The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
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RAY PRICE
“FOR THE GOOD TIMES”
(Kris Kristofferson)
Columbia 45178
No. 11 January 2, 1971
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Ray Nobel Price (b. Jan. 12, 1926, Perryville, TX) grew up on a farm, served in the Marines, and attended
the North Texas Agricultural College in Abilene with plans to become a veterinary surgeon. Ray, however,
had been moonlighting–singing under the guise of”The Cherokee Cowboy” at school events–and beginning
in 1948, he appeared on the “Hillbilly Circus” radio show on KRBC. The response was better than he had
hoped, so the next year, he joined KRLD’s “Big D Jamboree” in Dallas. School days were done.
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The program received some network coverage, and soon Price was recording for Bullet, singing on the
Grand Ole Opry, and hanging around with the country legend Hank Williams. Their styles were similar, and
often, when Williams was under the weather and unable to perform, Ray would fill in. Months before
Hank’s death, Price earned his first country charting with “Talk to Your Heart” (#3, 1952), followed by
“Don’t Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes” (#4, 1952). Upon Hank’s death, members of Williams’s Drifting
Cowboys became Price’s band, the Cherokee Cowboys.
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For years, Ray successfully worked the honky-tonk genre. His C & W hit songs are in some cases even well
known to pop/rock fans: “Release Me” (#6, 1954), “If You Don’t Somebody Else Will” (#8, 1954), “Crazy
Arms” (#1, 1956), “My Shoes Keep Walking Back to Me” (#1, 1957), “City Lights” (#1, 1958), “Heartaches by
the Number” (#2, 1959), “Under Your Spell Again” (#5, 1959), and “Make the World Go Away” (#2, 1963).
In all, more than 100 of his 45s have made Billboard’s C & W listings, and Ray was to continue for some
years.
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But 1967 marked a major turning point for Price, pundits claim. The more perceptive detected his future
leanings as early as 1964, in “Burning Memories” (C&W: #2, 1964). Ray abandoned his Texas stylings,
scrapping the fiddle, the steel guitar, and all the other instrumental touches that rural folk considered
“authentic” country. Great numbers of violins–whole symphonies, it seemed–were added, as Ray over
hauled his repertory.
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