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He is a guitarist, bassist, producer and songwriter born
in Owasso, Oklahoma,
who started his career in music in 1949 when he became a member of the Oklahoma
Swingbillies.
Moving into the 1950s he began playing the guitar in Miami,
Oklahoma with the fiddler Art Davis and
followed that by moving to Wichita, Kansas,
and accompanying Jimmy Hall, also a fiddler.
In 1952 he went back home to Oklahoma
and became a member of the Jonnie Lee Wills Band in Tulsa. The following year he started his
own band which performed at the Southern Club in Lawton,
Oklahoma, and were known as The Southernaires.
Everything changed for him in 1958 when he went to
perform at a recording in Clovis, New
Mexico and met up with Buddy Holly. Before long he was a member of Buddy
Holly & The Crickets and became the first guitarist to play a solo one
of their recordings. Sometime
later on in 1959, when they were going to a location on their tour, there was
a coin toss up between him and Richie
Valens as to which one went on the fateful flight
which took all the lives of the passengers. In 1979, many years after the tragic
event, he opened the club Tommy’s Heads Up Saloon in Fort
Worth, Texas, in memory of
his narrow escape.
Needing to make an unwanted move following the loss of
Buddy Holly, he moved to Liberty Records in California
to take up the position of their country & western A&R Director and
producer of Bob Wills & The Texas Playboys. He remained working with Bob Wills
until 1973 when he recorded his final album For the Last Time. During
his years at Liberty he also
produced artists that included Joe Carson, Willie Nelson, Tex Williams and
many others.
In 1968 he made the moved to Nashville
to become the head of Metromedia Records. 4 years later he produced Ray Benson
and Asleep at the Wheel for their debut album with the United Artist label
and produced a further four albums for them when they recorded for Capital
Records. He went on to produce and
perform on many further albums in Nashville,
often in the Western Swing genre and remains active in the music industry there
to this day.
His work as a songwriter included credits on “Guitar
Twist” by The Ventures.
During the course of his career he has worked with
numerous artists either as a guitarist, bassist and/or producer. Just a few of these include Moe
Bandy, Johnny Burnette, Vickie Carr, David Allen
Coe, Narvel Felts, Janie Fricke, Doug Kershaw, Julie
London, Reba McEntire, Bill Medley, Melba
Montgomery, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich, Del
Shannon, Warren Smith, Joe Stampley, Ernest Tubb, Bobby Vee, Gene Watson
and Dwight Yoakam.
Just a fraction of the recordings he has worked on
include his own Buddy Holly Songbook
as well as Ride With Bob by
Asleep at the Wheel, Gone Girl by
Johnny Cash, Somethin’ Else: The Ultimate Collection
by Eddy Cochran, Two Sides of ‘Crash’
by Billy “Crash” Craddock, Heartaches
and Harmonies by The Everly Brothers, Chirpin’ Crickets by Buddy Holly, Clovis to Phoenix: The Early Years
by Waylon Jennings, My Very Special Guests
by George Jones, Mercury Smashes…and
Rockin’ Sessions by Jerry Lee Lewis, Nashville Hit Man by Charlie McCoy, Chain Lightning by Don McLean, Best Of... by Willie Nelson, Everybody’s Got a Family Meet Mine
by Johnny Paycheck, Unbreakable Hearts by Hargus “Pig”
Robbins, Under Western Skies by
Marty Robbins, The Gambler by
Kenny Rogers, Will o’ the Wisp
by Leon Russell, Say Has Anybody Seen
My Sweet Gypsy Rose by Terry Stafford, Yodeling/Country Songs/City Hits by Slim Whitman and Legends of Country Music by Bob
Wills & His Texas Playboys.
He is estimated to have made at least a staggering 6,500
recordings as a guitarist and/or bassist and such is the mark he has made
on the music industry that he was made a member of the Oklahoma Hall of
Fame and the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.
Aside from that, Paul McCartney calls him “one of the finest
guitar players in the world” and there is a book being written about
him and his career.
Hargus "Pig" Robbins recordings
Unbreakable
Hearts
Elektra (E-46512-A) (US promo 45)
Sources:
- http://www.rockabillyhall.com/TommyAllsup1.html
- http://www.omhof.com/Inductees/BYYEAR/tabid/86/ItemID/22/Default.aspx
- http://www.modernguitars.com/archives/003124.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Allsup
- http://uk.ask.com/music/artist//12187
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:09fixqq5ldhe~1~T40B
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:09fixqq5ldhe~2~T40B
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