Archival photos of Bob Wills and his band suggest that the proper usage is to use the 'and'.
Pictures don't lie.
Archival photos of Bob Wills and his band suggest that the proper usage is to use the 'and'.
Pictures don't lie.
Several factors led to Country Music's increased popularity in North America: the social upheaval of the Depression and of World War II, which brought people of varying backgrounds together and resulted in a mixing and levelling of musical tastes; the rise of Hollywood films starring such 'singing cowboys' as Gene Autry, Tex Ritter, and Roy Rogers, whose styles were tempered purposely to appeal to an urban audience; and the adoption of some superficialities of the country genre by Tin Pan Alley songwriters. Canada reflected these trends, which lasted into the 1950s.
Canadians Wilf Carter, Hank Snow, and Earl Heywood early on reflected a Canadian take on Country Music, and other performers also emerged between the late 1930s and the early 1950s, including the Bunkhouse Boys, the Hillbilly Jewels (with Joe Brown, later patriarch of the Family Brown) and Tex Cochrane in the Maritimes, Sid Plamondor and His Western Pals in Ontario, the Happy Wanderers, Cammie Howard and His Western Five, and Mac Beattie in Ottawa, Jim Magill and the Northern Ramblers in Toronto, Abbe Andrews and His Canadian Ranch Boys in St Catharines, Ont, Bob Boyd and His Red River Playboys in Winnipeg, Sleepy and Swede and the Tumbleweeds in Saskatoon(see the Rhythm Pals), Cactus Mack and His Saddle Tramps and.Vic Siebert and His Sons of the Saddle in Calgary, and King Ganam and His Sons of the West in Edmonton. Singers included Stu Davis, Allen Erwin ('The Calgary Kid'), Bob ('Mr Sunshine') King, Myrna Lorrie, Bev Monro, Jimmy Arthur Ordge, Stu Phillips, Orval Prophet, Keray Regan, Donn Reynolds ('Canada's Singing Yodeller'), Oral Scheer (b Madawaska, Ont 1917, d Ottawa 29 Oct 2004), Scotty Stevenson, Billy Whelan, and The Canadian Sweethearts (Lucille Starr and Bob Regan).
These three volumes are a collection of rare Canadian Country recordings from those early years.
John Bowie was lead singer for The Philadelphians; a Philly R&B group of the late fifties and sixties. The Philadelphians got their start at The Community Center located at 10th and Thompson Sts. of The Cambria Hgts. projects. The Philadelphians consisted of Big John as lead, Frank Gordon as bass, Sam [unknown] as second tenor, and Eddie [unknown] as first tenor, and an unknown baritone singer. They recorded sides for Campus Records, Cameo-Parkway and Jamie-Guyden with such recordings as Dear, The Love I Lost, I Missed Her, Coming Home To You, The Vow, Church Bells and My Love My Love.
By the late 1960's The Philadelphians had split up and John was doing some production work (Mysterious Clown) and solo work, recording as Little John Bowie on the Merben label, as well as cutting one single in 1967 for the Phil-LA Of Soul label.
John Bowie died from a robbery attempt at a gas station where he worked in 1985.