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1950 in country music

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This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1950.

Events

  • February 14 — "Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy" by Red Foley #1 selling Country record becomes first Country cross over on Pop Best Seller chart.
  • August 19 — Hank Snow begins a 21-week run at No. 1 on the Billboard country charts with his landmark "I'm Movin' On." Until 2013 (when changes to chart methodology will result in longer chart runs), the song – a 12-bar blues song metaphorically using a train trip to describe a young man's breakup with a high-class girlfriend – is one of just three that will stay as long atop the charts in chart history.
  • September 30 — The Grand Ole Opry is televised for the first time.

Top hits of the year

Number one hits

(As certified by Billboard magazine)

USSingleArtist
align"center"January 7"Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer", 7,000,000 sold by 1969Gene Autry
align"center"January 7"Blue Christmas"Ernest Tubb
align"center"January 14"I Love You Because"Leon Payne
align"center"January 14"Blues Stay Away From Me"Delmore Brothers
January 21"Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy"Red Foley
align"center"January 28"Take Me in Your Arms and Hold Me"Eddy Arnold
align"center"April 22"Long Gone Lonesome Blues"Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys
May 27"Birmingham Bounce"Red Foley
align"center"June 17"Why Don't You Love Me"Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys
align"center"June 17"I'll Sail My Ship Alone"Moon Mullican
align"center"July 15"M-I-S-S-I-S-S-I-P-P-I"Red Foley
align"center"August 19"I'm Movin' On"Hank Snow and His Rainbow Ranch Boys
align"center"August 26"Goodnight Irene"Red Foley and Ernest Tubb
align"center"December 23"If You've Got the Money I've Got the Time"Lefty Frizzell
align"center"December 3"Moanin' the Blues"Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys

:Note: Several songs were simultaneous No. 1 hits on the separate "Most Played Juke Box Folk (Country & Western) Records," "Best Selling Retail Folk (Country & Western) Records" and "Country & Western Records Most Played by Folk Disk Jockeys" charts.

Other major hits

USSingleArtist
5Ain't Nobody's Business by My OwnKay Starr and Tennessee Ernie Ford
6A-Sleeping at the Foot of the BedLittle Jimmy Dickens
7Beyond the SunsetThe Three Suns with Elton Britt and Rosalie Allen
4Bloodshot EyesHank Penny
7Blues, Stay Away from MeOwen Bradley Quintet
10Bonaparte's RetreatPee Wee King
2Broken Down Merry-Go-RoundMargaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely
6A Bushel and a PeckMargaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely
8Careless KissesRed Foley
5Choc'late Ice Cream ConeRed Foley
8Choc'late Ice Cream ConeKenny Roberts
2Cincinnati Dancing PigRed Foley
7Cry of the Dying Duck in a Thunder-StormCactus Pryor
2The Cry of the Wild GooseTennessee Ernie Ford
2Cuddle Buggin' BabyEddy Arnold
6Daddy's Last LetterTex Ritter
7Don't Be Ashamed of Your AgeErnest Tubb and Red Foley
6Enclosed, One Broken HeartEddy Arnold
8Faded LoveBob Wills
4Frosty the Snow ManGene Autry
9Give Me a Little Old Fashioned LoveErnest Tubb
9God Please Protect AmericaJimmie Osborne
3The Gods Were Angry with MeMargaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely
5Goodnight, IreneMoon Mullican
3Hillbilly FeverLittle Jimmy Dickens
9Hillbilly Fever No. 2Ernest Tubb and Red Foley
4I Gotta Have My Baby BackFloyd Tillman
10I Gotta Have My Baby BackRed Foley
5I Just Don't Like This Kind of Livin'Hank Williams
2I Love You BecauseErnest Tubb
8I Love You BecauseClyde Moody
3(I Won't Go Huntin', Jake) But I'll Go Chasin' WomenStuart Hamblen
2I'll Never Be FreeKay Starr and Tennessee Ernie Ford
8I'll Take a Back Seat for YouErnest Tubb
10Ida Red Likes the BoogieBob Wills
9Just a Closer Walk with TheeRed Foley
2Let's Go to Church (Next Sunday Morning)Margaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely
2Letters Have No ArmsErnest Tubb
3Little Angel with the Dirty FaceEddy Arnold
7Lose Your BluesRed Kirk
8Love Song in 32 BarsJohnny Bond
2The Lovebug ItchEddy Arnold
6Mama and Daddy Broke My HeartEddy Arnold
4Mona LisaMoon Mullican
10Mona LisaJimmy Wakely
9My Son Calls Another Man DaddyHank Williams
9Nobody's Lonesome for MeHank Williams
8Our Lady of FatimaRed Foley
7Pan American BoogieThe Delmore Brothers
3Peter CottontailGene Autry
6Peter CottontailMervin Shiner
7Peter CottontailJimmy Wakely
7Peter CottontailJohnnie Lee Wills
10A Prison Without WallsEddy Arnold
3QuicksilverElton Britt and Rosalie Allen
2Rag MopJohnnie Lee Wills
2(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves YouStuart Hamblen
5(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves YouErnest Tubb
5Rudolph the Red-Nosed ReindeerGene Autry
7Slippin' Around with Jole BlonBud Messner
8StampedeRoy Rogers
9Steal AwayRed Foley
4Sugarfoot RagRed Foley
3Sunday Down in TennesseeRed Foley
2Tennessee Border – No. 2Red Foley and Ernest Tubb
6There's No Wings on My AngelEddy Arnold
5They'll Never Take Her Love from MeHank Williams
3Throw Your Love My WayErnest Tubb
8Unfaithful OneErnest Tubb
3Why Should I Cry?Eddy Arnold
9Why Should We Try AnymoreHank Williams
10You Don't Have to Be a Baby to CryErnest Tubb

Births

  • January 1 – Steve Ripley, leader/producer of The Tractors (died 2019).
  • February 16 — Paul Worley, record producer whose success dates from the mid-1980s onward.
  • March 26 — Ronnie McDowell, male vocalist of the 1970s and 1980s, who first rose to fame with his Elvis Presley tribute "The King Is Gone".
  • August 7 — Rodney Crowell, singer-songwriter who enjoyed mainstream fame in the late 1980s before becoming a leader in the alternative country movement; ex-husband of Rosanne Cash.
  • September 16 — David Bellamy, of The Bellamy Brothers.

Deaths

Main article: Deaths in 1950

References

References

  1. Murrells, Joseph. (1978). "The book of golden discs". London : Barrie & Jenkins.
  2. [https://www.tulsaworld.com/entertainment/oklahoma-music-artist-steve-ripley-dies/article_9cb0dc83-4d5c-5e43-b76c-becf9190f612.html Oklahoma music artist Steve Ripley dies]
Info: Wikipedia Source

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