Discussion:
RIP Hank Locklin
(too old to reply)
Tom Kan PA
2009-03-09 20:28:00 UTC
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Country music star Hank Locklin dies at 91

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (Reuters) - Country music star Hank Locklin, who
helped pioneer the idea of the concept album and whose songs were
popular from Ireland to Japan, has died at age 91, Grand Ole Opry
officials said on Monday.

The singer, songwriter and guitarist died on Sunday at his home in
Brewton, Alabama, of undisclosed causes.

Born Lawrence Hankins Locklin in 1918 in Florida's timber-rich
Panhandle, he played guitar and sang on radio stations across the
South as a teenager.

He scored his first top 10 country hit with "The Same Sweet Girls" in
1949 and scored another chart-topper with "Let Me Be the One" in 1953.

His 1957 recording of "Send Me the Pillow You Dream On" crossed over
from the country to the U.S. and British pop charts and became a
standard for many performers, including Dwight Yoakam and Dolly
Parton.

His recording of "Please Help Me, I'm Falling" spent 14 weeks at the
top of the country music charts in 1960, the same year Locklin joined
the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville.

That song's "slip-note" piano style became Locklin's signature and his
version was featured on the soundtrack of the 1993 movie, "A Perfect
World," directed by Clint Eastwood.

Locklin was widely credited as one of the pioneers of the themed
concept album with such recordings as "A Tribute to Roy Acuff, King of
Country Music," "Foreign Love" and "Irish Songs Country Style," which
led to tours in England and Ireland.

In 2001, he recorded "Generations in Song," which featured Parton and
Vince Gill. His 65th album, "By the Grace of God," was a collection of
gospel songs and released in 2006.
OldMan Zeke
2009-03-12 17:58:40 UTC
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http://www.nashvillecitypaper.com/news.php?viewStoryPrinter=66660
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