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Charley Pride

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File:Charley Pride.jpg
Charley Pride on the cover of one of his several greatest hits albums, from 2003

Charley Frank Pride (born March 18, 1938 in Sledge, Mississippi) is a former Negro League baseball player who became one of the few African Americans to have a successful career in modern country music.

Background

Pride was one of eleven children born to desperately poor sharecroppers. His father named him Charl Frank Pride, but due to a typing error on his birth certificate, he was legally born as Charley Frank Pride. He grew up dreaming of being a baseball player and met his future wife, Rozene, while playing for the Memphis Red Sox in Memphis, Tennessee (which was a Negro-American League team). Pride played guitar and sang while touring as a baseball player.In 1958 when he was in Memphis, Charley Pride visited Sun Studio and recorded some songs. One song has survived on tape, released in England on an lp-box. The song is a slow stroll in walking tempo called "Walkin (the stroll)"

Early music success

When it became clear that he would not become a Major League Baseball player, he turned to music as a full time career. He was introduced to producer Jack Clement, who gave him two songs to record, "Snakes Crawl at Night" and "Atlantic Coastal Line." Clement gave Pride’s two-song demo to the head of RCA Records in Nashville, Chet Atkins, who signed him to the label. Atkins and Clement considered not disclosing that he was black until the records were established, but Atkins decided that it was unfair to all concerned. Pride’s first single was broadcast in January 1966. Within a short period of time, both songs became hits.

Music career

Pride has garnered more than 36 number one country singles and sold over 70 million records (singles, albums, compilation inclusions). His fame is world-wide, during the 1980's his Golden Greats album reached Number 1 on the UK Country music charts.

"Kiss An Angel Good Morning" was a million-selling crossover single and helped Pride land Country Music Association Awards as Entertainer of the Year in 1971 and Top Male Vocalist in 1971 and 1972.

Other Pride standards include "Is Anybody Goin' To San Antone?", "I'm So Afraid of Losing You Again", "Mississippi Cotton Picking Delta Town", "Someone Loves You Honey", "When I Stop Leaving I'll Be Gone", "Burgers and Fries", and "You're So Good When You're Bad". Like many other country performers, he has paid tribute to Hank Williams with performances of Williams' classics "Kaw-Liga" and "Honky Tonk Blues", both of which are on the album There's a Little Bit of Hank in Me.

Chronology

Trivia

  • Pride returned to his hometown of Sledge and purchased the cotton farm where he had been born.

External links

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