of Fame inductees Category:Epic Records artists Category:Grammy Award winners Category:Grand Ole Opry members Category:Mercury Records artists Category:People from Beaumont, Texas Category:Starday Records artists Category:United States Marines Category:United States National Medal of Arts recipients Category:United Artists Records artists
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