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Hank Williams

Hiram "Hank" Williams (September 17, 1923 – January 1, 1953) was an American singer, songwriter, and musician. Regarded as one of the most significant and influential American singers and songwriters of the 20th century, he recorded 55 singles (five released posthumously) that reached the top 10 of the Billboard Country & Western Best Sellers chart, including 12 that reached No. 1 (three posthumously).

Hank Williams
Williams in 1951
Born
Hiram Williams

(1923-09-17)September 17, 1923
DiedJanuary 1, 1953(1953-01-01) (aged 29)
Resting placeOakwood Annex Cemetery
Montgomery, Alabama, U.S.
32°23′05″N 86°17′29″W / 32.3847°N 86.2913°W / 32.3847; -86.2913
Other names
  • The Singing Kid
  • Lovesick Blues Boy
  • Luke the Drifter
  • The Hillbilly Shakespeare
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • musician
Years active1937–1952
Spouses
(m. 1944; div. 1952)
(m. 1952)
Relatives
Musical career
Genres
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • fiddle
Labels
WebsiteHankWilliams.com
Signature

Born and raised in Alabama, Williams was given guitar lessons by African-American blues musician Rufus Payne in exchange for meals or money. Payne, along with Roy Acuff and Ernest Tubb, had a major influence on Williams' later musical style. Williams began his music career in Montgomery in 1937, when producers at local radio station WSFA hired him to perform and host a 15-minute program. He formed the Drifting Cowboys backup band, which was managed by his mother, and dropped out of school to devote his time to his career. When several of his band members were drafted during World War II, he had trouble with their replacements, and WSFA terminated his contract because of his alcoholism.

Williams married singer Audrey Sheppard, who was his manager for nearly a decade. After recording "Never Again" and "Honky Tonkin'" with Sterling Records, he signed a contract with MGM Records. In 1947, he released "Move It on Over", which became a hit, and also joined the Louisiana Hayride radio program. One year later, he released a cover of "Lovesick Blues", a huge country hit, which propelled him to stardom on the Grand Ole Opry. He was unable to read or notate music to any significant degree. Among the hits he wrote were "Your Cheatin' Heart", "Hey, Good Lookin'", and "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry". Years of back pain, alcoholism, and prescription drug abuse severely compromised Williams' health. In 1952, he divorced Sheppard and married singer Billie Jean Horton. He was dismissed by the Grand Ole Opry because of his unreliability and alcoholism.

On New Year's Day 1953, at the age of 29, Williams suffered from heart failure while being driven to his next scheduled concert in Charleston, West Virginia, and died suddenly in the back seat of the car in Oak Hill, West Virginia. Despite his relatively brief career, he is one of the most celebrated and influential musicians of the 20th century, especially in country music. Many artists have covered his songs and he has influenced Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, George Jones, George Strait, Charley Pride, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones, among others. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961, the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, and the Native American Music Awards Hall of Fame in 1999. The Pulitzer Prize jury awarded him a posthumous special citation in 2010 for his "craftsmanship as a songwriter who expressed universal feelings with poignant simplicity and played a pivotal role in transforming country music into a major musical and cultural force in American life".

Early life

 
Williams' family house in Georgiana, Alabama

Hank Williams was born Hiram Williams on September 17, 1923, in the rural community of Mount Olive in Butler County, Alabama.[1] He was the third child of Jessie Lillybelle "Lillie" (née Skipper) (1898–1955) with Elonzo Huble "Lon" Williams (1891–1970). Elonzo was a railroad engineer for the W. T. Smith lumber company and was drafted during World War I, serving from July 1918 to June 1919. He was severely injured after falling from a truck, breaking his collarbone and suffering a severe blow to the head.[2] The family's first child, Ernest Huble Williams, was born on July 5, 1921; he died two days later. They later had a daughter named Irene. Williams was named after Hiram I of the Book of Kings.[3] His name was misspelled as "Hiriam" on his birth certificate, which was prepared and signed when he was 10 years old.[4]

As a child, Williams was nicknamed "Harm" by his family and "Herky" or "Skeets" by his friends.[5] He was born with spina bifida occulta, a birth defect of the spinal column, which gave him lifelong pain; this became a factor in his later alcohol and drug abuse.[6] Williams' father was frequently relocated by the lumber company railway for which he worked, and the family lived in many southern Alabama towns. In 1930, when Williams was seven years old, Elonzo began experiencing facial paralysis. At a Veterans Affairs clinic in Pensacola, Florida, doctors determined that the cause was a brain aneurysm, and Elonzo was sent to the VA Medical Center in Alexandria, Louisiana. He remained hospitalized for eight years, rendering him mostly absent throughout Williams' childhood.[7] From that time on, Lillie assumed responsibility for the family.[8]

In the fall of 1934, the Williams family moved to Greenville, Alabama, where Lillie opened a boarding house next to the Butler County courthouse.[9] In 1935, they settled in Garland, Alabama, where Lillie opened a new boarding house; they later moved with Williams' cousin Opal McNeil to Georgiana, Alabama,[10] where Lillie took several side jobs to support the family despite the bleak economic climate of the Great Depression. She worked in a cannery and served as a night-shift nurse in the local hospital.[11] Their first house burned down, and the family lost their possessions. They moved to a new house on the other side of town on Rose Street, which Williams' mother soon turned into another boarding house. The house had a small garden on which they grew diverse crops that Williams and his sister Irene sold around Georgiana.[12] At a chance meeting in Georgiana, Williams met U.S. Representative J. Lister Hill while Hill was campaigning across Alabama. He told Hill that his mother was interested in talking to him about his problems and her need to collect Elonzo's disability pension. With Hill's help, the family began collecting the money.[13] Despite his medical condition, the family managed fairly well financially throughout the Great Depression.[14]

There are several versions of how Williams got his first guitar. His mother stated that she bought it with money from selling peanuts, but many other prominent residents of the town claimed to have been the one who purchased the guitar for him. While living in Georgiana, Williams met Rufus "Tee-Tot" Payne, a street performer. Payne gave Williams guitar lessons in exchange for money or meals prepared by Lillie.[15][16] Payne's base musical style was blues.[17] Payne taught Williams chords, chord progressions, bass turns, and the musical style of accompaniment that he would use in most of his future songwriting. Later on, Williams recorded "My Bucket's Got a Hole in It", one of the songs that Payne taught him.[18] His musical style contained influences from Payne along with several other country influences, among them Jimmie Rodgers, Moon Mullican, and Roy Acuff.[19] In 1937, Williams got into a fight with his physical education teacher about exercises the coach wanted him to do. His mother subsequently demanded that the school board terminate the coach; when they refused, the family moved to Montgomery, Alabama.[20] Payne and Williams lost touch, though Payne also eventually moved to Montgomery, where he died in poverty in 1939. Williams later credited him as his only teacher.[21]

Career

1930s

 
Williams performing in Montgomery in 1938

In July 1937, the Williams and McNeils opened a boarding house on South Perry Street in downtown Montgomery. It was at this time that Williams decided to change his name informally from Hiram to Hank.[22] During the same year, he participated in a talent show at the Empire Theater. He won the first prize of $15, singing his first original song "WPA Blues". Williams wrote the lyrics and used the tune of Riley Puckett's "Dissatisfied".[23]

He never learned to read music; instead he based his compositions in storytelling and personal experience.[24] After school and on weekends, Williams sang and played his Silvertone guitar on the sidewalk in front of the WSFA radio studio.[25] His recent win at the Empire Theater and the street performances caught the attention of WSFA producers who occasionally invited him to perform on air.[26] So many listeners contacted the radio station asking for more of "the singing kid", possibly influenced by his mother, that the producers hired him to host his own 15-minute show twice a week for a weekly salary of US$15 (equivalent to $300 in 2021).[27]

In August 1938, Elonzo Williams was temporarily released from the hospital. He showed up unannounced at the family's home in Montgomery. Lillie was unwilling to let him reclaim his position as the head of the household. Elonzo stayed to celebrate his son's birthday in September before he returned to the medical center in Louisiana. Williams' mother had claimed that he was dead.[25]

Williams' successful radio show fueled his entry into a music career. His salary was enough for him to start his own band, which he dubbed the Drifting Cowboys. The original members were guitarist Braxton Schuffert, fiddler Freddie Beach, and comedian Smith "Hezzy" Adair. James E. (Jimmy) Porter was the youngest, being only 13 when he started playing steel guitar for Williams. Arthur Whiting was also a guitarist for the Drifting Cowboys.[28] The band traveled throughout central and southern Alabama performing in clubs and at private gatherings. James Ellis Garner later played fiddle for him. Lillie Williams became the Drifting Cowboys' manager. Williams dropped out of school in October 1939 so that he and the Drifting Cowboys could work full-time.[6] Lillie Williams began booking show dates, negotiating prices and driving them to some of their shows. Now free to travel without Williams' schooling taking precedence, the band could tour as far away as western Georgia and the Florida Panhandle.[29] The band started playing in theaters before the start of the movies and later in honky-tonks.[30] Williams' alcohol use started to become a problem during the tours; on occasion he spent a large part of the show revenues on alcohol. Meanwhile, between tour schedules, Williams returned to Montgomery to host his radio show.[31]

1940s

 
Williams, Sheppard, and the Drifting Cowboys band in 1951

The American entry into World War II in 1941 marked the beginning of hard times for Williams. While he was medically disqualified from military service after suffering a back injury caused by falling from a bull during a rodeo in Texas, his band members were all drafted to serve. Many of their replacements refused to play in the band due to Williams' worsening alcoholism.[32] He continued to show up for his radio show intoxicated, so in August 1942 the WSFA radio station fired him for "habitual drunkenness". During one of his concerts, Williams met his idol, Grand Ole Opry star Roy Acuff backstage,[33] who later warned him of the dangers of alcohol, saying, "You've got a million-dollar talent, son, but a ten-cent brain."[34]

He worked for the rest of the war for a shipbuilding company in Mobile, Alabama, as well as singing in bars for soldiers.[23] In 1943, Williams met Audrey Sheppard at a medicine show in Banks, Alabama. Williams and Sheppard lived and worked together in Mobile.[35] Sheppard later told Williams that she wanted to move to Montgomery with him and start a band together and help him regain his radio show. The couple were married in 1944 at a Texaco Station in Andalusia, Alabama, by a justice of the peace. The marriage was technically invalid, since Sheppard's divorce from her previous husband did not comply with the legally required 60-day trial reconciliation.[36]

In 1945, when he was back in Montgomery, Williams started to perform again for the WSFA radio station. He wrote songs weekly to perform during the shows.[37] As a result of the new variety of his repertoire, Williams published his first songbook, Original Songs of Hank Williams.[33] The book only listed lyrics, since its main purpose was to attract more audiences, though it is also possible that he did not want to pay for transcribing the notes. It included 10 songs: "Mother Is Gone", "Won't You Please Come Back", "My Darling Baby Girl" (with Audrey Sheppard), "Grandad's Musket", "I Just Wish I Could Forget", "Let's Turn Back the Years", "Honkey-Tonkey", "I Loved No One But You", "A Tramp on the Street", and "You'll Love Me Again".[38] With Williams beginning to be recognized as a songwriter,[39] Sheppard became his manager and occasionally accompanied him on duets in some of his live concerts.[40]

On September 14, 1946, Williams auditioned for Nashville's Grand Ole Opry, but was rejected. After the failure of his audition, Williams and Audrey Sheppard attempted to interest the recently formed music publishing firm Acuff-Rose Music. Williams and his wife approached Fred Rose, the president of the company, during one of his habitual ping-pong games at WSM radio studios. Audrey Williams asked Rose if her husband could sing a song for him on that moment,[41] Rose agreed, and he liked Williams' musical style.[42] Rose signed Williams to a six-song contract, and leveraged this deal to sign Williams with Sterling Records. On December 11, 1946, in his first recording session, he recorded "Wealth Won't Save Your Soul", "Calling You", "Never Again (Will I Knock on Your Door)", and "When God Comes and Gathers His Jewels", which was misprinted as "When God Comes and Fathers His Jewels".[33] The recordings "Never Again" and "Honky Tonkin'" became successful, and earned Williams the attention of MGM Records.[43]

Williams signed with MGM Records in 1947 and released "Move It on Over"; considered an early example of rock and roll music, the song became a country hit. In 1948, he moved to Shreveport, Louisiana, and he joined the Louisiana Hayride, a radio show broadcast that propelled him into living rooms all over the Southeast appearing on weekend shows. Williams eventually started to host a show on KWKH and started touring across western Louisiana and eastern Texas, always returning on Saturdays for the weekly broadcast of the Hayride.[44] After a few more moderate hits, in 1949 he released his version of the 1922 Cliff Friend and Irving Mills song "Lovesick Blues",[45] made popular by Rex Griffin. Williams' version became a hit; the song stayed at number one on the Billboard charts for four consecutive months, and it gained Williams a place in the Grand Ole Opry.[46] On June 11, 1949, Williams made his debut at the Grand Ole Opry, where he became the first performer to receive six encores.[47] He brought together Bob McNett (guitar), Hillous Butrum (bass), Jerry Rivers (fiddle) and Don Helms (steel guitar) to form the most famous version of the Drifting Cowboys, earning an estimated $1,000 per show. (equivalent to $11,400 in 2021)[48] That year Audrey Williams gave birth to Randall Hank Williams (Hank Williams Jr.).[47] During 1949, he joined the first European tour of the Grand Ole Opry, performing in military bases in England, Germany and the Azores.[49] Williams released seven hit songs after "Lovesick Blues", including "Wedding Bells",[45] "Mind Your Own Business", "You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)", and "My Bucket's Got a Hole in It".[50]

1950s

 
Williams performing in 1951

In 1950, Williams began recording as "Luke the Drifter" for his religious-themed recordings, many of which are recitations rather than singing. Fearful that disc jockeys and jukebox operators would hesitate to accept these unusual recordings, Williams used this alias to avoid hurting the marketability of his name.[51] Although the real identity of Luke the Drifter was supposed to be anonymous, Williams often performed part of the material of the recordings on stage. Most of the material was written by Williams himself, in some cases with the help of Fred Rose and his son Wesley.[52] The songs depicted Luke the Drifter traveling around from place to place, narrating stories of different characters and philosophizing about life.[53][54] Some of the compositions were accompanied by a pipe organ.[51] Around this time Williams released more hit songs, such as "My Son Calls Another Man Daddy", "They'll Never Take Her Love from Me", "Why Should We Try Anymore", "Nobody's Lonesome for Me", "Long Gone Lonesome Blues", "Why Don't You Love Me", "Moanin' the Blues", and "I Just Don't Like This Kind of Living".[55] In 1951, "Dear John" became a hit, but it was the flip side, "Cold, Cold Heart", that became one of his most recognized songs. A pop cover version by Tony Bennett released the same year stayed on the charts for 27 weeks, peaking at number one.[56]

Williams' career reached a peak in the late summer of 1951 with his Hadacol tour of the U.S. with Bob Hope and other actors. On the weekend after the tour ended, Williams was photographed backstage at the Grand Ole Opry signing a motion picture deal with MGM.[57] In October, Williams recorded a demo, "There's a Tear in My Beer" for a friend, "Big Bill Lister", who recorded it in the studio.[58] On November 14, 1951, Williams flew to New York with his steel guitar player Don Helms where he appeared on television for the first time on The Perry Como Show. There he sang "Hey Good Lookin'", and the next week Como opened the show singing the same song, with apologies to Williams.[59]

In November 1951, Williams fell during a hunting trip with his fiddler Jerry Rivers in Franklin, Tennessee. The fall reactivated his old back pains. He later started to consume painkillers, including morphine, and alcohol to help ease the pain.[60] On May 21, he had been admitted to North Louisiana Sanitarium for the treatment of his alcoholism, leaving on May 24.[61] On December 13, 1951, he had a spinal fusion at the Vanderbilt University Hospital, being released on December 24.[61] During his recovery, he lived with his mother in Montgomery, and later moved to Nashville with Ray Price.[62]

During the spring of 1952, Williams flew to New York with steel guitarist Don Helms, where he made two appearances with other Grand Ole Opry members on The Kate Smith Evening Hour. He sang "Cold, Cold Heart", "Hey Good Lookin''", "Glory Bound Train" and "I Saw the Light" with other cast members, and a duet, "I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)" with Anita Carter.[63] That same year, Williams had a brief extramarital affair with dancer Bobbie Jett, with whom he fathered a daughter, Jett Williams.[64]

In June 1952, he recorded "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)", "Window Shopping", "Settin' the Woods on Fire", and "I'll Never Get out of this World Alive". Audrey Williams divorced him that year; the next day he recorded "You Win Again" and "I Won't be Home No More". Around this time, he met Billie Jean Jones, a girlfriend of country singer Faron Young, at the Grand Ole Opry. As a girl, Jones had lived down the street from Williams when he was with the Louisiana Hayride, and now Williams began to visit her frequently in Shreveport, causing him to miss many Grand Ole Opry appearances.[65]

On August 11, 1952, Williams was dismissed from the Grand Ole Opry for habitual drunkenness and missing shows. He returned to Shreveport, Louisiana, to perform on KWKH and WBAM shows and in the Louisiana Hayride, for which he toured again. His performances were acclaimed when he was sober, but despite the efforts of his work associates to get him to shows sober, his abuse of alcohol resulted in occasions when he did not appear or his performances were poor.[66] In October 1952 he married Billie Jean Jones.[67]

During his last recording session on September 23, 1952, Williams recorded "Kaw-Liga", along with "Your Cheatin' Heart", "Take These Chains from My Heart", and "I Could Never be Ashamed of You". Due to Williams' excesses, Fred Rose stopped working with him. By the end of 1952, Williams started to have heart problems.[68]He met Horace "Toby" Marshall in Oklahoma City, who said that he was a doctor. Marshall had been previously convicted for forgery, and had been paroled and released from the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in 1951. Among other fake titles, he said that he was a Doctor of Science. He purchased the DSC title for $25 from the Chicago School of Applied Science; in the diploma, he requested that the DSc be spelled out as "Doctor of Science and Psychology". Under the name of Dr. C. W. Lemon he prescribed Williams with amphetamines, Seconal, chloral hydrate, and morphine, which made his heart problems worse.[69] His final concert was held in Austin, Texas, at the Skyline Club on December 19.[70]

Personal life

 
Williams and his first wife Audrey Sheppard in a publicity photo for MGM Records, c. 1952.

On December 15, 1944, Williams married Audrey Sheppard. It was her second marriage and his first. Their son, Randall Hank Williams (now known as Hank Williams Jr.), was born on May 26, 1949. The marriage was always turbulent and rapidly disintegrated, and Williams developed serious problems with alcohol, morphine, and other painkillers prescribed for him to ease the severe back pain caused by his spina bifida occulta.[6] The couple divorced on May 29, 1952.[71] In June 1952, Williams moved in with his mother, even as he released numerous hit songs such as "Half as Much" in April, "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)" in July, "You Win Again" in September, and "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" in November. His substance abuse problems continued to spiral out of control as he moved to Nashville and officially divorced Sheppard.[72] A relationship with a woman named Bobbie Jett during this period resulted in a daughter, Jett Williams, who was born five days after Williams died. His mother adopted Jett, who was made a ward of the state after her grandmother died and then adopted by another couple. Jett did not learn that she was Williams' daughter until the early 1980s.[73]

On October 18, 1952, Williams and Billie Jean Jones were married by a justice of the peace[74] in Minden, Louisiana.[67] It was the second marriage for both (each being divorced with children).[67] The next day, two public ceremonies were held at the New Orleans Civic Auditorium, where 14,000 seats were sold for each.[74] After Williams' death, a judge ruled that the wedding was not legal because Jones' divorce had not become final until 11 days after she married Williams. His first wife and his mother were the driving forces behind having the marriage declared invalid, and they pursued the matter for years. Williams had also married Sheppard before her divorce was final, on the 10th day of a required 60-day reconciliation period.[75]

A man named Lewis Fitzgerald (born 1943) claimed to be Williams' illegitimate son; he was the son of Marie McNeil, Williams' cousin.[76] Fitzgerald was interviewed, and he suggested that Lillie Williams operated a brothel at her boarding house in Montgomery. A friend of the family denied his claims, but singer Billy Walker remembered that Williams mentioned to him the presence of men in the house being led upstairs.[76]

Death

 
Entrance marker of the Oakwood Annex Cemetery in Montgomery, Alabama

Williams was scheduled to perform at the Municipal Auditorium in Charleston, West Virginia, on December 31, 1952. Advance ticket sales totaled $3,500. That day, Williams could not fly because of an ice storm in the Nashville area; he hired a college student, Charles Carr, to drive him to the concerts.[77] Carr called the Charleston auditorium from Knoxville to say that Williams would not arrive on time owing to the ice storm and was instead ordered to drive Williams to Canton, Ohio, for a New Year's Day concert there.[78] The two arrived at the Andrew Johnson Hotel in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Carr requested a doctor for Williams, who was affected by the combination of the chloral hydrate and alcohol he had consumed on the way to Knoxville.[79] Dr. P. H. Cardwell injected Williams with two shots of vitamin B12 that also contained a quarter-grain of morphine. Carr and Williams checked out of the hotel, but the porters had to carry Williams to the car as he was coughing and hiccuping.[80]

At around midnight on January 1, 1953, when the two crossed the Tennessee state line and arrived in Bristol, Virginia, Carr stopped at a small all-night restaurant and asked Williams if he wanted to eat. Williams said he did not, and those are believed to be his last words.[81] Carr later drove on until he stopped for fuel at a gas station in Oak Hill, West Virginia, where he realized that Williams had been dead for so long that rigor mortis had already set in. The station's owner called the local police chief.[82] In Williams' Cadillac, the police found some empty beer cans and unfinished handwritten lyrics.[83] Dr. Ivan Malinin performed the autopsy at the Tyree Funeral House. He found hemorrhages in the heart and neck and pronounced the cause of death as "insufficiency of the right ventricle of the heart".[84] He also wrote that Williams had been severely beaten and kicked in the groin recently (during a fight in a Montgomery bar a few days earlier), and local magistrate Virgil F. Lyons ordered an inquest into Williams' death concerning a welt that was visible on his head.[85] That evening, when the announcer in Canton announced Williams' death to the gathered crowd, they started laughing because they thought it was just another excuse. After Hawkshaw Hawkins and other performers started singing Williams' song "I Saw the Light" as a tribute to him, the crowd realized that he was indeed dead and began to sing along.[74]

On January 2, Williams' body was transported to Montgomery, Alabama, where it was placed in a silver casket that was displayed at his mother's boarding house for two days. His funeral took place on January 4 at the Montgomery Auditorium, with his casket placed on the flower-covered stage.[86] An estimated 15,000 to 25,000 people passed by the silver casket, and the auditorium was filled with 2,750 mourners.[87] His funeral was said to have been far larger than any ever held for any other citizen of Alabama, and the largest event ever held in Montgomery.[88][89] Williams' remains are interred at the Oakwood Annex in Montgomery. The president of MGM Records told Billboard magazine that the company got only about five requests for pictures of Williams during the weeks before his death, but over 300 afterwards. The local record shops reportedly sold all their Williams records, and customers were asking for all records ever released by Williams.[87]

Williams' final single, released in November 1952 while he was still alive, was titled "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive". His song "Your Cheatin' Heart" was written and recorded in September 1952, but released in late January 1953 after his death. The song, backed by "Kaw-Liga", was No. 1 on the country charts for six weeks. It provided the title for the 1964 biographical film of the same name, which starred George Hamilton as Williams.[90] "Take These Chains From My Heart" was released in April 1953 and reached No. 1 on the country charts.[91] Released in July, "I Won't Be Home No More" went to No. 4. Meanwhile, "Weary Blues From Waitin'" reached No. 7.[92]

Legacy

 
Hank Williams's star at 6400 Hollywood Boulevard, on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Williams has been called "the King of Country Music" in popular culture.[93][94] Alabama governor Gordon Persons officially proclaimed September 21 "Hank Williams Day". The first celebration, in 1954, featured the unveiling of a monument at the Cramton Bowl that was later placed at the gravesite of Williams. The ceremony featured Ferlin Husky interpreting "I Saw the Light".[95] Williams had 11 number one country hits in his career ("Lovesick Blues", "Long Gone Lonesome Blues", "Why Don't You Love Me", "Moanin' the Blues", "Cold, Cold Heart", "Hey, Good Lookin'", "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)", "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive", "Kaw-Liga", "Your Cheatin' Heart", and "Take These Chains from My Heart"), as well as many other top 10 hits.[96]

On February 8, 1960, Williams' star was placed at 6400 Hollywood Boulevard on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[97] He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961, and into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1985.[98][99] When Downbeat magazine took a poll the year after Williams' death, he was voted the most popular country and Western performer of all time—ahead of such giants as Jimmie Rodgers, Roy Acuff, Red Foley, and Ernest Tubb.[100]


In 1977, a national organization of CB truck drivers voted "Your Cheatin' Heart" as their favorite record of all time.[101] In 1987, he was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame under the category "Early Influence".[102] He was ranked second in CMT's 40 Greatest Men of Country Music in 2003, behind only Johnny Cash who recorded the song "The Night Hank Williams Came To Town". His son, Hank Jr., was ranked on the same list.[103] In the 1980 Canadian film, Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave, Williams is portrayed by singer Sneezy Waters.

In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked him number 74 on its list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[104] In 2005, the BBC documentary series Arena featured an episode on Williams.[105]

Many artists of the 1950s and 1960s, including Elvis Presley,[106] Bob Dylan, Tammy Wynette, David Houston, Jerry Lee Lewis, Merle Haggard, Gene Vincent, Carl Perkins, Ricky Nelson, and Conway Twitty.[107]

 
Hank Williams, Jr.
 
Williams' grandson, Hank Williams III

In 2011, Williams' 1949 MGM number one hit, "Lovesick Blues", was inducted into the Recording Academy Grammy Hall of Fame.[108] The same year, Hank Williams: The Complete Mother's Best Recordings ...Plus! was honored with a Grammy nomination for Best Historical Album.[109] In 1999, Williams was inducted into the Native American Music Hall of Fame.[110] On April 12, 2010, the Pulitzer Prize Board awarded Williams a posthumous special citation that paid tribute to his "craftsmanship as a songwriter who expressed universal feelings with poignant simplicity and played a pivotal role in transforming country music into a major musical and cultural force in American life".[111] Several members of Williams' descendants became musicians: Hank Williams Jr., daughter Jett Williams, grandsons Hank Williams III and Sam Williams, and granddaughters Hilary Williams[112] and Holly Williams are also country musicians.[113][114] In July 2020, his granddaughter Katherine (Hank Jr.'s daughter) died in a car crash at the age of 27.[115] His great-grandson Coleman Finchum, son of Hank Williams III, released his debut single credited to IV and the Strange Band in 2021. Meanwhile, Lewis Fitzgerald's son Ricky billed himself as Hank Williams IV following his father's claim of being Williams' son.[116]

In 2006, a janitor of Sony/ATV Music Publishing found in a dumpster the unfinished lyrics written by Williams that had been found in his car the night he died. The worker claimed that she sold Williams' notes to a representative of the Honky-Tonk Hall of Fame and the Rock-N-Roll Roadshow. The janitor was accused of theft, but the charges were later dropped when a judge determined that her version of events was true. The unfinished lyrics were later returned to Sony/ATV, which handed them to Bob Dylan in 2008 to complete the songs for a new album. Ultimately, the completion of the album included recordings by Alan Jackson, Norah Jones, Jack White, Lucinda Williams, Vince Gill, Rodney Crowell, Patty Loveless, Levon Helm, Jakob Dylan, Sheryl Crow, and Merle Haggard. The album, named The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams, was released on October 4, 2011.[117][118]

Material recorded by Williams, originally intended for radio broadcasts to be played when he was on tour or for its distribution to radio stations nationwide, resurfaced throughout time.[119] In 1993, a double-disc set of recordings of Williams for the Health & Happiness Show was released.[120] Broadcast in 1949, the shows were recorded for the promotion of Hadacol. The set was re-released on Hank Williams: The Legend Begins in 2011. The album included unreleased songs. "Fan It" and "Alexander's Ragtime Band", recorded by Williams at age 15; the homemade recordings of him singing "Freight Train Blues", "New San Antonio Rose", "St. Louis Blues" and "Greenback Dollar" at age 18; and a recording for the 1951 March of Dimes.[121] In May 2014, further radio recordings by Williams were released. The Garden Spot Programs, 1950, a series of publicity segments for plant nursery Naughton Farms originally aired in 1950. The recordings were found by collector George Gimarc at radio station KSIB in Creston, Iowa.[122] Gimarc contacted Williams' daughter Jett, and Colin Escott, writer of a biography book on Williams. The material was restored and remastered by Michael Graves and released by Omnivore Recordings.[123][124] The release won a Grammy Award for Best Historical Album.[125]

Williams was portrayed by English actor Tom Hiddleston in the 2016 biopic I Saw the Light, based on Colin Escott's 1994 book Hank Williams: The Biography.[126]

Lawsuits over the estate

After Williams' death, Audrey Williams filed a suit in Nashville against MGM Records and Acuff-Rose. The suit demanded that both of the publishing companies continue to pay her half of the royalties from Hank Williams' records. Williams had an agreement giving his first wife half of the royalties, but allegedly there was no clarification that the deal was valid after his death. Because Williams may have left no will, the disposition of the remaining 50 percent was considered uncertain; those involved included Williams' second wife, Billie Jean Horton and her daughter, and Williams' mother and sister.[127] On October 22, 1975, a federal judge in Atlanta, Georgia, ruled Horton's marriage to Williams was valid and that half of Williams' future royalties belonged to her.[128]

WSM's Mother's Best Flour

In 1951, Williams hosted a 15-minute show for Mother's Best Flour on WSM radio. Due to Williams' tour schedules, some of the shows were previously recorded to be played in his absence.[129] The original acetates made their way to the possession of Jett Williams. Prior to that, duplicates were made and intended to be published by a third party. In February 2005, the Tennessee Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling stating that Williams' heirs—son, Hank Williams Jr, and daughter, Jett Williams—have the sole rights to sell his recordings made for a Nashville radio station in 1951.

The court rejected claims made by PolyGram Records and Legacy Entertainment in releasing recordings Williams made for the Mother's Best Flour Show. The recordings, which Legacy Entertainment acquired in 1997, include live versions of Williams' hits and his cover version of other songs. PolyGram contended that Williams' contract with MGM Records, whose back catalogue they owned at the time, prior to current owner Universal Music's absorption of PolyGram the next year, gave them rights to release the radio recordings. A 3-CD selection of the tracks, restored by Joe Palmaccio, was released by Time-Life in October 2008 titled The Unreleased Recordings.[130]

Tributes

Awards

Year Award Awards Notes References
1987 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 29th Annual Grammy Awards Posthumously [131]
1989 Grammy for Best Country Vocal Collaboration ("There's a Tear in My Beer"). Grammy with Hank Williams Jr. [132]
1989 Music Video of the Year CMA with Hank Williams Jr. [133]
1989 Vocal Event of the Year CMA with Hank Williams Jr.
1989 Video of the Year Academy of Country Music with Hank Williams Jr. [134]
1990 Vocal Collaboration of the Year TNN/Music City News with Hank Williams Jr. [135]
1990 Video of the Year TNN/Music City News with Hank Williams Jr.
2010 Special Awards and Citation for his pivotal role in transforming country music The Pulitzer Prize Posthumously [111]


Discography

Footnotes

  1. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 6.
  2. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 4.
  3. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2015, p. 3.
  4. ^ Flippo, Chet 1985, p. 12.
  5. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 7.
  6. ^ a b c Koon, George William 1983, p. 10.
  7. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 9.
  8. ^ Middleton, Richard 2000, p. 318.
  9. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 26.
  10. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 18.
  11. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 13.
  12. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 14.
  13. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 27.
  14. ^ Hemphill, Paul 2005, p. 17.
  15. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 13.
  16. ^ Lipsitz, George 1994, p. 26.
  17. ^ Campbell, Michael 2012, p. 126.
  18. ^ Brackett, David 2000, p. 98.
  19. ^ Dicaire, David 2007, p. p. 124.
  20. ^ Masino, Susan 2011, p. 11.
  21. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 229.
  22. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 21.
  23. ^ a b Koon, George William 1983, p. 16.
  24. ^ Browne, Ray Broadus 2005, p. 66.
  25. ^ a b Koon, George William 1983, p. 153.
  26. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 16, 17.
  27. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 18.
  28. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 11.
  29. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2015, p. 48.
  30. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2015, p. 29.
  31. ^ Hemphill, Paul 2005, p. 34.
  32. ^ Hemphill, Paul 2005, p. 39.
  33. ^ a b c Cusic, Don 2008, p. 61.
  34. ^ Hemphill, Paul 2005, p. 40.
  35. ^ Lipsitz, George 1994, p. 27.
  36. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 24.
  37. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 42.
  38. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 111.
  39. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 42, 59.
  40. ^ Ribowsky, Mark 2016, p. 156.
  41. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 59.
  42. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 60.
  43. ^ Young, William H. & Young, Nancy K. 2010, p. 234.
  44. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 70, 71.
  45. ^ a b Gilliland, John 1969.
  46. ^ Browne, Pat 2001, p. 913.
  47. ^ a b Koon, George William 1983, p. 43.
  48. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 50.
  49. ^ Evans, Mike 2006, p. 15.
  50. ^ Young, William H. & Young, Nancy K. 2010, p. 235.
  51. ^ a b Ching, Barbara 2003, p. p. 55.
  52. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 127.
  53. ^ Bernstein, Cynthia, Nunnally, Thomas & Sabino, Robin 1997, p. 250.
  54. ^ Peppiatt, Francesca 2004, p. 82.
  55. ^ Billboard staff 1951, p. 9.
  56. ^ Whitburn, Joel 1991, p. 26.
  57. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2015, p. 198.
  58. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 180-181.
  59. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 191-193.
  60. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 63.
  61. ^ a b Koon, George William 1983, p. 153, 154.
  62. ^ Wolff, Kurt 2000, p. 160.
  63. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 211.
  64. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 226, 227.
  65. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 201-204.
  66. ^ Lornell, Kip & Laird, Tracey 2008, p. 82.
  67. ^ a b c Koon, George William 1983, p. 70.
  68. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 67.
  69. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 74.
  70. ^ Pugh, Ronnie 1998, p. 191.
  71. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 96.
  72. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. XII.
  73. ^ Williams, Hilary & Roberts, Mary Beth 2010, p. 127.
  74. ^ a b c Celon, Curtis 1995, p. 80.
  75. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 46.
  76. ^ a b Ribowsky, Mark 2016, p. 43.
  77. ^ Tharpe, Jim 2013.
  78. ^ Lilly, John 2002.
  79. ^ Olson, Ted 2004, p. 296.
  80. ^ Olson, Ted 2004, p. 298.
  81. ^ Olson, Ted 2004, p. 300.
  82. ^ Olson, Ted 2004, p. 303.
  83. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 79.
  84. ^ Olson, Ted 2004, p. 306.
  85. ^ Escott, Colin, Merritt, George & MacEwen, William 2009, p. 243.
  86. ^ Stanton, Scott 2003, p. p. 262.
  87. ^ a b Peterson, Richard A. 1997, p. 182.
  88. ^ Sheckler Finch, Jackie 2011, p. 72, 73.
  89. ^ Alabama.Travel 2013.
  90. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 161.
  91. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 128.
  92. ^ Whitburn, Joel 2002, p. 391.
  93. ^ Huber, Patrick, Goodson, Steve & Anderson, David 2014, p. 226.
  94. ^ Haislop, Neil, Lathrop, Tad & Sumrall, Harry 1995, p. 230.
  95. ^ Windham, Kathryn Tucker 2007, p. 33.
  96. ^ George-Warren, Holly et al. 2001, p. 1066.
  97. ^ Walk of Fame staff 2013.
  98. ^ CMHoF 2023.
  99. ^ AlamHof 2003.
  100. ^ Williams, Roger M 1981, p. 140.
  101. ^ Caress, Jay 1979, p. 228.
  102. ^ RockHall 2023.
  103. ^ "CMT 40 Greatest Men of Country Music". CMT. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  104. ^ Rolling Stone staff 2014.
  105. ^ BBC staff 2005.
  106. ^ "Elvis Presley". AllMusic. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
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  110. ^ "Hank Williams: Native American group Inducts Him". Herald-Journal. November 9, 1999. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  111. ^ a b . Official Pulitzer Awards Website. Columbia University. April 12, 2010. Archived from the original on July 24, 2010. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  112. ^ Chiu, David (November 2, 2010). "Hilary Williams Details Her Brush with Death in 'Sign of Life'". theboot.com. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  113. ^ . Yahoo!. Associated Press. April 17, 2008. Archived from the original on March 18, 2013. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  114. ^ Betts, Stephen (September 18, 2018). "Hilary Williams on Triumphant New Album 'My Lucky Scars,' Family Legacy". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  115. ^ Pasquini, Maria (June 14, 2020). "Country Singer Hank Williams Jr.'s Daughter, 27, Killed in Tennessee Car Crash". People. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
  116. ^ "The Hank Williams Lineage Continues with Hank3's Son "IV"". Saving Country Music. April 8, 2021. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  117. ^ Flippo, Chet (August 25, 2011). "Nashville Skyline: Hank Williams' Life After Death". Country Music Television. MTV Networks. Retrieved September 6, 2011.
  118. ^ . bobdylan.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2011. Retrieved October 4, 2011.
  119. ^ Koon, George William 1983, pp. 153–154.
  120. ^ "Health and Happiness Show". Allmusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved May 26, 2014.
  121. ^ Flippo, Chet (September 15, 2011). "Nashville Skyline: Johnny Cash and Hank Williams: Got Some More Music Here". Country Music Television. Retrieved May 26, 2014.
  122. ^ "Hear a newly discovered Hank Williams performance". USA Today. March 28, 2014.
  123. ^ "Six Decades Later, A Long-Lost Hank Williams Recording Resurfaces". National Public Radio. May 18, 2014. Retrieved May 19, 2014.
  124. ^ "Newly Discovered Hank! 'The Garden Spot Programs' 1950". American Standard Time. May 24, 2014.
  125. ^ Stefano, Angela (2015). "Hank Williams' 'The Garden Spot Programs' Named Best Historical Album at the 2015 Grammy Awards". The Boot. Taste of Country Network. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
  126. ^ Sean Michaels (June 13, 2014). "Tom Hiddleston played country icon Hank Williams in biopic". The Guardian. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  127. ^ "File Action to Untangle Hank Williams Estate". Billboard. May 23, 1953. p. 15. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  128. ^ Koon, George William 1983, p. 247.
  129. ^ Hilbourn, Robert (October 28, 2008). "There's Plenty Cookin'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  130. ^ Mike Ragogna (November 11, 2011). "Mother's Best, Hank's Best: A Conversation With Jett Williams and the Students". The Huffington Post. AOL.
  131. ^ "Lifetime Achievement Award". Recording Academy. October 18, 2010. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  132. ^ Jan DeKnock (February 16, 1990). "Who'll Win The Grammys? And the Grammy nominees are ...". Chicago Tribune. p. 37.
  133. ^ "Past Winners and Nominees". CMA Awards. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  134. ^ "Winners". Academy of Country Music. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  135. ^ Goldsmith, Thomas; Oermann, Robert (June 6, 1990). "Rick Van Shelton Tops TNN Awards". Press and Sun-Bulletin. New York. Retrieved February 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)  

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  • Haislop, Neil; Lathrop, Tad; Sumrall, Harry (1995). Giants of Country Music: Classic Sounds and Stars, from the Heart of Nashville to the Top of the Charts. Billboard Books. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-8230-7635-2. HANK WILLIAMS Canonized after his death, revered as the king of country music by every subsequent generation of country performers, and studied by everyone from backwoods deejays to music scholars,
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Journals

  • "File Action to Untangle Hank Williams Estate". The Billboard. May 23, 1953. p. 15. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved March 13, 2011.

News

  • "PBS 'Country Music' - Native stories of Hank Williams Sr., Loretta Lynn and Peter La Farge". October 22, 2019. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  • "Native American Music Awards Hall of Fame". 2019. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  • "Country Music by Ken Burns Episode 3 The Hillbilly Shakespeare". PBS. 2019. Retrieved February 14, 2022.

Further reading

  • Williams, Lycrecia; Dale Vinicur (1989). Still in Love with You: Hank and Audrey Williams. Nashville, Tenn.: Rutledge Hill Press. ISBN 978-1-55853-105-5. OCLC 42469829.
  • Rivers, Jerry (1967). Thurston Moore (ed.). Hank Williams: From Life to Legend. Denver: Heather Enterprises. LCCN 67030642. OCLC 902165.

External links

hank, williams, other, people, named, disambiguation, hiram, hank, williams, september, 1923, january, 1953, american, singer, songwriter, musician, regarded, most, significant, influential, american, singers, songwriters, 20th, century, recorded, singles, fiv. For other people named Hank Williams see Hank Williams disambiguation Hiram Hank Williams September 17 1923 January 1 1953 was an American singer songwriter and musician Regarded as one of the most significant and influential American singers and songwriters of the 20th century he recorded 55 singles five released posthumously that reached the top 10 of the Billboard Country amp Western Best Sellers chart including 12 that reached No 1 three posthumously Hank WilliamsWilliams in 1951BornHiram Williams 1923 09 17 September 17 1923Butler County Alabama U S DiedJanuary 1 1953 1953 01 01 aged 29 Oak Hill West Virginia U S Resting placeOakwood Annex CemeteryMontgomery Alabama U S 32 23 05 N 86 17 29 W 32 3847 N 86 2913 W 32 3847 86 2913Other namesThe Singing KidLovesick Blues BoyLuke the DrifterThe Hillbilly ShakespeareOccupationsSingersongwritermusicianYears active1937 1952SpousesAudrey Sheppard m 1944 div 1952 wbr Billie Jean Horton m 1952 wbr RelativesHank Williams Jr son Jett Williams daughter Hank Williams III grandson Holly Williams granddaughter Musical careerGenresCountryWesternhonky tonkgospelInstrument s VocalsguitarfiddleLabelsSterlingMGMWebsiteHankWilliams comSignatureBorn and raised in Alabama Williams was given guitar lessons by African American blues musician Rufus Payne in exchange for meals or money Payne along with Roy Acuff and Ernest Tubb had a major influence on Williams later musical style Williams began his music career in Montgomery in 1937 when producers at local radio station WSFA hired him to perform and host a 15 minute program He formed the Drifting Cowboys backup band which was managed by his mother and dropped out of school to devote his time to his career When several of his band members were drafted during World War II he had trouble with their replacements and WSFA terminated his contract because of his alcoholism Williams married singer Audrey Sheppard who was his manager for nearly a decade After recording Never Again and Honky Tonkin with Sterling Records he signed a contract with MGM Records In 1947 he released Move It on Over which became a hit and also joined the Louisiana Hayride radio program One year later he released a cover of Lovesick Blues a huge country hit which propelled him to stardom on the Grand Ole Opry He was unable to read or notate music to any significant degree Among the hits he wrote were Your Cheatin Heart Hey Good Lookin and I m So Lonesome I Could Cry Years of back pain alcoholism and prescription drug abuse severely compromised Williams health In 1952 he divorced Sheppard and married singer Billie Jean Horton He was dismissed by the Grand Ole Opry because of his unreliability and alcoholism On New Year s Day 1953 at the age of 29 Williams suffered from heart failure while being driven to his next scheduled concert in Charleston West Virginia and died suddenly in the back seat of the car in Oak Hill West Virginia Despite his relatively brief career he is one of the most celebrated and influential musicians of the 20th century especially in country music Many artists have covered his songs and he has influenced Elvis Presley Bob Dylan Johnny Cash Chuck Berry Jerry Lee Lewis George Jones George Strait Charley Pride the Beatles and the Rolling Stones among others He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961 the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970 the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987 and the Native American Music Awards Hall of Fame in 1999 The Pulitzer Prize jury awarded him a posthumous special citation in 2010 for his craftsmanship as a songwriter who expressed universal feelings with poignant simplicity and played a pivotal role in transforming country music into a major musical and cultural force in American life Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1930s 2 2 1940s 2 3 1950s 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Legacy 5 1 Lawsuits over the estate 5 1 1 WSM s Mother s Best Flour 5 2 Tributes 6 Awards 7 Discography 8 Footnotes 8 1 References 8 1 1 Journals 8 1 2 News 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life Edit Williams family house in Georgiana Alabama Hank Williams was born Hiram Williams on September 17 1923 in the rural community of Mount Olive in Butler County Alabama 1 He was the third child of Jessie Lillybelle Lillie nee Skipper 1898 1955 with Elonzo Huble Lon Williams 1891 1970 Elonzo was a railroad engineer for the W T Smith lumber company and was drafted during World War I serving from July 1918 to June 1919 He was severely injured after falling from a truck breaking his collarbone and suffering a severe blow to the head 2 The family s first child Ernest Huble Williams was born on July 5 1921 he died two days later They later had a daughter named Irene Williams was named after Hiram I of the Book of Kings 3 His name was misspelled as Hiriam on his birth certificate which was prepared and signed when he was 10 years old 4 As a child Williams was nicknamed Harm by his family and Herky or Skeets by his friends 5 He was born with spina bifida occulta a birth defect of the spinal column which gave him lifelong pain this became a factor in his later alcohol and drug abuse 6 Williams father was frequently relocated by the lumber company railway for which he worked and the family lived in many southern Alabama towns In 1930 when Williams was seven years old Elonzo began experiencing facial paralysis At a Veterans Affairs clinic in Pensacola Florida doctors determined that the cause was a brain aneurysm and Elonzo was sent to the VA Medical Center in Alexandria Louisiana He remained hospitalized for eight years rendering him mostly absent throughout Williams childhood 7 From that time on Lillie assumed responsibility for the family 8 In the fall of 1934 the Williams family moved to Greenville Alabama where Lillie opened a boarding house next to the Butler County courthouse 9 In 1935 they settled in Garland Alabama where Lillie opened a new boarding house they later moved with Williams cousin Opal McNeil to Georgiana Alabama 10 where Lillie took several side jobs to support the family despite the bleak economic climate of the Great Depression She worked in a cannery and served as a night shift nurse in the local hospital 11 Their first house burned down and the family lost their possessions They moved to a new house on the other side of town on Rose Street which Williams mother soon turned into another boarding house The house had a small garden on which they grew diverse crops that Williams and his sister Irene sold around Georgiana 12 At a chance meeting in Georgiana Williams met U S Representative J Lister Hill while Hill was campaigning across Alabama He told Hill that his mother was interested in talking to him about his problems and her need to collect Elonzo s disability pension With Hill s help the family began collecting the money 13 Despite his medical condition the family managed fairly well financially throughout the Great Depression 14 My Bucket s Got a Hole in It source source The popular song My Bucket s Got a Hole in It became a hit for Hank Williams in 1949 Problems playing this file See media help There are several versions of how Williams got his first guitar His mother stated that she bought it with money from selling peanuts but many other prominent residents of the town claimed to have been the one who purchased the guitar for him While living in Georgiana Williams met Rufus Tee Tot Payne a street performer Payne gave Williams guitar lessons in exchange for money or meals prepared by Lillie 15 16 Payne s base musical style was blues 17 Payne taught Williams chords chord progressions bass turns and the musical style of accompaniment that he would use in most of his future songwriting Later on Williams recorded My Bucket s Got a Hole in It one of the songs that Payne taught him 18 His musical style contained influences from Payne along with several other country influences among them Jimmie Rodgers Moon Mullican and Roy Acuff 19 In 1937 Williams got into a fight with his physical education teacher about exercises the coach wanted him to do His mother subsequently demanded that the school board terminate the coach when they refused the family moved to Montgomery Alabama 20 Payne and Williams lost touch though Payne also eventually moved to Montgomery where he died in poverty in 1939 Williams later credited him as his only teacher 21 Career Edit1930s Edit Williams performing in Montgomery in 1938 In July 1937 the Williams and McNeils opened a boarding house on South Perry Street in downtown Montgomery It was at this time that Williams decided to change his name informally from Hiram to Hank 22 During the same year he participated in a talent show at the Empire Theater He won the first prize of 15 singing his first original song WPA Blues Williams wrote the lyrics and used the tune of Riley Puckett s Dissatisfied 23 He never learned to read music instead he based his compositions in storytelling and personal experience 24 After school and on weekends Williams sang and played his Silvertone guitar on the sidewalk in front of the WSFA radio studio 25 His recent win at the Empire Theater and the street performances caught the attention of WSFA producers who occasionally invited him to perform on air 26 So many listeners contacted the radio station asking for more of the singing kid possibly influenced by his mother that the producers hired him to host his own 15 minute show twice a week for a weekly salary of US 15 equivalent to 300 in 2021 27 In August 1938 Elonzo Williams was temporarily released from the hospital He showed up unannounced at the family s home in Montgomery Lillie was unwilling to let him reclaim his position as the head of the household Elonzo stayed to celebrate his son s birthday in September before he returned to the medical center in Louisiana Williams mother had claimed that he was dead 25 Williams successful radio show fueled his entry into a music career His salary was enough for him to start his own band which he dubbed the Drifting Cowboys The original members were guitarist Braxton Schuffert fiddler Freddie Beach and comedian Smith Hezzy Adair James E Jimmy Porter was the youngest being only 13 when he started playing steel guitar for Williams Arthur Whiting was also a guitarist for the Drifting Cowboys 28 The band traveled throughout central and southern Alabama performing in clubs and at private gatherings James Ellis Garner later played fiddle for him Lillie Williams became the Drifting Cowboys manager Williams dropped out of school in October 1939 so that he and the Drifting Cowboys could work full time 6 Lillie Williams began booking show dates negotiating prices and driving them to some of their shows Now free to travel without Williams schooling taking precedence the band could tour as far away as western Georgia and the Florida Panhandle 29 The band started playing in theaters before the start of the movies and later in honky tonks 30 Williams alcohol use started to become a problem during the tours on occasion he spent a large part of the show revenues on alcohol Meanwhile between tour schedules Williams returned to Montgomery to host his radio show 31 1940s Edit Williams Sheppard and the Drifting Cowboys band in 1951 The American entry into World War II in 1941 marked the beginning of hard times for Williams While he was medically disqualified from military service after suffering a back injury caused by falling from a bull during a rodeo in Texas his band members were all drafted to serve Many of their replacements refused to play in the band due to Williams worsening alcoholism 32 He continued to show up for his radio show intoxicated so in August 1942 the WSFA radio station fired him for habitual drunkenness During one of his concerts Williams met his idol Grand Ole Opry star Roy Acuff backstage 33 who later warned him of the dangers of alcohol saying You ve got a million dollar talent son but a ten cent brain 34 He worked for the rest of the war for a shipbuilding company in Mobile Alabama as well as singing in bars for soldiers 23 In 1943 Williams met Audrey Sheppard at a medicine show in Banks Alabama Williams and Sheppard lived and worked together in Mobile 35 Sheppard later told Williams that she wanted to move to Montgomery with him and start a band together and help him regain his radio show The couple were married in 1944 at a Texaco Station in Andalusia Alabama by a justice of the peace The marriage was technically invalid since Sheppard s divorce from her previous husband did not comply with the legally required 60 day trial reconciliation 36 In 1945 when he was back in Montgomery Williams started to perform again for the WSFA radio station He wrote songs weekly to perform during the shows 37 As a result of the new variety of his repertoire Williams published his first songbook Original Songs of Hank Williams 33 The book only listed lyrics since its main purpose was to attract more audiences though it is also possible that he did not want to pay for transcribing the notes It included 10 songs Mother Is Gone Won t You Please Come Back My Darling Baby Girl with Audrey Sheppard Grandad s Musket I Just Wish I Could Forget Let s Turn Back the Years Honkey Tonkey I Loved No One But You A Tramp on the Street and You ll Love Me Again 38 With Williams beginning to be recognized as a songwriter 39 Sheppard became his manager and occasionally accompanied him on duets in some of his live concerts 40 On September 14 1946 Williams auditioned for Nashville s Grand Ole Opry but was rejected After the failure of his audition Williams and Audrey Sheppard attempted to interest the recently formed music publishing firm Acuff Rose Music Williams and his wife approached Fred Rose the president of the company during one of his habitual ping pong games at WSM radio studios Audrey Williams asked Rose if her husband could sing a song for him on that moment 41 Rose agreed and he liked Williams musical style 42 Rose signed Williams to a six song contract and leveraged this deal to sign Williams with Sterling Records On December 11 1946 in his first recording session he recorded Wealth Won t Save Your Soul Calling You Never Again Will I Knock on Your Door and When God Comes and Gathers His Jewels which was misprinted as When God Comes and Fathers His Jewels 33 The recordings Never Again and Honky Tonkin became successful and earned Williams the attention of MGM Records 43 Lovesick Blues source source A major hit for Hank Williams Lovesick Blues moved him to the mainstream of country music and assured him a position in the Grand Ole Opry Problems playing this file See media help Williams signed with MGM Records in 1947 and released Move It on Over considered an early example of rock and roll music the song became a country hit In 1948 he moved to Shreveport Louisiana and he joined the Louisiana Hayride a radio show broadcast that propelled him into living rooms all over the Southeast appearing on weekend shows Williams eventually started to host a show on KWKH and started touring across western Louisiana and eastern Texas always returning on Saturdays for the weekly broadcast of the Hayride 44 After a few more moderate hits in 1949 he released his version of the 1922 Cliff Friend and Irving Mills song Lovesick Blues 45 made popular by Rex Griffin Williams version became a hit the song stayed at number one on the Billboard charts for four consecutive months and it gained Williams a place in the Grand Ole Opry 46 On June 11 1949 Williams made his debut at the Grand Ole Opry where he became the first performer to receive six encores 47 He brought together Bob McNett guitar Hillous Butrum bass Jerry Rivers fiddle and Don Helms steel guitar to form the most famous version of the Drifting Cowboys earning an estimated 1 000 per show equivalent to 11 400 in 2021 48 That year Audrey Williams gave birth to Randall Hank Williams Hank Williams Jr 47 During 1949 he joined the first European tour of the Grand Ole Opry performing in military bases in England Germany and the Azores 49 Williams released seven hit songs after Lovesick Blues including Wedding Bells 45 Mind Your Own Business You re Gonna Change Or I m Gonna Leave and My Bucket s Got a Hole in It 50 1950s Edit Williams performing in 1951 In 1950 Williams began recording as Luke the Drifter for his religious themed recordings many of which are recitations rather than singing Fearful that disc jockeys and jukebox operators would hesitate to accept these unusual recordings Williams used this alias to avoid hurting the marketability of his name 51 Although the real identity of Luke the Drifter was supposed to be anonymous Williams often performed part of the material of the recordings on stage Most of the material was written by Williams himself in some cases with the help of Fred Rose and his son Wesley 52 The songs depicted Luke the Drifter traveling around from place to place narrating stories of different characters and philosophizing about life 53 54 Some of the compositions were accompanied by a pipe organ 51 Around this time Williams released more hit songs such as My Son Calls Another Man Daddy They ll Never Take Her Love from Me Why Should We Try Anymore Nobody s Lonesome for Me Long Gone Lonesome Blues Why Don t You Love Me Moanin the Blues and I Just Don t Like This Kind of Living 55 In 1951 Dear John became a hit but it was the flip side Cold Cold Heart that became one of his most recognized songs A pop cover version by Tony Bennett released the same year stayed on the charts for 27 weeks peaking at number one 56 Williams career reached a peak in the late summer of 1951 with his Hadacol tour of the U S with Bob Hope and other actors On the weekend after the tour ended Williams was photographed backstage at the Grand Ole Opry signing a motion picture deal with MGM 57 In October Williams recorded a demo There s a Tear in My Beer for a friend Big Bill Lister who recorded it in the studio 58 On November 14 1951 Williams flew to New York with his steel guitar player Don Helms where he appeared on television for the first time on The Perry Como Show There he sang Hey Good Lookin and the next week Como opened the show singing the same song with apologies to Williams 59 In November 1951 Williams fell during a hunting trip with his fiddler Jerry Rivers in Franklin Tennessee The fall reactivated his old back pains He later started to consume painkillers including morphine and alcohol to help ease the pain 60 On May 21 he had been admitted to North Louisiana Sanitarium for the treatment of his alcoholism leaving on May 24 61 On December 13 1951 he had a spinal fusion at the Vanderbilt University Hospital being released on December 24 61 During his recovery he lived with his mother in Montgomery and later moved to Nashville with Ray Price 62 Beyond the Sunset source source One characteristic of Williams recordings as Luke the Drifter is the use of narration rather than singing Problems playing this file See media help During the spring of 1952 Williams flew to New York with steel guitarist Don Helms where he made two appearances with other Grand Ole Opry members on The Kate Smith Evening Hour He sang Cold Cold Heart Hey Good Lookin Glory Bound Train and I Saw the Light with other cast members and a duet I Can t Help It If I m Still in Love with You with Anita Carter 63 That same year Williams had a brief extramarital affair with dancer Bobbie Jett with whom he fathered a daughter Jett Williams 64 In June 1952 he recorded Jambalaya On the Bayou Window Shopping Settin the Woods on Fire and I ll Never Get out of this World Alive Audrey Williams divorced him that year the next day he recorded You Win Again and I Won t be Home No More Around this time he met Billie Jean Jones a girlfriend of country singer Faron Young at the Grand Ole Opry As a girl Jones had lived down the street from Williams when he was with the Louisiana Hayride and now Williams began to visit her frequently in Shreveport causing him to miss many Grand Ole Opry appearances 65 On August 11 1952 Williams was dismissed from the Grand Ole Opry for habitual drunkenness and missing shows He returned to Shreveport Louisiana to perform on KWKH and WBAM shows and in the Louisiana Hayride for which he toured again His performances were acclaimed when he was sober but despite the efforts of his work associates to get him to shows sober his abuse of alcohol resulted in occasions when he did not appear or his performances were poor 66 In October 1952 he married Billie Jean Jones 67 During his last recording session on September 23 1952 Williams recorded Kaw Liga along with Your Cheatin Heart Take These Chains from My Heart and I Could Never be Ashamed of You Due to Williams excesses Fred Rose stopped working with him By the end of 1952 Williams started to have heart problems 68 He met Horace Toby Marshall in Oklahoma City who said that he was a doctor Marshall had been previously convicted for forgery and had been paroled and released from the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in 1951 Among other fake titles he said that he was a Doctor of Science He purchased the DSC title for 25 from the Chicago School of Applied Science in the diploma he requested that the DSc be spelled out as Doctor of Science and Psychology Under the name of Dr C W Lemon he prescribed Williams with amphetamines Seconal chloral hydrate and morphine which made his heart problems worse 69 His final concert was held in Austin Texas at the Skyline Club on December 19 70 Personal life Edit Williams and his first wife Audrey Sheppard in a publicity photo for MGM Records c 1952 On December 15 1944 Williams married Audrey Sheppard It was her second marriage and his first Their son Randall Hank Williams now known as Hank Williams Jr was born on May 26 1949 The marriage was always turbulent and rapidly disintegrated and Williams developed serious problems with alcohol morphine and other painkillers prescribed for him to ease the severe back pain caused by his spina bifida occulta 6 The couple divorced on May 29 1952 71 In June 1952 Williams moved in with his mother even as he released numerous hit songs such as Half as Much in April Jambalaya On the Bayou in July You Win Again in September and I ll Never Get Out of This World Alive in November His substance abuse problems continued to spiral out of control as he moved to Nashville and officially divorced Sheppard 72 A relationship with a woman named Bobbie Jett during this period resulted in a daughter Jett Williams who was born five days after Williams died His mother adopted Jett who was made a ward of the state after her grandmother died and then adopted by another couple Jett did not learn that she was Williams daughter until the early 1980s 73 On October 18 1952 Williams and Billie Jean Jones were married by a justice of the peace 74 in Minden Louisiana 67 It was the second marriage for both each being divorced with children 67 The next day two public ceremonies were held at the New Orleans Civic Auditorium where 14 000 seats were sold for each 74 After Williams death a judge ruled that the wedding was not legal because Jones divorce had not become final until 11 days after she married Williams His first wife and his mother were the driving forces behind having the marriage declared invalid and they pursued the matter for years Williams had also married Sheppard before her divorce was final on the 10th day of a required 60 day reconciliation period 75 A man named Lewis Fitzgerald born 1943 claimed to be Williams illegitimate son he was the son of Marie McNeil Williams cousin 76 Fitzgerald was interviewed and he suggested that Lillie Williams operated a brothel at her boarding house in Montgomery A friend of the family denied his claims but singer Billy Walker remembered that Williams mentioned to him the presence of men in the house being led upstairs 76 Death EditMain article Death of Hank Williams Entrance marker of the Oakwood Annex Cemetery in Montgomery Alabama Williams was scheduled to perform at the Municipal Auditorium in Charleston West Virginia on December 31 1952 Advance ticket sales totaled 3 500 That day Williams could not fly because of an ice storm in the Nashville area he hired a college student Charles Carr to drive him to the concerts 77 Carr called the Charleston auditorium from Knoxville to say that Williams would not arrive on time owing to the ice storm and was instead ordered to drive Williams to Canton Ohio for a New Year s Day concert there 78 The two arrived at the Andrew Johnson Hotel in Knoxville Tennessee and Carr requested a doctor for Williams who was affected by the combination of the chloral hydrate and alcohol he had consumed on the way to Knoxville 79 Dr P H Cardwell injected Williams with two shots of vitamin B12 that also contained a quarter grain of morphine Carr and Williams checked out of the hotel but the porters had to carry Williams to the car as he was coughing and hiccuping 80 At around midnight on January 1 1953 when the two crossed the Tennessee state line and arrived in Bristol Virginia Carr stopped at a small all night restaurant and asked Williams if he wanted to eat Williams said he did not and those are believed to be his last words 81 Carr later drove on until he stopped for fuel at a gas station in Oak Hill West Virginia where he realized that Williams had been dead for so long that rigor mortis had already set in The station s owner called the local police chief 82 In Williams Cadillac the police found some empty beer cans and unfinished handwritten lyrics 83 Dr Ivan Malinin performed the autopsy at the Tyree Funeral House He found hemorrhages in the heart and neck and pronounced the cause of death as insufficiency of the right ventricle of the heart 84 He also wrote that Williams had been severely beaten and kicked in the groin recently during a fight in a Montgomery bar a few days earlier and local magistrate Virgil F Lyons ordered an inquest into Williams death concerning a welt that was visible on his head 85 That evening when the announcer in Canton announced Williams death to the gathered crowd they started laughing because they thought it was just another excuse After Hawkshaw Hawkins and other performers started singing Williams song I Saw the Light as a tribute to him the crowd realized that he was indeed dead and began to sing along 74 On January 2 Williams body was transported to Montgomery Alabama where it was placed in a silver casket that was displayed at his mother s boarding house for two days His funeral took place on January 4 at the Montgomery Auditorium with his casket placed on the flower covered stage 86 An estimated 15 000 to 25 000 people passed by the silver casket and the auditorium was filled with 2 750 mourners 87 His funeral was said to have been far larger than any ever held for any other citizen of Alabama and the largest event ever held in Montgomery 88 89 Williams remains are interred at the Oakwood Annex in Montgomery The president of MGM Records told Billboard magazine that the company got only about five requests for pictures of Williams during the weeks before his death but over 300 afterwards The local record shops reportedly sold all their Williams records and customers were asking for all records ever released by Williams 87 Williams final single released in November 1952 while he was still alive was titled I ll Never Get Out of This World Alive His song Your Cheatin Heart was written and recorded in September 1952 but released in late January 1953 after his death The song backed by Kaw Liga was No 1 on the country charts for six weeks It provided the title for the 1964 biographical film of the same name which starred George Hamilton as Williams 90 Take These Chains From My Heart was released in April 1953 and reached No 1 on the country charts 91 Released in July I Won t Be Home No More went to No 4 Meanwhile Weary Blues From Waitin reached No 7 92 Legacy Edit Hank Williams s star at 6400 Hollywood Boulevard on the Hollywood Walk of Fame Williams has been called the King of Country Music in popular culture 93 94 Alabama governor Gordon Persons officially proclaimed September 21 Hank Williams Day The first celebration in 1954 featured the unveiling of a monument at the Cramton Bowl that was later placed at the gravesite of Williams The ceremony featured Ferlin Husky interpreting I Saw the Light 95 Williams had 11 number one country hits in his career Lovesick Blues Long Gone Lonesome Blues Why Don t You Love Me Moanin the Blues Cold Cold Heart Hey Good Lookin Jambalaya On the Bayou I ll Never Get Out of This World Alive Kaw Liga Your Cheatin Heart and Take These Chains from My Heart as well as many other top 10 hits 96 On February 8 1960 Williams star was placed at 6400 Hollywood Boulevard on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 97 He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961 and into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1985 98 99 When Downbeat magazine took a poll the year after Williams death he was voted the most popular country and Western performer of all time ahead of such giants as Jimmie Rodgers Roy Acuff Red Foley and Ernest Tubb 100 In 1977 a national organization of CB truck drivers voted Your Cheatin Heart as their favorite record of all time 101 In 1987 he was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame under the category Early Influence 102 He was ranked second in CMT s 40 Greatest Men of Country Music in 2003 behind only Johnny Cash who recorded the song The Night Hank Williams Came To Town His son Hank Jr was ranked on the same list 103 In the 1980 Canadian film Hank Williams The Show He Never Gave Williams is portrayed by singer Sneezy Waters In 2004 Rolling Stone ranked him number 74 on its list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time 104 In 2005 the BBC documentary series Arena featured an episode on Williams 105 Many artists of the 1950s and 1960s including Elvis Presley 106 Bob Dylan Tammy Wynette David Houston Jerry Lee Lewis Merle Haggard Gene Vincent Carl Perkins Ricky Nelson and Conway Twitty 107 Hank Williams Jr Williams grandson Hank Williams III In 2011 Williams 1949 MGM number one hit Lovesick Blues was inducted into the Recording Academy Grammy Hall of Fame 108 The same year Hank Williams The Complete Mother s Best Recordings Plus was honored with a Grammy nomination for Best Historical Album 109 In 1999 Williams was inducted into the Native American Music Hall of Fame 110 On April 12 2010 the Pulitzer Prize Board awarded Williams a posthumous special citation that paid tribute to his craftsmanship as a songwriter who expressed universal feelings with poignant simplicity and played a pivotal role in transforming country music into a major musical and cultural force in American life 111 Several members of Williams descendants became musicians Hank Williams Jr daughter Jett Williams grandsons Hank Williams III and Sam Williams and granddaughters Hilary Williams 112 and Holly Williams are also country musicians 113 114 In July 2020 his granddaughter Katherine Hank Jr s daughter died in a car crash at the age of 27 115 His great grandson Coleman Finchum son of Hank Williams III released his debut single credited to IV and the Strange Band in 2021 Meanwhile Lewis Fitzgerald s son Ricky billed himself as Hank Williams IV following his father s claim of being Williams son 116 In 2006 a janitor of Sony ATV Music Publishing found in a dumpster the unfinished lyrics written by Williams that had been found in his car the night he died The worker claimed that she sold Williams notes to a representative of the Honky Tonk Hall of Fame and the Rock N Roll Roadshow The janitor was accused of theft but the charges were later dropped when a judge determined that her version of events was true The unfinished lyrics were later returned to Sony ATV which handed them to Bob Dylan in 2008 to complete the songs for a new album Ultimately the completion of the album included recordings by Alan Jackson Norah Jones Jack White Lucinda Williams Vince Gill Rodney Crowell Patty Loveless Levon Helm Jakob Dylan Sheryl Crow and Merle Haggard The album named The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams was released on October 4 2011 117 118 Material recorded by Williams originally intended for radio broadcasts to be played when he was on tour or for its distribution to radio stations nationwide resurfaced throughout time 119 In 1993 a double disc set of recordings of Williams for the Health amp Happiness Show was released 120 Broadcast in 1949 the shows were recorded for the promotion of Hadacol The set was re released on Hank Williams The Legend Begins in 2011 The album included unreleased songs Fan It and Alexander s Ragtime Band recorded by Williams at age 15 the homemade recordings of him singing Freight Train Blues New San Antonio Rose St Louis Blues and Greenback Dollar at age 18 and a recording for the 1951 March of Dimes 121 In May 2014 further radio recordings by Williams were released The Garden Spot Programs 1950 a series of publicity segments for plant nursery Naughton Farms originally aired in 1950 The recordings were found by collector George Gimarc at radio station KSIB in Creston Iowa 122 Gimarc contacted Williams daughter Jett and Colin Escott writer of a biography book on Williams The material was restored and remastered by Michael Graves and released by Omnivore Recordings 123 124 The release won a Grammy Award for Best Historical Album 125 Williams was portrayed by English actor Tom Hiddleston in the 2016 biopic I Saw the Light based on Colin Escott s 1994 book Hank Williams The Biography 126 Lawsuits over the estate Edit After Williams death Audrey Williams filed a suit in Nashville against MGM Records and Acuff Rose The suit demanded that both of the publishing companies continue to pay her half of the royalties from Hank Williams records Williams had an agreement giving his first wife half of the royalties but allegedly there was no clarification that the deal was valid after his death Because Williams may have left no will the disposition of the remaining 50 percent was considered uncertain those involved included Williams second wife Billie Jean Horton and her daughter and Williams mother and sister 127 On October 22 1975 a federal judge in Atlanta Georgia ruled Horton s marriage to Williams was valid and that half of Williams future royalties belonged to her 128 WSM s Mother s Best Flour Edit In 1951 Williams hosted a 15 minute show for Mother s Best Flour on WSM radio Due to Williams tour schedules some of the shows were previously recorded to be played in his absence 129 The original acetates made their way to the possession of Jett Williams Prior to that duplicates were made and intended to be published by a third party In February 2005 the Tennessee Court of Appeals upheld a lower court ruling stating that Williams heirs son Hank Williams Jr and daughter Jett Williams have the sole rights to sell his recordings made for a Nashville radio station in 1951 The court rejected claims made by PolyGram Records and Legacy Entertainment in releasing recordings Williams made for the Mother s Best Flour Show The recordings which Legacy Entertainment acquired in 1997 include live versions of Williams hits and his cover version of other songs PolyGram contended that Williams contract with MGM Records whose back catalogue they owned at the time prior to current owner Universal Music s absorption of PolyGram the next year gave them rights to release the radio recordings A 3 CD selection of the tracks restored by Joe Palmaccio was released by Time Life in October 2008 titled The Unreleased Recordings 130 Tributes Edit Main article List of tributes to Hank WilliamsAwards EditYear Award Awards Notes References1987 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 29th Annual Grammy Awards Posthumously 131 1989 Grammy for Best Country Vocal Collaboration There s a Tear in My Beer Grammy with Hank Williams Jr 132 1989 Music Video of the Year CMA with Hank Williams Jr 133 1989 Vocal Event of the Year CMA with Hank Williams Jr 1989 Video of the Year Academy of Country Music with Hank Williams Jr 134 1990 Vocal Collaboration of the Year TNN Music City News with Hank Williams Jr 135 1990 Video of the Year TNN Music City News with Hank Williams Jr 2010 Special Awards and Citation for his pivotal role in transforming country music The Pulitzer Prize Posthumously 111 Discography EditMain article Hank Williams discography See also List of songs written by Hank WilliamsFootnotes Edit Koon George William 1983 p 6 Koon George William 1983 p 4 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2015 p 3 Flippo Chet 1985 p 12 Williams Roger M 1981 p 7 a b c Koon George William 1983 p 10 Williams Roger M 1981 p 9 Middleton Richard 2000 p 318 Williams Roger M 1981 p 26 Williams Roger M 1981 p 18 Williams Roger M 1981 p 13 Williams Roger M 1981 p 14 Williams Roger M 1981 p 27 Hemphill Paul 2005 p 17 Koon George William 1983 p 13 Lipsitz George 1994 p 26 Campbell Michael 2012 p 126 Brackett David 2000 p 98 Dicaire David 2007 p p 124 Masino Susan 2011 p 11 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 229 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 21 a b Koon George William 1983 p 16 Browne Ray Broadus 2005 p 66 a b Koon George William 1983 p 153 Koon George William 1983 p 16 17 Koon George William 1983 p 18 Koon George William 1983 p 11 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2015 p 48 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2015 p 29 Hemphill Paul 2005 p 34 Hemphill Paul 2005 p 39 a b c Cusic Don 2008 p 61 Hemphill Paul 2005 p 40 Lipsitz George 1994 p 27 Koon George William 1983 p 24 Williams Roger M 1981 p 42 Koon George William 1983 p 111 Williams Roger M 1981 p 42 59 Ribowsky Mark 2016 p 156 Williams Roger M 1981 p 59 Williams Roger M 1981 p 60 Young William H amp Young Nancy K 2010 p 234 Williams Roger M 1981 p 70 71 a b Gilliland John 1969 Browne Pat 2001 p 913 a b Koon George William 1983 p 43 Koon George William 1983 p 50 Evans Mike 2006 p 15 Young William H amp Young Nancy K 2010 p 235 a b Ching Barbara 2003 p p 55 Williams Roger M 1981 p 127 Bernstein Cynthia Nunnally Thomas amp Sabino Robin 1997 p 250 Peppiatt Francesca 2004 p 82 Billboard staff 1951 p 9 Whitburn Joel 1991 p 26 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2015 p 198 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 180 181 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 191 193 Koon George William 1983 p 63 a b Koon George William 1983 p 153 154 Wolff Kurt 2000 p 160 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 211 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 226 227 Williams Roger M 1981 p 201 204 Lornell Kip amp Laird Tracey 2008 p 82 a b c Koon George William 1983 p 70 Koon George William 1983 p 67 Koon George William 1983 p 74 Pugh Ronnie 1998 p 191 Williams Roger M 1981 p 96 Koon George William 1983 p XII Williams Hilary amp Roberts Mary Beth 2010 p 127 a b c Celon Curtis 1995 p 80 Williams Roger M 1981 p 46 a b Ribowsky Mark 2016 p 43 Tharpe Jim 2013 Lilly John 2002 Olson Ted 2004 p 296 Olson Ted 2004 p 298 Olson Ted 2004 p 300 Olson Ted 2004 p 303 Koon George William 1983 p 79 Olson Ted 2004 p 306 Escott Colin Merritt George amp MacEwen William 2009 p 243 Stanton Scott 2003 p p 262 a b Peterson Richard A 1997 p 182 Sheckler Finch Jackie 2011 p 72 73 Alabama Travel 2013 Koon George William 1983 p 161 Koon George William 1983 p 128 Whitburn Joel 2002 p 391 Huber Patrick Goodson Steve amp Anderson David 2014 p 226 Haislop Neil Lathrop Tad amp Sumrall Harry 1995 p 230 Windham Kathryn Tucker 2007 p 33 George Warren Holly et al 2001 p 1066 Walk of Fame staff 2013 CMHoF 2023 AlamHof 2003 Williams Roger M 1981 p 140 Caress Jay 1979 p 228 RockHall 2023 CMT 40 Greatest Men of Country Music CMT Retrieved March 14 2011 Rolling Stone staff 2014 BBC staff 2005 Elvis Presley AllMusic Retrieved March 14 2011 Huber Patrick Goodson Steve amp Anderson David 2014 p 302 Hank Williams receives additional Grammy Recognition as Lovesick Blues inducted into Grammy Hall of Fame Rodeo Attitude official website Archived from the original on July 15 2011 Retrieved March 14 2011 The Beatles catalogue wins Best Historical Album Grammy WMMR Greater Media February 14 2011 Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved March 14 2011 Hank Williams Native American group Inducts Him Herald Journal November 9 1999 Retrieved June 25 2010 a b The 2010 Pulitzer Prize Winners Special Awards and Citations Official Pulitzer Awards Website Columbia University April 12 2010 Archived from the original on July 24 2010 Retrieved November 10 2011 Chiu David November 2 2010 Hilary Williams Details Her Brush with Death in Sign of Life theboot com Retrieved July 8 2020 New exhibit explores Hank Williams family legacy Yahoo Associated Press April 17 2008 Archived from the original on March 18 2013 Retrieved March 14 2011 Betts Stephen September 18 2018 Hilary Williams on Triumphant New Album My Lucky Scars Family Legacy Rolling Stone Retrieved February 8 2020 Pasquini Maria June 14 2020 Country Singer Hank Williams Jr s Daughter 27 Killed in Tennessee Car Crash People Retrieved July 8 2020 The Hank Williams Lineage Continues with Hank3 s Son IV Saving Country Music April 8 2021 Retrieved April 14 2021 Flippo Chet August 25 2011 Nashville Skyline Hank Williams Life After Death Country Music Television MTV Networks Retrieved September 6 2011 The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams to be released in October bobdylan com Archived from the original on September 24 2011 Retrieved October 4 2011 Koon George William 1983 pp 153 154 Health and Happiness Show Allmusic Rovi Corporation Retrieved May 26 2014 Flippo Chet September 15 2011 Nashville Skyline Johnny Cash and Hank Williams Got Some More Music Here Country Music Television Retrieved May 26 2014 Hear a newly discovered Hank Williams performance USA Today March 28 2014 Six Decades Later A Long Lost Hank Williams Recording Resurfaces National Public Radio May 18 2014 Retrieved May 19 2014 Newly Discovered Hank The Garden Spot Programs 1950 American Standard Time May 24 2014 Stefano Angela 2015 Hank Williams The Garden Spot Programs Named Best Historical Album at the 2015 Grammy Awards The Boot Taste of Country Network Retrieved February 10 2021 Sean Michaels June 13 2014 Tom Hiddleston played country icon Hank Williams in biopic The Guardian Retrieved June 16 2014 File Action to Untangle Hank Williams Estate Billboard May 23 1953 p 15 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 13 2011 Koon George William 1983 p 247 Hilbourn Robert October 28 2008 There s Plenty Cookin Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 14 2011 Mike Ragogna November 11 2011 Mother s Best Hank s Best A Conversation With Jett Williams and the Students The Huffington Post AOL Lifetime Achievement Award Recording Academy October 18 2010 Retrieved February 8 2021 Jan DeKnock February 16 1990 Who ll Win The Grammys And the Grammy nominees are Chicago Tribune p 37 Past Winners and Nominees CMA Awards Retrieved February 8 2021 Winners Academy of Country Music Retrieved February 8 2021 Goldsmith Thomas Oermann Robert June 6 1990 Rick Van Shelton Tops TNN Awards Press and Sun Bulletin New York Retrieved February 8 2021 via Newspapers com a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link References Edit Alabama Travel 2013 Hank Williams Trail Brochure Alabama Tourism Department Alabama Tourism Department Archived from the original on March 11 2023 Retrieved March 14 2023 AlamHof 2003 1985 Inductee Lifework Award for Performing Achievement The Alabama Music Hall of Fame Archived from the original on February 13 2003 Retrieved October 4 2011 lt ref gt BBC staff February 5 2005 Hank Williams Honky Tonk Blues BBC Retrieved February 10 2021 Bernstein Cynthia Nunnally Thomas Sabino Robin 1997 Language variety in the South revisited University of Alabama Press ISBN 978 0 8173 0882 7 Billboard staff January 13 1951 The Year s Top Country amp Western Artists The Year s Top Country amp Western Records The Billboard p 19 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 7 2011 Brackett David 2000 Interpreting popular music University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22541 1 Browne Pat 2001 The guide to United States popular culture Popular Press ISBN 978 0 87972 821 2 Retrieved March 6 2011 Browne Ray Broadus 2005 Profiles of Popular Culture A Reader Popular Press ISBN 978 0 87972 869 4 Campbell Michael 2012 Popular Music in America The Beat Goes On Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 133 71260 2 Caress Jay 1979 Hank Williams Country Music s Tragic King New York Stein and Day ISBN 978 0 8128 2583 1 OCLC 4492866 Celon Curtis 1995 Country music culture from hard times to Heaven Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 934 3 Retrieved March 8 2011 Ching Barbara 2003 Wrong s What I Do Best Hard Country Music and Contemporary Culture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516942 3 Retrieved March 7 2011 CMHoF 2023 Hank Williams The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Retrieved March 15 2023 Cusic Don 2008 Discovering country music ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35245 4 Dicaire David 2007 The first generation of country music stars biographies of 50 artists born before 1940 McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 3021 5 Escott Colin Merritt George MacEwen William 2009 Hank Williams The Biography Hachette UK ISBN 978 0 316 07463 6 Escott Colin Merritt George MacEwen William 2015 I Saw the Light The Story of Hank Williams Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 31506 7 Evans Mike 2006 Country Music Facts Figures amp Fun AAPPL ISBN 978 1 904332 53 4 George Warren Holly Romanowski Patricia Romanowski Bashe Patricia Pareles Jon 2001 The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock amp Roll Fireside ISBN 978 0 7432 0120 9 Flippo Chet 1985 Your Cheatin Heart A Biography of Hank Williams Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 19737 3 Gilliland John 1969 Show 9 Tennessee Firebird American country music before and after Elvis Part 1 Retrieved March 13 2023 Haislop Neil Lathrop Tad Sumrall Harry 1995 Giants of Country Music Classic Sounds and Stars from the Heart of Nashville to the Top of the Charts Billboard Books p 230 ISBN 978 0 8230 7635 2 HANK WILLIAMS Canonized after his death revered as the king of country music by every subsequent generation of country performers and studied by everyone from backwoods deejays to music scholars Hemphill Paul 2005 Lovesick Blues The Life of Hank Williams New York Penguin Group ISBN 0 670 03414 2 Huber Patrick Goodson Steve Anderson David 2014 The Hank Williams Reader Oxford University Press p 226 ISBN 978 0 19 934989 0 With the legacy of aching standards that he left Williams may be the King of Country Music but on classics like I m So Lonesome I Could Cry he really was singing the white man s blues in its purest form Koon George William 1983 Hank Williams So Lonesome University of Mississippi press ISBN 978 1 57806 283 6 Retrieved March 6 2011 Lilly John 2002 Hank s Lost Charleston Show West Virginia Division of Culture and History Archived from the original on March 7 2023 Retrieved March 14 2023 Lipsitz George 1994 Rainbow at midnight labor and culture in the 1940s University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 06394 7 Lornell Kip Laird Tracey 2008 Shreveport sounds in black and white Univ Press of Mississippi p 82 ISBN 978 1 60473 303 7 louisiana hayride Middleton Richard 2000 Reading Pop Approaches to Textual Analysis in Popular Music Approaches to Textual Analysis in Popular Music Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 191 58821 1 Masino Susan 2011 Family Tradition Three Generations of Hank Williams Backbeat Books ISBN 978 1 617 13107 3 Olson Ted 2004 Crossroads A Southern Culture Annual Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 86554 866 4 Retrieved March 8 2011 Peppiatt Francesca 2004 Country Music s Most Wanted The Top 10 Book of Cheatin Hearts Honky Tonk Tragedies and Music City Oddities Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 593 4 Retrieved March 7 2011 Peterson Richard A 1997 Creating country music fabricating authenticity University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 66284 8 Retrieved March 8 2011 Pugh Ronnie 1998 Ernest Tubb The Texas Troubadour Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 822 32190 3 Ribowsky Mark 2016 Hank The Short Life and Long Country Road of Hank Williams Liveright Publishing ISBN 978 1 631 49158 0 RockHall 2023 Hank Williams Retrieved March 15 2023 Rolling Stone staff January 10 2014 100 Greatest Artists of All Time Rolling Stone Retrieved March 15 2023 Sheckler Finch Jackie 2011 It Happened in Alabama Globe Pequot ISBN 978 0 7627 6113 5 Stanton Scott 2003 The tombstone tourist musicians Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7434 6330 0 Retrieved March 13 2011 Tharpe Jim July 2 2013 Hank Williams last ride Driver recalls lonesome end AccessAtlanta com Retrieved June 13 2016 Williams Hilary Roberts Mary Beth 2010 Sign of Life A Story of Family Tragedy Music and Healing Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81913 1 Williams Roger M 1981 Sing a sad song the life of Hank Williams University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 00861 0 Retrieved March 6 2011 Windham Kathryn Tucker 2007 Alabama One Big Front Porch NewSouth Books ISBN 978 1 58838 219 1 Whitburn Joel 1991 Joel Whitburn Presents Billboard 1s 1950 1991 A Week by week Record of Billboard s 1 Hits Record Research ISBN 978 0 89820 080 5 Whitburn Joel 2002 Top Country Singles 1944 to 2001 Chart Data Compiled from Billboard s Country Singles Charts 1944 2001 Record Research ISBN 978 0 898 20151 2 Walk of Fame staff January 28 2013 Hank Williams Hollywood Walk of Fame Walk of Fame com Hollywood Chamber of Commerce a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint date and year link Wolff Kurt 2000 Country Music The Rough Guide the Complete Guide to Country Music the Artists the Songs and the Stories Behind Them Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 85828 534 4 Young William H Young Nancy K 2010 World War II and the Postwar Years in America A Historical and Cultural Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35652 0 Journals Edit File Action to Untangle Hank Williams Estate The Billboard May 23 1953 p 15 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved March 13 2011 News Edit PBS Country Music Native stories of Hank Williams Sr Loretta Lynn and Peter La Farge October 22 2019 Retrieved February 14 2022 Native American Music Awards Hall of Fame 2019 Retrieved February 14 2022 Country Music by Ken Burns Episode 3 The Hillbilly Shakespeare PBS 2019 Retrieved February 14 2022 Further reading EditWilliams Lycrecia Dale Vinicur 1989 Still in Love with You Hank and Audrey Williams Nashville Tenn Rutledge Hill Press ISBN 978 1 55853 105 5 OCLC 42469829 Rivers Jerry 1967 Thurston Moore ed Hank Williams From Life to Legend Denver Heather Enterprises LCCN 67030642 OCLC 902165 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hank Williams Wikiquote has quotations related to Hank Williams Hank Williams at IMDb Hank Williams at AllMusic Listing of all Hank Williams s songs and alternatives Archived August 5 2019 at the Wayback Machine Hank Williams Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Hank Williams 1923 1953 at Library of Congress with 127 library catalog records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hank Williams amp oldid 1144822715, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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