Johnny Horton
Wikimp3 information about the music of Johnny Horton. On our website we have 70 albums and 70 collections of artist Johnny Horton. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Johnny Horton represents Country genres.
Biography
[Edit]Although he is better-remembered for his historical songs, Johnny Horton was one of the best and most popular honky tonk singers of the late '50s. Horton managed to infuse honky tonk with an urgent rockabilly underpinning. His career may have been cut short by a fatal car crash in 1960, but his music reverberated throughout the next three decades.
Horton was born in Los Angeles in 1925, the son of sharecropping parents. During his childhood, his family continually moved between California and Texas, in an attempt to find work. His mother taught him how to play guitar at the age of 11. Horton graduated from high school in 1944 and attended a Methodist seminary with the intent of joining a ministry. After a short while, he left the seminary and began traveling across the country, eventually moving to Alaska in 1949 to become a fisherman. While he was in Alaska, he began writing songs in earnest.
The following year, Horton moved back to east Texas, where he entered a talent contest hosted by Jim Reeves, who was then an unknown vocalist. He won the contest, which encouraged him to pursue a career as a performer. Horton started out by playing talent contests throughout Texas, which is where he gained the attention of Fabor Robison, a music manager that was notorious for his incompetence and his scams. In early 1951, Robison became Horton's manager and managed to secure him a recording contract with Corman Records. However, shortly after his signing, the label folded. Robison then founded his own label, Abbott Records, with the specific intent of recording Horton. None of these records had any chart success. During 1951, Horton began performing on various Los Angeles TV shows and hosted a radio show in Pasadena, where he performed under the name "the Singing Fisherman." By early 1952, Robison had moved Horton to Mercury Records.
At the end of 1951, Horton relocated from California to Shreveport, LA, where he became a regular on the Louisiana Hayride. However, Lousiana was filled with pitfalls — his first wife left him shortly after the move, and Robison severed all ties with Horton when he became Reeves' manager. During 1952, Hank Williams rejoined the cast of the Hayride and became a kind of mentor for Horton. After Williams died on New Year's Eve of 1952, Horton became close with his widow, Billie Jean; the couple married in September of 1953.
Although he had a regular job on the Hayride, Horton's recording career was going nowhere — none of his Mercury records were selling, and rock & roll was beginning to overtake country's share of the market place. Horton's fortunes changed in the latter half of 1955, when he hired Webb Pierce's manager Tillman Franks as his own manager and quit Mercury Records. Franks had Pierce help him secure a contract for Horton with Columbia Records by the end of 1955. The change in record labels breathed life into Horton's career. At his first Columbia session, he cut "Honky Tonk Man," his first single for the label and one that would eventually become a honky tonk classic. By the spring of 1956, the song had reached the country Top Ten and Horton was well on his way to becoming a star.
"Honky Tonk Man" was edgy enough to have Horton grouped in on the more country-oriented side of rockabilly. Wearing a large cowboy hat to hide his receding hairline, he became a popular concert attraction and racked up three more hit singles — "I'm a One-Woman Man" (number seven), "I'm Coming Home" (number 11), "The Woman I Need" (number nine) — in the next year. However, the hits dried up just as quickly as they arrived; for the latter half of 1957 and 1958, he didn't hit the charts at all. Horton responded by cutting some rockabilly, which was beginning to fall out of favor by the time his singles were released.
In the fall of 1958, he bounced back with the Top Ten "All Grown Up," but it wasn't until the ballad "When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)" hit the charts in early 1959 that he achieved a comeback. The song fit neatly into the folk-based story songs that were becoming popular in the late '50s, and it climbed all the way to number one. Its success inspired his next single, "The Battle of New Orleans." Taken from a 1958 Jimmie Driftwood album, the song was a historical saga song like "When It's Springtime in Alaska," but it was far more humorous. It was also far more successful, topping the country charts for ten weeks and crossing over into the pop charts, where it was number one for six weeks. After the back-to-back number one successes of "When It's Spring Time in Alaska" and "The Battle of New Orleans," Horton concentrated solely on folky saga songs. "Johnny Reb" became a Top Ten hit in the fall of 1959, and "Sink the Bismarck" was a Top Ten hit in the spring of 1960, followed by the number one hit "North to Alaska" in the fall of 1960.
Around the time of "North to Alaska"'s November release, Horton claimed that he was getting premonitions of an early death. Sadly, his premonitions came true. On November 4, 1960, he suffered a car crash driving home to Shreveport after a concert in Austin, TX. Horton was still alive after the wreck, but he died on the way to the hospital; the other passengers in his car had severe injuries, but they survived. Although he died early in his career, Horton left behind a recorded legacy that proved to be quite influential. Artists like George Jones and Dwight Yoakam have covered his songs, and echoes of Horton's music can still be heard in honky tonk and country-rock music well into the '90s.
Title: The Golden Rocket: The 1951-1960 Rockin' Honky Tonk Recordings
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Country
Title: Honky Tonk Cowboy - The Best of Johnny Horton
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Rock, Country, Rockabilly
Title: Live Recordings from the Louisiana Hayride: Johnny Horton
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Rock, Country, Rockabilly
Title: The Johnny Horton Singles Collection 1950-60 (CD1)
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Country, Rockabilly
Title: The Battle of New Orleans (Digitally Remastered)
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Rock, Country, Rockabilly, Pop
Title: Honky-Tonk Man (Remastered) - Single
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Rock, Country, Rockabilly, Pop
Title: Honky Tonk Man: The Essential Johnny Horton, 1956-1960
Artist: Johnny Horton
Genre: Rock, Country, Rockabilly
Collections
Title: I Love the 50's Vol. 2
Genre: Pop
Title: 100 Rare '50s Rockabilly Tracks
Genre: Rock, Rockabilly
Title: Christmas All Over the World, Vol. 1
Genre:
Title: Moochin' Abouts Stateside Hitlist 1959
Genre: Pop
Title: Christmas Cheer! Kid's Holiday Music
Genre: Kids
Title: The 50 Best Protest Songs Ever
Genre: World Music, Folk
Title: Christmas Favorites, Vol. 1
Genre:
Title: Mambo! 100 Popular Latin Dance Classics
Genre: Latin
Title: The 1959 British Hit Parade the B Sides, Pt. 1, Vol. 2
Genre: Pop
Title: Music We Grew up With, Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: The Hits of 1962, Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: A Variety of Hits, Vol. 3
Genre: Pop
Title: The Hits of 1959, Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: Pop of the 60s, Vol. 3
Genre: Pop
Title: Fifty #1 Hits of the '50s
Genre: Pop
Title: Funny Christmas Songs
Genre: Kids
Title: Jolly Old Christmas
Genre:
Title: We All Love Our Mums (Classic Mother's Day Songs, Vol. 4)
Genre: Pop
Title: Greatest Hits of 1960, Vol. 8
Genre: Pop
Title: Classic Country and Western Cowboy Songs
Genre: Country
Title: Star Spangled Country
Genre: Country
Title: Most Essential Country Classics
Genre: Country
Title: The 50 Best Country Songs Ever
Genre: Country
Title: Country Crunch, Vol. 3
Genre: Country
Title: Country Crunch, Vol. 5
Genre: Country
Title: Radio Classics of the 50's
Title: Christmas Favorites, Vol. 1
Genre: Traditional Pop Music
Title: Country Train Songs
Genre: Country
Title: Classic Folk Masters
Genre: Country
Title: Almost Big Hits of 1962, Vol. 6 (Original Recordings)
Genre: Pop
Title: Folk Is Goin' On
Genre: Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist
Title: Crazy Redneck Songs: Country Music for Real Rednecks
Genre: Country
Title: Discover 50s Country
Genre: Country
Title: America's Greatest Hits 1960 Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: Gli anni 50: il meglio (100 HIts)
Genre: Pop
Title: Columbia Country Classics, Vol. 3: Americana
Genre: Country
Title: Christmas Classics for Kids
Genre:
Title: Classic Country - Critics Hall of Fame
Genre: Country
Title: Country Road Songs
Genre: Country
Title: Top 20 Country
Genre: Country
Title: Country Heartaches, Country Heartbreaks
Genre: Country
Title: Country Classics, Vol. 2
Genre: Country
Title: Big Hits & Highlights of 1959, Vol. 8
Genre: Pop
Title: King of the Road - Country Driving Songs
Genre: Country
Title: Greatest Big Hits of 1961, Vol. 4
Genre: Pop
Title: Country: Hits
Genre: Country
Title: Sun Records - Country Archive
Genre: Country
Title: Country: The American Tradition
Genre: Country
Title: Sons of Guns
Genre: Country
Title: Country Number 1 Hits Of 1961
Genre: Pop
Title: Hits of Honky Tonk
Genre: Country
Title: Best Country Gentlemen
Genre: Country
Title: 15 Classic Country Songs
Genre: Country
Title: Discover American Country
Genre: Country
Title: Country Classics Vol 1
Genre: Country
Title: Louisiana Hayride - Classic Country Radio Volume 1
Genre: Country
Title: It's All In The Name - The Boys
Genre: Pop
Title: Country Crunch, Vol. 2
Genre: Country
Title: Big Hits & Highlights of 1959, Vol. 3
Genre: Pop
Title: Rockabilly Rock
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk Rock
Title: Rockabillly Revolution
Genre: Country
Featuring albums
Title: Songs From the Mojave Wasteland - In a Fallout New Vegas Mood
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Country
Title: Los Gatos Negros. Todas Sus Grabaciones (1962-1966) (Remastered) (CD1)
Artist: Los Gatos Negros
Genre: Pop
Title: American Heartbeat - The '60s (CD2)
Artist: American Heartbeat
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Gospel, Rock & Roll, Country, Rockabilly, Pop