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Chanteur Country US né Gordon Edwards Burns, le 13 Décembre 1930 à Warrior (Alabama).
Gordon
Edwards Burns, known as Country Boy Eddie or sometimes Country Boy Eddy (born
December 13, 1930 near Warrior) is a country singer, fiddler and guitarist who
hosted the long-running Country Boy Eddie Show on WBRC-TV from 1957 to 1993.
Burns, one of eight children raised on his family's 200-acre Blount County farm,
had determined to work in radio since he was a 10-year-old listening to Curley
Fox on the Grand Ole Opry. At 13 he bought a fiddle with money he raised selling
Garden Spot Seeds door to door. He taught himself to play the fiddle and joined
Happy Hal Burns' band in 1946, playing on WBRC-AM's Crossroads Variety Show. It
was Burns (no relation) who gave him his nickname.
Burns served in the US Army during the Korean War and sang on the Armed Forces
Radio Network in Korea, Japan and Hawaii. He returned home to Happy Hal's band,
touring for a few years and making appearances on shows like "Hillbilly
Bandstand". He caught the ear of Bill Monroe and finally made his own
appearances on the Grand Ole Opry program.
Burns soon married and settled in Birmingham. He took a job as a disc jockey for
program director Warren Musgrove at WILD-AM. In a staged stunt, Musgrove "fired"
him for bringing a mule into the studio, and Burns rode out and proceeded as far
as Alabaster. Besides WILD, Burns also worked for WLBS-AM and WLPH-AM. In
addition he appeared at as many as 500 live performances per year and operated a
water park, Waterfalls U.S.A. near his cattle ranch in Blount County.
In 1955 Burns put together his own band for the first "Country Boy Eddie Show"
at midnight, after wrestling on Saturday nights, on WAPI-TV (Channel 13). Two
years later, the band was hired as the stage band for the Tom York Morning Show
on WBRC-TV. In February 1957 the more familiar Country Boy Eddie Show was spun
off into its own slot weekdays 5:00 to 7:00 AM. On Mondays and Tuesdays in 1961
and 1962 he would drive to Nashville to tape a week's worth of morning shows for
a station there. He introduced a young Dolly Parton to audiences there and also
had Pat Boone and Eddy Arnold on the show.
Burns' homespun amiability became a familiar part of the morning for many
Birminghamians, and was syndicated around the region by as many as 120 cable
channels. The show endured for 38 years. Burns retired after the December 31,
1993 broadcast.
Since retirement, Burns continues to make public appearances. He and his wife
Edwina spend their time at his 200-acre family farm in Blount County. They are
active members of Piney Woods Baptist Church in Gardendale and have one son,
Doyle, and three grandchildren.
Burns was given the 2001 Media Award from the Alabama Music Hall of Fame.
Talents : Vocals, Fiddle, Guitar
Style musical : Traditional Country Country, Rockabilly
HANG IN THERE LIKE A RUSTY FISH HOOK (1960)
FODDER FOSSIL'S BLUES (1960) |
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Years in activity :
1910 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 | 80 | 90 | 2000 | 10 | 20 |
DISCOGRAPHY
Single
01/1960 | SP REED RR1031 (US) | Country Boy EDDIE with The COUNTRY BOY EDDIE SHOW BAND - Hang In There Like A Rusty Fish Hook / Fodder Fossil's Blues |
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© Rocky Productions 4/10/2012