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The Oak Ridge Boys

The Oak Ridge Boys are an American country and gospel vocal quartet originating in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The group was founded in 1943 as the Oak Ridge Quartet. They became popular in Southern gospel during the 1950s. Their name was changed to the Oak Ridge Boys in the early 1960s, and they remained a gospel group until the mid-1970s, when they changed their image and concentrated on country music.[1][2]

The Oak Ridge Boys
The Oak Ridge Boys in 2013
(From left: Joe Bonsall, Duane Allen, William Lee Golden, and Richard Sterban)
Background information
Also known asThe Oak Ridge Quartet (1947-1961)
OriginOak Ridge, Tennessee, U.S.
GenresCountry, southern gospel, doo wop, pop
Years active1947–present
Members
Past members
  • Curly Kinsey
  • Lon "Deacon" Freeman
  • Wally Fowler
  • Little Johnny New
  • Monroe (Curley) Blaylock
  • Bob Weber
  • Pat Patterson
  • Joe Allred
  • Bob Prather
  • Carlos Cook
  • Calvin Newton
  • Cat Freeman
  • Les Roberson
  • Ron Page
  • Bill Smith
  • Ronnie Page
  • Smitty Gatlin
  • Hobert Evans
  • Bobby Clark
  • Tommy Fairchild
  • Herman Harper
  • James Metz
  • Little Willie Wynn
  • Gary McSpadden
  • Big Jim Hamill
  • Noel Fox
  • Glen Allred (guitar and fill in baritone)
  • Steve Sanders
Websitewww.oakridgeboys.com

The lineup that produced their most well-known country and crossover hits ― such as "Elvira" (1981), "Bobbie Sue" (1982), and "American Made" (1983) ― consists of Duane Allen (lead vocals), Joe Bonsall (tenor), William Lee Golden (baritone), and Richard Sterban (bass). Golden and Allen joined the group in the mid-1960s, and Sterban and Bonsall joined in the early 1970s. Golden was removed from the group in 1987 and replaced by Steve Sanders until 1995, when he left and Golden rejoined.

The group was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2015.

History edit

The Oak Ridge Quartet edit

The core group that would eventually lead to the Oak Ridge Boys was a country group called Wally Fowler and the Georgia Clodhoppers, formed in 1943 in Knoxville, Tennessee. They were requested to perform for staff members and their families restricted during World War II at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in nearby Oak Ridge, Tennessee. They were asked to sing there so often that, eventually, they changed their name to the Oak Ridge Quartet, and because their most popular songs were gospel, Fowler decided to focus solely on Southern gospel music. At the time, the quartet was made up of Wally Fowler, Lon "Deacon" Freeman, Curly Kinsey, and Johnny New. This group began recording in 1947.[3] Wally Fowler and the Oak Ridge Quartet were members of the Grand Ole Opry in the 1940s.[4] In 1949, the other three men split from Fowler to form a new group, Curley Kinsey and the Tennessee Ridge Runners, so Fowler hired an existing group, the Calvary Quartet, to reform the Oak Ridge Quartet. Walt Cornell sang baritone for the Oak Ridge Quartet in the early 1950s. In 1957, Fowler sold the rights to the "Oak Ridge Quartet" name to group member Smitty Gatlin in exchange for forgiveness of a debt. As a result of more personnel changes, the group lost its tenor, so they lowered their arrangements and had Gatlin sing tenor, while the pianist, Tommy Fairchild, sang lead. They recorded an album for Cadence Records, then in 1958, they hired Willie Wynn to sing the tenor part, and Fairchild moved back exclusively to the piano. At this point, the group consisted of Fairchild at the piano, Wynn, Gatlin (singing lead), baritone Ron Page, and bass Herman Harper. They recorded an album on the Checker Records label, one on Starday, and three on Skylite. In 1961, Gatlin changed the group's name to "the Oak Ridge Boys" because their producer, Bud Praeger, thought "Oak Ridge Quartet" sounded too old-fashioned for their contemporary sound.

1962–1973 edit

In 1962, Ron Page left, and the group hired Gary McSpadden (who had filled in for Jake Hess in the Statesmen Quartet) as baritone with the understanding from Jake Hess that when he was ready to start a group, he would recruit McSpadden. They recorded another album on Skylite, and then two groundbreaking albums on Warner Bros. Records. When Hess followed through on that promise, McSpadden quit to join a new group Hess was forming, the Imperials. Jim Hammill[5] (who later became a mainstay in the Kingsmen Quartet) was chosen to be his replacement. They made one album for Festival Records, one for Stateswood (Skylite's budget label), and two more for Skylite. Hammill did not get along with the rest of the group, and William Lee Golden, a newcomer to the music industry, felt that Hamill was hurting the group and asked the group if he could be Hammil's replacement. After Hamill's retirement from the group in 1964, Golden joined as baritone.

The group recorded another album for Starday and another on Skylite in 1965. In 1966, Gatlin left the group to become a minister of music, and on Golden's recommendation, Duane Allen, formerly of the Southernairs Quartet (and more recently baritone of the Prophets Quartet), was hired to replace him. With Willie Wynn still singing tenor and Herman Harper as bass, the group made another album for Skylite and one for United Artists, and then began recording on the Heart Warming label. Between 1966 and 1973, they made 12 albums with Heart Warming, and the company also released several compilation albums on which they were included during those years. The group also had an album on Vista (Heart Warming's budget label) that included unreleased songs from previous sessions. Harper left the group in 1968 to join the Don Light Talent Agency, before starting his own company, the Harper Agency, which remains one of the most reputable booking agencies in gospel music. Noel Fox, formerly of the Tennesseans and the Harvesters, took over the bass part. In 1970, the Oak Ridge Boys earned their first Grammy Award for "Talk About the Good Times".

In late October 1972, Richard Sterban, the bass with J. D. Sumner and the Stamps Quartet, left that group and joined the Oak Ridge Boys. The quartet that appeared on Hee Haw in 1972 consisted of Willie Wynn, Duane Allen, William Lee Golden, and Richard Sterban. Joe Bonsall, a Philadelphia native who was a member of the Keystone Quartet and recording on Duane Allen's Superior label, joined in April 1973. Sterban and Bonsall had both been in the Keystones during the late 1960s, recording much of the ORB's material. That same year, the Oak Ridge Boys recorded a single with Johnny Cash and the Carter Family, "Praise the Lord and Pass the Soup", that put them on the country charts for the first time. The group's lineup remained consistent for the next 15 years.

1974–1986 edit

In the mid-1970s, the Oak Ridge Boys became involved with prominent country music promoter Jim Halsey, who as their new manager, began encouraging them to move from gospel music to broader country music—the most fundamental change in their history—and began arranging international appearances.[1][2][6][7]

After opening a series of shows for Roy Clark, the group moved in 1973 to the Columbia label, for which they made three albums and several singles. In early 1976, they toured Russia for three weeks with Roy Clark. They went from being one of the top acts on Heart Warming to nearly the bottom on Columbia in terms of promotion. Columbia did not serve the gospel radio stations like Heart Warming did, leaving the impression that the Oak Ridge Boys were leaving gospel music, which hurt the group's popularity among its core fan demographic. While promoting the single "Heaven Bound", the Oak Ridge Boys made appearances on The Mike Douglas Show and The Merv Griffin Show, both nationally syndicated in the United States and Canada. In 1976, despite having been picked by Paul Simon to sing backup on "Slip Slidin' Away", the group asked to be released from its contract with Columbia after its single, "Family Reunion", was only a lukewarm success. Columbia complied with the request, and the band immediately made a live album that was a mix of gospel and country on their own label.

In 1977, the Oak Ridge Boys fully switched from gospel to country with the release of their first ABC Records (later absorbed by MCA) album, Y'all Come Back Saloon. Two songs from that album reached the top five on the country charts, and their next album, Room Service, in 1978, gave them two more, including their first number-one hit, "I'll Be True to You". The Oak Ridge Boys Have Arrived was released in 1979, and Together followed in 1980. A compilation album simply titled Greatest Hits, containing 10 singles from the previous four albums, was released in the fall of 1980. This same year, the Oak Ridge Boys also made a brief cameo appearance on The Dukes of Hazzard (season two, "Granny Annie").

The group's sixth album, Fancy Free, released early in 1981, contained the Dallas Frazier–penned song "Elvira". This remains the group's most widely known song, and Fancy Free is their best-selling album. "Elvira" had been recorded by other artists, including Frazier himself in the late 1960s and the First Edition in 1970, but the Oak Ridge Boys were the first to have a hit with it. Their version of the song was a number-one country hit, and in July 1981 reached number five on the pop charts.

The doo-wop-style title track from Bobbie Sue, their seventh album, was another crossover hit, reaching number one on the country charts and number 12 on the pop charts. That album also spawned the group's first U.S.-released music video, for the song "So Fine". (A video was made for "Easy", from the Y'All Come Back Saloon album, but was never released in the U.S.) The group also recorded The Oak Ridge Boys Christmas album in 1982.

Their album American Made was released in January 1983. The title track was used as a TV advertisement for Miller Beer.

The group recorded three albums over the next three years. The late-1983 album Deliver provided two number-one singles, one of which, "I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes", was written by Randy VanWarmer, who had a hit in 1979 with "Just When I Needed You Most". Their next album was Greatest Hits 2, released in July 1984. Unlike the 1980 Greatest Hits album, this one included two new songs, "Everyday" and "Make My Life With You", both number-one country hits. In 1985, they released their 12th album, Step on Out. The title cut was written by ex-Byrd Chris Hillman and former Crawdaddy magazine editor Peter Knobler. The group recorded two albums in 1986, one of which was a second Christmas album, and in 1987, they recorded a single called "Take Pride in America", which was used in television public service announcements about recycling.

1987–1999 edit

In 1987, Where The Fast Lane Ends was released. It was the first with new producer Jimmy Bowen, and was the group's last album before the 1987 departure of William Lee Golden. Golden was replaced by the band's guitarist, Steve Sanders.[8]

The group released four more albums for MCA, including a third Greatest Hits album that contained a previously unreleased single they had recorded for the Take Pride In America campaign. They moved to RCA Nashville and made three albums there, including Best of the Oak Ridge Boys, which included a single they had made for the My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys movie soundtrack. The move to RCA did not work out because the person who had signed them there moved to another label shortly thereafter, and his replacement wanted to promote Alabama more than the Oak Ridge Boys. They switched again and signed with Liberty Records, (Capitol's Nashville-based label), for which they made their third Christmas album.[9]

Baritone Steve Sanders was replaced by Duane Allen's son, Dee, with occasional help from his brother-in-law Paul Martin. (Martin had previously replaced J.P. Pennington as lead singer of Exile in the early 1990s until that band's disbanding.) At midnight on New Year's Day 1996, at the Star Plaza Theatre in Merrillville, Indiana, Golden returned to the group. That year, they made a two-disc gospel set, Revival (their first full gospel album since 1976) with Leon Russell producing. This was sold on TV and later by the Oak Ridge Boys themselves at concerts and through the mail. In 1998, Sanders died by suicide.[10]

Over the next few years, the group collaborated on an album with polka instrumentalist Jimmy Sturr and then made an album for Platinum Records called Voices.[11]

2000–present edit

After nearly a decade of dealing with problems such as labels that had little interest in promoting The Oak Ridge Boys, studio breakdowns, and sluggish sales, the group's fortunes changed when they signed with Spring Hill Records in 2000. In the first four years of teaming with Dove Award-winning producer Michael Sykes, the quartet released a full-length gospel album (From The Heart), their fourth Christmas album (Inconvenient Christmas), a patriotic album (Colors), a bluegrass album (The Journey), and a quasi-compilation, titled Common Thread, containing newly recorded versions of older gospel songs, as well as material from 2004's The Journey. Another Christmas album, Christmas Cookies, followed in 2005. In 2006, the group completed the album, Front Row Seats, a return to mainstream country music with modern, aggressive arrangements and song selection. The project spawned a minor top-40 hit with "It's Hard to Be Cool in a Mini-Van".

In June 2007, they returned to their namesake, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. They were the featured performers at the Secret City Festival and were given a tour of the Y-12 National Security Complex's historic Calutrons (used to separate the uranium 235 for Little Boy, the first atomic bomb used in warfare). While there, a street was renamed the Oak Ridge Boys Way in their honor.

Also in 2007, the group appeared on Shooter Jennings' (son of Waylon Jennings) album The Wolf. This pairing led to The Boys Are Back, released on May 19, 2009, and named for the title song written by Shooter Jennings. The project debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Top Country Albums Chart and number 77 on the Billboard Top 200. The album was produced by Dave Cobb, who was introduced to the group by Shooter Jennings. Reviews were mixed, but most praised the cover of "Seven Nation Army" by The White Stripes; 2010 was just as busy, including a cameo appearance on the History Channel show Pawn Stars episode "Packing Heat", which aired on December 13, 2010.[12]

During the July 8, 2011, performance of the Friday Night Opry, Little Jimmy Dickens announced that the Oak Ridge Boys would become the newest members of the Grand Ole Opry, effective August 6, 2011.[13][14][15][16]

In September 2011, the quartet released It's Only Natural through Cracker Barrel Old Country Store's music label. The album debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Country albums chart, remaining in the country top 40 for nearly two months. It contains 12 tracks - five new songs and seven re-recorded hits from the late 1980s. The first single off the album is "What-cha Gonna Do". A special 30th-anniversary re-recording of "Elvira" is featured on the album, as well.

In 2012, the group released two new studio albums. In May, they made a return to their Southern gospel roots with the release of Back Home Again. Along with gospel standards, the group covered John Denver's "Back Home Again" and Dolly Parton's "Coat of Many Colors". The album, featuring mostly acoustic arrangements, was produced by Ben Isaacs (of The Isaacs). In September of the same year, Christmas Time's A-Coming, the group's sixth Christmas project, was released through Gaither Music Group, and was also a featured title at Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores. The project features traditional standards, both secular and spiritual, as well as new material.

In 2013, The Oak Ridge Boys celebrated the 40th anniversary of the current lineup of members with a special 40th-Anniversary Tour, commemorative CD project, an Oak Ridge Boys-themed cruise, and a network television special.[17]

The Oak Ridge Boys released their first-ever live hits album Boys Night Out in April 2014 through Cleopatra Records. In an interview, Joe Bonsall said, "Here it is live and kicking with the audience singing with us. It's totally updated and different. I think for our real fans, this is going to be a gigantic treat, because our fans have clamored for a live album for years, and for people who don't know us or don't know us as well, to listen to this makes them go, "Oh wow, these guys are still sounding great, holy cow." I think it's going to be a good project for us all around."[18]

On August 21, 2015, they revealed a collaboration recording of their hit "Elvira". This collaboration was recorded with Sing-Off-winning, country a cappella group Home Free, who uploaded the video to their YouTube channel. The video was an instant hit, reaching 90,000 views within the first 20 hours of it being uploaded.[19]

On October 25, 2015, the Oak Ridge Boys were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame during the Medallion Ceremony, in the category of modern-era artists. It was presented by Kenny Rogers (a previous inductee).[20][21][22]

In 2017, the Oak Ridge Boys joined Third Day at the legendary FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to record a cover version of Paul Simon's "Loves Me Like A Rock" for the Third Day album, Revival.

In December 2018, the Oak Ridge Boys attended the funeral of the 41st President of the United States, George H. W. Bush, in Houston, Texas, and sang "Amazing Grace" during the service.[23]

On October 4, 2019, the Oak Ridge Boys announced[24] their partnership with AARP and the U.S. Department of Justice to help raise awareness of elder fraud.

On September 19, 2023, the Oak Ridge Boys announced that they would be embarking on a farewell tour to mark their golden anniversary under their current lineup. Sterban has taken leave from the band on numerous occasions, with Dailey & Vincent bass vocalist Aaron McCune filling in for him; Bonsall suffered a pulmonary embolism that has affected his legs and can no longer navigate the stage without assistance, resulting in his performing from a stool.[25][26]

Discography edit

Personnel edit

Current members edit

Former members edit

  • Curly Kinsey – bass (1945–47)
  • Lon "Deacon" Freeman – baritone/guitar (1945–49)
  • Wally Fowler – lead (1945–52)
  • Little Johnny New – tenor (1945–49; 1952)
  • Monroe (Curley) Blaylock – bass (1947–49)
  • Bob Weber – bass (1949–56)
  • Pat Patterson – baritone (1949–52), lead (1952–53)
  • Joe Allred – tenor (1949–52)
  • Bob Prather – baritone (1952)
  • Carlos Cook – lead (1952–53), baritone (1953–68)
  • Calvin Newton – lead (1953–56)
  • Cat Freeman – tenor (1954–56)
  • Les Roberson – baritone (1955–56)
  • Ron Page – bass (1956)
  • Bill Smith – bass (1957)
  • Ronnie Page – baritone (1957–62)
  • Smitty Gatlin – lead (1957–58; 1959–66), tenor (1958–59)
  • Hobert Evans – tenor (1957–58)
  • Wallace "Happy" Edwards – tenor fill-in (1958)
  • Bobby Clark – tenor (1958)
  • Tommy Fairchild – lead (1958–59)
  • Herman Harper – bass (1957–69)
  • Little Willie Wynn – tenor (1959–73)
  • Gary McSpadden – baritone (1962–63)
  • Big Jim Hamill – baritone (1963–64)
  • Noel Fox – bass (1969–72)
  • Steve Sanders – baritone (1987–95)
  • Dee Allen – baritone fill-in (late 1995)
  • Paul Martin – baritone fill-in (late 1995)

Band edit

  • Boyce Hawkins – piano (1949)
  • Bobby Whitfield – piano (1950–52; 1954–1956)
  • Glen Allred – guitar / vocals (1951–52)
  • Powell Hassell – piano (1957–58)
  • Tommy Fairchild – piano (1959–60; 1961–72)
  • Gary Trusler – piano (1960)
  • James Goss – piano (1960)
  • Mark Ellerbee – drums (1969–79)
  • Marty Twinkles Glisson – piano (1976 [?])
  • Don Breland – bass guitar (1969–87)
  • Skip Mitchell – guitar (1976–86)
  • Pete Cummings – lead guitar (1980-1983)
  • John Rich – guitar and steel (1972–75)
  • Tony Brown – piano and keyboards (1972–75)
  • Garland Craft – piano (1975–80)
  • Michael Saleem – drums (1979–80)
  • Fred Satterfield – drums (1980–96)
  • Paul Urick – bass guitar (1987–early 1990s [?])
  • Chris Nole – keyboard (2009–12)
  • Dewey Dorough – saxophone, harmonica (1982–2000)[28]
  • Ron Fairchild – keyboard (1980–2001, 2002–09, fill-in 2009–12, 2013–present)
  • Chris Golden – acoustic guitar/mandolin (1995), drums (1996–2014)
  • Don Carr – lead guitar (1991–2014)
  • Jimmy Fulbright – keyboard (2001), bass guitar (2003–12)
  • Rex Wiseman – various instruments (2006–present)
  • Jeff Douglas – guitar and dobro (1995–2021)
  • Scotty Simpson – bass guitar (2013–present)
  • David Northup – percussion/drums (2014–2017)
  • Roger Eaton – lead guitar (2014–2021)
  • Austin Curcuruto – percussion/drums (2017–present)
  • James Watkins – lead guitar (2021)
  • Darin Favorite – lead guitar (2021-present)

Timeline edit

Awards and honors edit

Academy of Country Music Awards

  • 1978: Top Vocal Group
  • 1981: Single of the Year – "Elvira"

Country Music Association Awards

  • 1978: Instrumental Group of the Year (Oak Ridge Boys Band)
  • 1978: Vocal Group of the Year
  • 1981: Single of the Year – "Elvira"
  • 1986: Instrumental Group of the Year (Oak Ridge Boys Band)

GMA Dove Awards

  • 1969: Album of the Year – It's Happening
  • 1970: Male Group of the Year
  • 1972: Male Group of the Year
  • 1972: Album of the Year – Light
  • 1973: Album of the Year – Street Gospel
  • 2002: Country Album of the Year – From The Heart
  • 2007: Country Song of the Year – "Jonah, Job and Moses"
  • 2010: Long Form Music Video of the Year – A Gospel Journey

Grammy Awards

Other honors edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Carter, Walter: "Oak Ridge Boys: Inducted 2015,", 2015, (adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum's Encyclopedia of Country Music, Oxford University Press) Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, retrieved September 6, 2020
  2. ^ a b "Country Music Hall Of Fame Inductees: Jim Ed Brown And The Browns, Grady Martin, Oak Ridge Boys,", October 25, 2015, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, retrieved September 6, 2020
  3. ^ Huey, Steve. "Oak Ridge Boys Bio". Cmt.com. Retrieved April 5, 2011.
  4. ^ "Opry Timeline – 1940s". Opry.com. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
  5. ^ . January 14, 2006. Archived from the original on January 14, 2006.
  6. ^ Everly-Douze, Susan: "'Livin' on Tulsa Time': Trio Rocks Country Music Cradle", biography, Oklahoma Today, retrieved from Oklahoma State University archives, September 5, 2020
  7. ^ Grawe, Jim (producer/narrator): Kansas Country, documentary film (preview online), aired September 5, 2020 (and previously), KPTS-TV, viewed September 5, 2020
  8. ^ "Steve Sanders; Former Oak Ridge Boys Baritone". Los Angeles Times. June 11, 1998. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  9. ^ "The Oak Ridge Boys Albums and Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  10. ^ "Steve Sanders dies at 45". Variety.com. June 18, 1998. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  11. ^ "Voices - The Oak Ridge Boys | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  12. ^ "MusicScribe Blog". Musicscribe.com. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  13. ^ . NewsChannel5.com. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  14. ^ "News : Opry Invites Oak Ridge Boys to Join Cast". CMT. July 11, 2011. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  15. ^ . oakridgeboys.com. August 6, 2011. Archived from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  16. ^ "Oak Ridge Boys to play the Grand Ole Opry". wbir.com. July 9, 2011. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  17. ^ . Oakridgeboys.com. Archived from the original on January 27, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  18. ^ Ragogna, Mike (April 9, 2014). "An Oak Ridge Boy and a Carter Girl: Conversations With Joe Bonsall and Carlene Carter, Plus a George Michael Exclusive". The Huffington Post.
  19. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Home Free - Elvira (feat. The Oak Ridge Boys)". YouTube.
  20. ^ Reuter, Annie (October 26, 2015). "Oak Ridge Boys Inducted Into Country Music Hall of Fame". Taste of Country.
  21. ^ Watts, Cindy; Thanki, Juli. "Oak Ridge Boys among Country Music Hall of Fame inductees". The Tennessean.
  22. ^ "Medallion Red Carpet Fan Experience". Country Music Hall of Fame.
  23. ^ "The Oak Ridge boys perform: "We're here, sir. We told you we would be."". CNN. December 3, 2018.
  24. ^ World, Jimmie Tramel Tulsa (October 5, 2019). "Oak Ridge Boys join campaign to combat elder fraud, the band announces in Tulsa". Tulsa World. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  25. ^ Aaron McCune Keeps Bass Singing Alive with Oak Ridge Boys, Dailey & Vincent. Saving Country Music. February 3, 2023. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  26. ^ Watts, Cindy (September 19, 2023). "The Oak Ridge Boys Announce Farewell Tour". CMT. Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  27. ^ Aaron McCune Keeps Bass Singing Alive with Oak Ridge Boys, Dailey & Vincent. Saving Country Music. February 3, 2023. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  28. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "The SULTAN Dewey Dorough". YouTube. February 26, 2010. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  29. ^ . Cmrnashville.com. Archived from the original on April 28, 2019. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  30. ^ "Silver Buffalo Award Recipients". Boy Scouts of America. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
  31. ^ . Country Music Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on April 15, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2016.

External links edit

ridge, boys, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article, talk,. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources The Oak Ridge Boys news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Oak Ridge Boys are an American country and gospel vocal quartet originating in Oak Ridge Tennessee The group was founded in 1943 as the Oak Ridge Quartet They became popular in Southern gospel during the 1950s Their name was changed to the Oak Ridge Boys in the early 1960s and they remained a gospel group until the mid 1970s when they changed their image and concentrated on country music 1 2 The Oak Ridge BoysThe Oak Ridge Boys in 2013 From left Joe Bonsall Duane Allen William Lee Golden and Richard Sterban Background informationAlso known asThe Oak Ridge Quartet 1947 1961 OriginOak Ridge Tennessee U S GenresCountry southern gospel doo wop popYears active1947 presentMembersJoe Bonsall Duane Allen William Lee Golden Richard SterbanPast membersCurly Kinsey Lon Deacon Freeman Wally Fowler Little Johnny New Monroe Curley Blaylock Bob Weber Pat Patterson Joe Allred Bob Prather Carlos Cook Calvin Newton Cat Freeman Les Roberson Ron Page Bill Smith Ronnie Page Smitty Gatlin Hobert Evans Bobby Clark Tommy Fairchild Herman Harper James Metz Little Willie Wynn Gary McSpadden Big Jim Hamill Noel Fox Glen Allred guitar and fill in baritone Steve SandersWebsitewww wbr oakridgeboys wbr comThe lineup that produced their most well known country and crossover hits such as Elvira 1981 Bobbie Sue 1982 and American Made 1983 consists of Duane Allen lead vocals Joe Bonsall tenor William Lee Golden baritone and Richard Sterban bass Golden and Allen joined the group in the mid 1960s and Sterban and Bonsall joined in the early 1970s Golden was removed from the group in 1987 and replaced by Steve Sanders until 1995 when he left and Golden rejoined The group was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2015 Contents 1 History 1 1 The Oak Ridge Quartet 1 2 1962 1973 1 3 1974 1986 1 4 1987 1999 1 5 2000 present 2 Discography 3 Personnel 3 1 Current members 3 2 Former members 3 3 Band 3 3 1 Timeline 4 Awards and honors 4 1 Other honors 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe Oak Ridge Quartet edit The core group that would eventually lead to the Oak Ridge Boys was a country group called Wally Fowler and the Georgia Clodhoppers formed in 1943 in Knoxville Tennessee They were requested to perform for staff members and their families restricted during World War II at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in nearby Oak Ridge Tennessee They were asked to sing there so often that eventually they changed their name to the Oak Ridge Quartet and because their most popular songs were gospel Fowler decided to focus solely on Southern gospel music At the time the quartet was made up of Wally Fowler Lon Deacon Freeman Curly Kinsey and Johnny New This group began recording in 1947 3 Wally Fowler and the Oak Ridge Quartet were members of the Grand Ole Opry in the 1940s 4 In 1949 the other three men split from Fowler to form a new group Curley Kinsey and the Tennessee Ridge Runners so Fowler hired an existing group the Calvary Quartet to reform the Oak Ridge Quartet Walt Cornell sang baritone for the Oak Ridge Quartet in the early 1950s In 1957 Fowler sold the rights to the Oak Ridge Quartet name to group member Smitty Gatlin in exchange for forgiveness of a debt As a result of more personnel changes the group lost its tenor so they lowered their arrangements and had Gatlin sing tenor while the pianist Tommy Fairchild sang lead They recorded an album for Cadence Records then in 1958 they hired Willie Wynn to sing the tenor part and Fairchild moved back exclusively to the piano At this point the group consisted of Fairchild at the piano Wynn Gatlin singing lead baritone Ron Page and bass Herman Harper They recorded an album on the Checker Records label one on Starday and three on Skylite In 1961 Gatlin changed the group s name to the Oak Ridge Boys because their producer Bud Praeger thought Oak Ridge Quartet sounded too old fashioned for their contemporary sound 1962 1973 edit In 1962 Ron Page left and the group hired Gary McSpadden who had filled in for Jake Hess in the Statesmen Quartet as baritone with the understanding from Jake Hess that when he was ready to start a group he would recruit McSpadden They recorded another album on Skylite and then two groundbreaking albums on Warner Bros Records When Hess followed through on that promise McSpadden quit to join a new group Hess was forming the Imperials Jim Hammill 5 who later became a mainstay in the Kingsmen Quartet was chosen to be his replacement They made one album for Festival Records one for Stateswood Skylite s budget label and two more for Skylite Hammill did not get along with the rest of the group and William Lee Golden a newcomer to the music industry felt that Hamill was hurting the group and asked the group if he could be Hammil s replacement After Hamill s retirement from the group in 1964 Golden joined as baritone The group recorded another album for Starday and another on Skylite in 1965 In 1966 Gatlin left the group to become a minister of music and on Golden s recommendation Duane Allen formerly of the Southernairs Quartet and more recently baritone of the Prophets Quartet was hired to replace him With Willie Wynn still singing tenor and Herman Harper as bass the group made another album for Skylite and one for United Artists and then began recording on the Heart Warming label Between 1966 and 1973 they made 12 albums with Heart Warming and the company also released several compilation albums on which they were included during those years The group also had an album on Vista Heart Warming s budget label that included unreleased songs from previous sessions Harper left the group in 1968 to join the Don Light Talent Agency before starting his own company the Harper Agency which remains one of the most reputable booking agencies in gospel music Noel Fox formerly of the Tennesseans and the Harvesters took over the bass part In 1970 the Oak Ridge Boys earned their first Grammy Award for Talk About the Good Times In late October 1972 Richard Sterban the bass with J D Sumner and the Stamps Quartet left that group and joined the Oak Ridge Boys The quartet that appeared on Hee Haw in 1972 consisted of Willie Wynn Duane Allen William Lee Golden and Richard Sterban Joe Bonsall a Philadelphia native who was a member of the Keystone Quartet and recording on Duane Allen s Superior label joined in April 1973 Sterban and Bonsall had both been in the Keystones during the late 1960s recording much of the ORB s material That same year the Oak Ridge Boys recorded a single with Johnny Cash and the Carter Family Praise the Lord and Pass the Soup that put them on the country charts for the first time The group s lineup remained consistent for the next 15 years 1974 1986 edit In the mid 1970s the Oak Ridge Boys became involved with prominent country music promoter Jim Halsey who as their new manager began encouraging them to move from gospel music to broader country music the most fundamental change in their history and began arranging international appearances 1 2 6 7 After opening a series of shows for Roy Clark the group moved in 1973 to the Columbia label for which they made three albums and several singles In early 1976 they toured Russia for three weeks with Roy Clark They went from being one of the top acts on Heart Warming to nearly the bottom on Columbia in terms of promotion Columbia did not serve the gospel radio stations like Heart Warming did leaving the impression that the Oak Ridge Boys were leaving gospel music which hurt the group s popularity among its core fan demographic While promoting the single Heaven Bound the Oak Ridge Boys made appearances on The Mike Douglas Show and The Merv Griffin Show both nationally syndicated in the United States and Canada In 1976 despite having been picked by Paul Simon to sing backup on Slip Slidin Away the group asked to be released from its contract with Columbia after its single Family Reunion was only a lukewarm success Columbia complied with the request and the band immediately made a live album that was a mix of gospel and country on their own label In 1977 the Oak Ridge Boys fully switched from gospel to country with the release of their first ABC Records later absorbed by MCA album Y all Come Back Saloon Two songs from that album reached the top five on the country charts and their next album Room Service in 1978 gave them two more including their first number one hit I ll Be True to You The Oak Ridge Boys Have Arrived was released in 1979 and Together followed in 1980 A compilation album simply titled Greatest Hits containing 10 singles from the previous four albums was released in the fall of 1980 This same year the Oak Ridge Boys also made a brief cameo appearance on The Dukes of Hazzard season two Granny Annie The group s sixth album Fancy Free released early in 1981 contained the Dallas Frazier penned song Elvira This remains the group s most widely known song and Fancy Free is their best selling album Elvira had been recorded by other artists including Frazier himself in the late 1960s and the First Edition in 1970 but the Oak Ridge Boys were the first to have a hit with it Their version of the song was a number one country hit and in July 1981 reached number five on the pop charts The doo wop style title track from Bobbie Sue their seventh album was another crossover hit reaching number one on the country charts and number 12 on the pop charts That album also spawned the group s first U S released music video for the song So Fine A video was made for Easy from the Y All Come Back Saloon album but was never released in the U S The group also recorded The Oak Ridge Boys Christmas album in 1982 Their album American Made was released in January 1983 The title track was used as a TV advertisement for Miller Beer The group recorded three albums over the next three years The late 1983 album Deliver provided two number one singles one of which I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes was written by Randy VanWarmer who had a hit in 1979 with Just When I Needed You Most Their next album was Greatest Hits 2 released in July 1984 Unlike the 1980 Greatest Hits album this one included two new songs Everyday and Make My Life With You both number one country hits In 1985 they released their 12th album Step on Out The title cut was written by ex Byrd Chris Hillman and former Crawdaddy magazine editor Peter Knobler The group recorded two albums in 1986 one of which was a second Christmas album and in 1987 they recorded a single called Take Pride in America which was used in television public service announcements about recycling 1987 1999 edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1987 Where The Fast Lane Ends was released It was the first with new producer Jimmy Bowen and was the group s last album before the 1987 departure of William Lee Golden Golden was replaced by the band s guitarist Steve Sanders 8 The group released four more albums for MCA including a third Greatest Hits album that contained a previously unreleased single they had recorded for the Take Pride In America campaign They moved to RCA Nashville and made three albums there including Best of the Oak Ridge Boys which included a single they had made for the My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys movie soundtrack The move to RCA did not work out because the person who had signed them there moved to another label shortly thereafter and his replacement wanted to promote Alabama more than the Oak Ridge Boys They switched again and signed with Liberty Records Capitol s Nashville based label for which they made their third Christmas album 9 Baritone Steve Sanders was replaced by Duane Allen s son Dee with occasional help from his brother in law Paul Martin Martin had previously replaced J P Pennington as lead singer of Exile in the early 1990s until that band s disbanding At midnight on New Year s Day 1996 at the Star Plaza Theatre in Merrillville Indiana Golden returned to the group That year they made a two disc gospel set Revival their first full gospel album since 1976 with Leon Russell producing This was sold on TV and later by the Oak Ridge Boys themselves at concerts and through the mail In 1998 Sanders died by suicide 10 Over the next few years the group collaborated on an album with polka instrumentalist Jimmy Sturr and then made an album for Platinum Records called Voices 11 2000 present edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message After nearly a decade of dealing with problems such as labels that had little interest in promoting The Oak Ridge Boys studio breakdowns and sluggish sales the group s fortunes changed when they signed with Spring Hill Records in 2000 In the first four years of teaming with Dove Award winning producer Michael Sykes the quartet released a full length gospel album From The Heart their fourth Christmas album Inconvenient Christmas a patriotic album Colors a bluegrass album The Journey and a quasi compilation titled Common Thread containing newly recorded versions of older gospel songs as well as material from 2004 s The Journey Another Christmas album Christmas Cookies followed in 2005 In 2006 the group completed the album Front Row Seats a return to mainstream country music with modern aggressive arrangements and song selection The project spawned a minor top 40 hit with It s Hard to Be Cool in a Mini Van In June 2007 they returned to their namesake Oak Ridge Tennessee They were the featured performers at the Secret City Festival and were given a tour of the Y 12 National Security Complex s historic Calutrons used to separate the uranium 235 for Little Boy the first atomic bomb used in warfare While there a street was renamed the Oak Ridge Boys Way in their honor Also in 2007 the group appeared on Shooter Jennings son of Waylon Jennings album The Wolf This pairing led to The Boys Are Back released on May 19 2009 and named for the title song written by Shooter Jennings The project debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Top Country Albums Chart and number 77 on the Billboard Top 200 The album was produced by Dave Cobb who was introduced to the group by Shooter Jennings Reviews were mixed but most praised the cover of Seven Nation Army by The White Stripes 2010 was just as busy including a cameo appearance on the History Channel show Pawn Stars episode Packing Heat which aired on December 13 2010 12 During the July 8 2011 performance of the Friday Night Opry Little Jimmy Dickens announced that the Oak Ridge Boys would become the newest members of the Grand Ole Opry effective August 6 2011 13 14 15 16 In September 2011 the quartet released It s Only Natural through Cracker Barrel Old Country Store s music label The album debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Country albums chart remaining in the country top 40 for nearly two months It contains 12 tracks five new songs and seven re recorded hits from the late 1980s The first single off the album is What cha Gonna Do A special 30th anniversary re recording of Elvira is featured on the album as well In 2012 the group released two new studio albums In May they made a return to their Southern gospel roots with the release of Back Home Again Along with gospel standards the group covered John Denver s Back Home Again and Dolly Parton s Coat of Many Colors The album featuring mostly acoustic arrangements was produced by Ben Isaacs of The Isaacs In September of the same year Christmas Time s A Coming the group s sixth Christmas project was released through Gaither Music Group and was also a featured title at Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores The project features traditional standards both secular and spiritual as well as new material In 2013 The Oak Ridge Boys celebrated the 40th anniversary of the current lineup of members with a special 40th Anniversary Tour commemorative CD project an Oak Ridge Boys themed cruise and a network television special 17 The Oak Ridge Boys released their first ever live hits album Boys Night Out in April 2014 through Cleopatra Records In an interview Joe Bonsall said Here it is live and kicking with the audience singing with us It s totally updated and different I think for our real fans this is going to be a gigantic treat because our fans have clamored for a live album for years and for people who don t know us or don t know us as well to listen to this makes them go Oh wow these guys are still sounding great holy cow I think it s going to be a good project for us all around 18 On August 21 2015 they revealed a collaboration recording of their hit Elvira This collaboration was recorded with Sing Off winning country a cappella group Home Free who uploaded the video to their YouTube channel The video was an instant hit reaching 90 000 views within the first 20 hours of it being uploaded 19 On October 25 2015 the Oak Ridge Boys were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame during the Medallion Ceremony in the category of modern era artists It was presented by Kenny Rogers a previous inductee 20 21 22 In 2017 the Oak Ridge Boys joined Third Day at the legendary FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals Alabama to record a cover version of Paul Simon s Loves Me Like A Rock for the Third Day album Revival In December 2018 the Oak Ridge Boys attended the funeral of the 41st President of the United States George H W Bush in Houston Texas and sang Amazing Grace during the service 23 On October 4 2019 the Oak Ridge Boys announced 24 their partnership with AARP and the U S Department of Justice to help raise awareness of elder fraud On September 19 2023 the Oak Ridge Boys announced that they would be embarking on a farewell tour to mark their golden anniversary under their current lineup Sterban has taken leave from the band on numerous occasions with Dailey amp Vincent bass vocalist Aaron McCune filling in for him Bonsall suffered a pulmonary embolism that has affected his legs and can no longer navigate the stage without assistance resulting in his performing from a stool 25 26 Discography editMain article The Oak Ridge Boys discographyPersonnel editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Current members edit William Lee Golden baritone 1965 87 1995 Duane Allen lead 1966 Richard Sterban bass 1972 Joe Bonsall tenor 1973 Aaron McCune fill in bass 2023 27 Former members edit Curly Kinsey bass 1945 47 Lon Deacon Freeman baritone guitar 1945 49 Wally Fowler lead 1945 52 Little Johnny New tenor 1945 49 1952 Monroe Curley Blaylock bass 1947 49 Bob Weber bass 1949 56 Pat Patterson baritone 1949 52 lead 1952 53 Joe Allred tenor 1949 52 Bob Prather baritone 1952 Carlos Cook lead 1952 53 baritone 1953 68 Calvin Newton lead 1953 56 Cat Freeman tenor 1954 56 Les Roberson baritone 1955 56 Ron Page bass 1956 Bill Smith bass 1957 Ronnie Page baritone 1957 62 Smitty Gatlin lead 1957 58 1959 66 tenor 1958 59 Hobert Evans tenor 1957 58 Wallace Happy Edwards tenor fill in 1958 Bobby Clark tenor 1958 Tommy Fairchild lead 1958 59 Herman Harper bass 1957 69 Little Willie Wynn tenor 1959 73 Gary McSpadden baritone 1962 63 Big Jim Hamill baritone 1963 64 Noel Fox bass 1969 72 Steve Sanders baritone 1987 95 Dee Allen baritone fill in late 1995 Paul Martin baritone fill in late 1995 Band edit Boyce Hawkins piano 1949 Bobby Whitfield piano 1950 52 1954 1956 Glen Allred guitar vocals 1951 52 Powell Hassell piano 1957 58 Tommy Fairchild piano 1959 60 1961 72 Gary Trusler piano 1960 James Goss piano 1960 Mark Ellerbee drums 1969 79 Marty Twinkles Glisson piano 1976 Don Breland bass guitar 1969 87 Skip Mitchell guitar 1976 86 Pete Cummings lead guitar 1980 1983 John Rich guitar and steel 1972 75 Tony Brown piano and keyboards 1972 75 Garland Craft piano 1975 80 Michael Saleem drums 1979 80 Fred Satterfield drums 1980 96 Paul Urick bass guitar 1987 early 1990s Chris Nole keyboard 2009 12 Dewey Dorough saxophone harmonica 1982 2000 28 Ron Fairchild keyboard 1980 2001 2002 09 fill in 2009 12 2013 present Chris Golden acoustic guitar mandolin 1995 drums 1996 2014 Don Carr lead guitar 1991 2014 Jimmy Fulbright keyboard 2001 bass guitar 2003 12 Rex Wiseman various instruments 2006 present Jeff Douglas guitar and dobro 1995 2021 Scotty Simpson bass guitar 2013 present David Northup percussion drums 2014 2017 Roger Eaton lead guitar 2014 2021 Austin Curcuruto percussion drums 2017 present James Watkins lead guitar 2021 Darin Favorite lead guitar 2021 present Timeline editAwards and honors editAcademy of Country Music Awards 1978 Top Vocal Group 1981 Single of the Year Elvira Country Music Association Awards 1978 Instrumental Group of the Year Oak Ridge Boys Band 1978 Vocal Group of the Year 1981 Single of the Year Elvira 1986 Instrumental Group of the Year Oak Ridge Boys Band GMA Dove Awards 1969 Album of the Year It s Happening 1970 Male Group of the Year 1972 Male Group of the Year 1972 Album of the Year Light 1973 Album of the Year Street Gospel 2002 Country Album of the Year From The Heart 2007 Country Song of the Year Jonah Job and Moses 2010 Long Form Music Video of the Year A Gospel JourneyGrammy Awards 1971 Best Gospel Performance other than soul Talk About the Good Times 1974 Best Gospel Performance other than soul Baptism of Jesse Taylor 1977 Best Gospel Performance other than soul Where the Soul Never Dies 1978 Best Traditional Gospel Performance Just a Little Talk with Jesus 1982 Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal ElviraOther honors edit 2000 Inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame 29 2001 Received the Silver Buffalo award from the Boy Scouts of America 30 2015 Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame 31 References edit a b Carter Walter Oak Ridge Boys Inducted 2015 2015 adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum s Encyclopedia of Country Music Oxford University Press Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum retrieved September 6 2020 a b Country Music Hall Of Fame Inductees Jim Ed Brown And The Browns Grady Martin Oak Ridge Boys October 25 2015 Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum retrieved September 6 2020 Huey Steve Oak Ridge Boys Bio Cmt com Retrieved April 5 2011 Opry Timeline 1940s Opry com Retrieved July 10 2012 Jim Hamill January 14 2006 Archived from the original on January 14 2006 Everly Douze Susan Livin on Tulsa Time Trio Rocks Country Music Cradle biography Oklahoma Today retrieved from Oklahoma State University archives September 5 2020 Grawe Jim producer narrator Kansas Country documentary film preview online aired September 5 2020 and previously KPTS TV viewed September 5 2020 Steve Sanders Former Oak Ridge Boys Baritone Los Angeles Times June 11 1998 Retrieved March 10 2022 The Oak Ridge Boys Albums and Discography AllMusic Retrieved March 10 2022 Steve Sanders dies at 45 Variety com June 18 1998 Retrieved March 10 2022 Voices The Oak Ridge Boys Songs Reviews Credits AllMusic Retrieved March 10 2022 MusicScribe Blog Musicscribe com Retrieved January 31 2016 Oak Ridge Boys Invited to Join Grand Ol Opry NewsChannel5 com Nashville News Weather amp Sports NewsChannel5 com Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved February 13 2013 News Opry Invites Oak Ridge Boys to Join Cast CMT July 11 2011 Retrieved February 13 2013 Oak Ridge Boys Inducted into Grand Ole Opry oakridgeboys com August 6 2011 Archived from the original on October 11 2011 Retrieved February 20 2013 Oak Ridge Boys to play the Grand Ole Opry wbir com July 9 2011 Retrieved February 13 2013 Legendary Oak Ridge Boys Launching 40th Anniversary Tour amp Commemorative CD Oakridgeboys com Archived from the original on January 27 2013 Retrieved February 13 2013 Ragogna Mike April 9 2014 An Oak Ridge Boy and a Carter Girl Conversations With Joe Bonsall and Carlene Carter Plus a George Michael Exclusive The Huffington Post Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Home Free Elvira feat The Oak Ridge Boys YouTube Reuter Annie October 26 2015 Oak Ridge Boys Inducted Into Country Music Hall of Fame Taste of Country Watts Cindy Thanki Juli Oak Ridge Boys among Country Music Hall of Fame inductees The Tennessean Medallion Red Carpet Fan Experience Country Music Hall of Fame The Oak Ridge boys perform We re here sir We told you we would be CNN December 3 2018 World Jimmie Tramel Tulsa October 5 2019 Oak Ridge Boys join campaign to combat elder fraud the band announces in Tulsa Tulsa World Retrieved October 7 2019 Aaron McCune Keeps Bass Singing Alive with Oak Ridge Boys Dailey amp Vincent Saving Country Music February 3 2023 Retrieved September 20 2023 Watts Cindy September 19 2023 The Oak Ridge Boys Announce Farewell Tour CMT Retrieved September 21 2023 Aaron McCune Keeps Bass Singing Alive with Oak Ridge Boys Dailey amp Vincent Saving Country Music February 3 2023 Retrieved September 20 2023 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The SULTAN Dewey Dorough YouTube February 26 2010 Retrieved January 31 2016 CMR Nashville Radio Oak Ridge Boys Album Rock of Ages Breaks into Billboard Top 10 Cmrnashville com Archived from the original on April 28 2019 Retrieved January 16 2016 Silver Buffalo Award Recipients Boy Scouts of America Retrieved February 13 2019 Inductees List Country Music Hall of Fame Archived from the original on April 15 2014 Retrieved January 16 2016 External links editOfficial website nbsp The Oak Ridge Boys at AllMusic The Oak Ridge Boys Vocal Group Hall of Fame page Oak Ridge Boys biography at the Country Music Television website Southern Gospel History Oak Ridge Boys Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Oak Ridge Boys amp oldid 1191688117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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