Ray Price |
“I love my fans and have devoted my life to reaching out to them,” Price, 87, said in a final message sent through his wife, Janie Price. “I appreciate their support all these years, and I hope I haven’t let them down. I am at peace. I love Jesus. I’m going to be just fine. Don’t worry about me. I’ll see you again one day.”Whether moaning honky-tonk blues or purring an intimate love song, Ray Price set dauntingly high standards. To appreciate his musical reach, one had only to listen to his first hit, "Talk to Your Heart" (1952), move on to the earnest shuffle of "City Lights" (1958) and then consider his sonorous, lavishly orchestrated "For the Good Times" (1970).
Although Hank Williams, his friend and one-time roommate,
was an early vocal influence, Price was marked just as deeply by the great
crooners of his youth -- Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole and Perry
Como.
Born Jan. 12, 1926, in Perryville, Texas, Nobel Ray Price
came of age in a world far less musically fragmented than it is now.
Radio was still the exciting media then, and even small
stations boasted an inspiring mixture of locally-grown and network-carried
sounds -- everything from rural string bands to romantic pop warblers to
symphony orchestras. Paving the way for Price in country music were the likes
of Eddy Arnold, Red Foley and Tennessee Ernie Ford, middle-of-the-road crooners
who regularly commuted between hillbilly and mainstream minstrelsy.
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