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Home arrow News arrow Country Music Hall of Fame To Honor Marty Robbins With New Exhibit

Country Music Hall of Fame To Honor Marty Robbins With New Exhibit

Country Music Hall of Fame

NASHVILLE, Tenn., April 2, 2007 – The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum will pay tribute to one of the genre’s most charismatic and well-rounded stars, Marty Robbins, with the cameo exhibition Marty Robbins: Among My Souvenirs. Among My Souvenirs will open in the Museum’s East Gallery on August 3, 2007, and will run through June 2008.

Robbins was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in October 1982, only seven weeks before he passed away at the age of 57.

"Marty Robbins was one of the most versatile performers in American music history," said Museum Director Kyle Young. "Throughout his career, he recorded country, western, rockabilly, Hawaiian music, gospel and pop with equal mastery. He was a showman who engaged fans and created excitement whenever he took the stage. Factor in that he was also a songwriter, businessman, actor, author and stockcar racer, and you have a Renaissance man with few equals."

An Arizona native, Marty Robbins was born into a poverty-stricken family and endured a difficult childhood. After dropping out of high school, he joined the U.S. Navy and saw action in the Pacific Theater in World War II.

Upon his return home to Arizona in the mid-1940s, Robbins began pursuing a career in music and soon had his own radio and TV shows on KPHO in Phoenix. His big break came in 1951 when Little Jimmy Dickens guested on his TV show: Dickens was so impressed with Robbins' talent that he encouraged his record company, Columbia Records, to offer Marty a contract. The label obliged and, except for the period 1972-74, when he recorded for Decca/MCA Records, Robbins remained with Columbia throughout his career.

During the ensuing decades, Robbins had nearly 100 charted hits, including 16 #1s. In 1953, he joined the Grand Ole Opry and moved to Nashville. Two years later, he charted with rockabilly songs and began to establish his crossover capability. In September 1956, Robbins' recording of "Singing the Blues" hit #1 on Billboard's country chart and hit the Top Twenty on the pop chart. His crossover success continued with a series of hits he recorded with the Ray Conniff Singers, in 1957 and 1958, aimed at the teen pop market. One of those songs, "A White Sport Coat (and a Pink Carnation)," became a huge crossover hit. Other songs from those sessions included "The Story of My Life" and "The Hanging Tree." It was during this same period that Robbins also released the first of several Hawaiian music albums, Song of the Islands.

An excellent songwriter, Robbins wrote many of his biggest hits. Originally signed by Acuff-Rose Publications in 1952, he later established his own music publishing company, a booking and management agency, and an independent record label.

Despite his propensity for so many styles of music, Robbins' strongest love was for the music and stories of the Old West. His signature song, the self-penned "El Paso," was released in October 1959 and won Robbins his first Grammy. Robbins' album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs became a hit the same year; along with "El Paso," the record included the classics "Big Iron," "Cool Water" and "Running Gun." Other western albums followed. Robbins also authored the book The Small Man, a western novel.

Following in the tradition of his idol Gene Autry, Robbins starred in a number of movies and TV series. Beginning in the 1950s, he made more than a dozen western- or country music-themed films, and his TV credits include Western Caravan, The Drifter, The Marty Robbins Show and Marty Robbins Spotlight.

Robbins was also known for his dynamic live performances, and had a close relationship with his fans, who called themselves "Marty's Army." He joked and flirted with the audience between songs and never failed to give fans their money's worth; he even created an Opry tradition of performing beyond his allotted time period, to the fans' delight.

In August 1969 Robbins suffered a heart attack, and in January 1970 underwent then-experimental bypass surgery. After a successful recovery, Robbins was honored in April by the Academy of Country Music as its "Man of the Decade." The following year, he received his second Grammy Award for another self-penned classic, "My Woman, My Woman, My Wife."

Second only to his passion for music was Robbins' love for racing. He began racing micro-midgets in the 1950s and by the 1960s was racing modified stockcars at the Nashville Speedway. He competed on the NASCAR circuit from 1966 to 1982, finishing in the Top Ten six times in Grand National Championship races.

As the 1980s began, Robbins was enjoying renewed chart success. In May 1982 "Some Memories Just Won't Die" made the country Top Ten, and in October Billboard awarded him its "Artist Resurgence Award" as the performer with the greatest career revival during the past year. The revival was tragically cut short, however, as Robbins succumbed to chronic heart disease in December 1982. He left his fans with a varied body of work matched by few entertainers, and his name remains synonymous with showmanship, passion, talent and zest for life.

Marty Robbins: Among My Souvenirs will be accompanied by an ongoing series of programs throughout the exhibit's duration.

 

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