Pat O'Daniel and The Hillbilly Boys - Single Episodes


(3 stars; 2 reviews)

THE HILLBILLY BOYS

W. Lee O'Daniel's musical career began in January 1931, when a West Texas fiddler named James Robert (Bob) Wills entered his Fort Worth office at Burrus Mill and Elevator Company. As general manager of the firm, O'Daniel had just canceled a radio program on which Wills and his fiddle band had been advertising Burrus Mill's Light Crust Flour. O'Daniel canceled it, as he said, "because I didn't like their hillbilly music." So many cards and letters came into station KFJZ that O'Daniel had to put the show back on the air, and the band became known as the Light Crust Doughboys. When O'Daniel realized how much flour the show was selling, he became the announcer for the show and manager of the band. According to Wills, O'Daniel was an asset to the show. He had a flair for dramatization and publicity; he wrote poems and read them on the air and often had the band work out music for them. Though his songs never became national hits, they became known throughout Texas and the Southwest. He wrote "Beautiful Texas," "Put Me in Your Pocket," and a song for Franklin D. Roosevelt's war on the Great Depression, "On to Victory Mr. Roosevelt" (all in 1933). The Doughboy broadcast became one of the most popular and longlived shows in the history of the Southwest. The original Light Crust Doughboy show consisted of O'Daniel as announcer, Bob Wills on fiddle, Herman Arnspiger on guitar, and Milton Brown as vocalist. By the mid-1930s all had left the Doughboys, and each eventually had an important place in Texas music. In 1935 Burrus Mill fired O'Daniel, and he organized his own band, The Hillbilly Boys, and his own flour company, W. Lee O'Daniel Flour Company, manufacturers of Hillbilly Flour. Between September 1935 and December 1938 O'Daniel and the Hillbilly Boys did six recording sessions for Vocalion (later part of Columbia Records). Some of their recordings were far from hillbilly music; in general, they represent some of the best western swing that any band in the Fort Worth-Dallas area ever recorded. As a vocalist, Leon Huff was at his best on these recordings, consistently better than when he later recorded for Bob and Johnnie Lee Wills. Kitty Williamson, whom O'Daniel called Texas Rose, vocalized on several recordings. She was probably the first female singer in western swing; her recording of "Baby Won't You Please Come Home" was in the Bessie Smith tradition and was vocalized western swing at its best. Although some of his recordings were hillbilly, it was on his radio shows that O'Daniel promoted a hillbilly façade. His famous "Pass the Biscuits Pappy" smacked of the hillbilly and made the show, Hillbilly Flour, and O'Daniel popular. He read poems and gave brief lectures on morality, most of which he never practiced, according to his musicians. O'Daniel had bigger and more important things in mind than his hillbilly music, however. In 1938 he became a candidate for governor of Texas. He was probably the first candidate anywhere in the nation to use a fiddle band (or perhaps any kind of a band) as a principal part of a political campaign. He toured the state with his Hillbilly Boys, who began his rallies by playing "Beautiful Texas" (which O'Daniel strategically recorded the year before). After the band drew the crowd, O'Daniel gave a campaign speech. Then he sent members of his family and the band into the audience with miniature flour barrels to accept campaign contributions. The method was successful, though no one will ever know how much so, since the donations were all in cash. When he was elected governor, O'Daniel took his Hillbilly Boys with him to Austin and got all of them jobs with the state. For example, Kermit Whalin, a barber, became a state barber inspector. The musicians broadcast a show from the Governor's Mansionqv on Sundays, and so continued to build the image of Governor O'Daniel and keep his name before the people. Most of the musicians never saw the inside of the mansion; they played the show on the front porch and were never invited inside. When O'Daniel's daughter, Molly, married, he sent band member Jim Boyd and his wife an engraved invitation, but Boyd said, "They stopped us at the church door and wouldn't let us in." When O'Daniel became a United States senator, he insisted that the band go with him to Washington but refused to tell them what salary they would receive. If they refused to go, they lost their state jobs immediately, and Jim Boyd was even evicted from his state-owned home. Practically every musician who played for O'Daniel believed he was selfish, unfair, and extremely ruthless. Aside from his politics and his personal qualities, O'Daniel was important in the music of Texas when it was in its formative years. Without his remarkable ability to promote and publicize, the innovative music of the Light Crust Doughboys might never have gained such vast popularity, and men like Bob Wills might have been known only in North and Central Texas. As governor, O'Daniel made the world aware that there was a distinctive Texas sound and that music was important enough to help a flour salesman attain the highest office in the state. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Dallas Morning News, August 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 1938. Seth Shepard McKay, W. Lee O'Daniel and Texas Politics, 1938-1942 (Lubbock: Texas Tech Press, 1944). Charles R. Townsend, San Antonio Rose: The Life and Music of Bob Wills (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1976). Charles R. Townsend (http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/WW/xgw1_print.html) From the Old Time Radio Researchers Group. See "Note" Section below for more information on the OTRR.

This recording is part of the Old Time Radio collection.

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Chapters

First Song - Under the Double Eagle 12:42
First Song - Dance All Night with a Bottle in My Hand 13:07
First Song - Old Wagoneer 12:41
First Song - The Devils Dream 13:13
First Song - Hell on the Wabash 13:07
First Song - Put on Your Old Grey Bonnet 13:28
First Song - Boiling Cabbage Down 13:48
First Song - The Hog Trough Reel 13:46
First Song - Sally Ann 13:44
First Song - Hogs in the Trough 14:01
First Song - Redwing 13:35
First Song - Birdy, Birdy, Birdy 13:39
First Song - Mason March 14:21
First Song - The Tonsorial Parlor 14:54
First Song - Little Brown Jug 14:41
First Song - Goosebird in the Haystack (end Clipped) 14:35
First Song - Those Crazy Lonesome Blues 14:53
First Song - Dinah 14:09
First Song - Paris Top Cornpipe 14:21
First Song - Hand Me Down My Walking Cane 14:17
First Song - Jingle Bells 9:24
First Song - Barrell Polka 15:04
First Song - Sweet Sue 14:38
First Song - Song of the Volga Boatmen 14:38
First Song - I Get the Blues When It Rains 14:40
First Song - Take Me Back to Tulsa 14:39
First Song - Lucky Days 14:35
First Song - Moonlight and Roses 14:39
W. LEE O'DANIEL 40-06-xx Sunday Broadcast 31:33
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (01) First Song - I Never Slept A Wink Last Night 14:17
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (02) First Song - Fisher's Hornpipe 14:47
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (03) First Song - LIttle Mother Of The Hill 14:30
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (04) First Song - Little Dutch Kindergarten 14:39
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (05) First Song - She'll Be Coming Around The Mount… 14:35
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (06) First Song - I'm Getting Sentimental Over You 14:17
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (07) First Song - Chewing Chewing Chewing Gum 14:43
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (08) First Song - The 12th Street Rag 14:21
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (09) First Song - Somebody Loves You 15:10
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (10) First Song - Speed The Plan 14:47
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (11) First Song - Doofus 14:52
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (12) First Song - Cross Patch 15:23
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (13) First Song - Ida 15:46
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (14) First Song - Wabash Blues 15:46
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (15) First Song - Dream Time 15:38
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (16) First Song - Washington Reel 15:37
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (17) First Song - Sing On Brother, Sing! 14:47
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (18) First Song - Goin' Back To Texas 14:59
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (19) First Song - Ned Kendall's Horn Pipe 15:30
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (20) First Song - Darktown Strutters Ball 15:33
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (21) First Song - Bye Bye Blues 15:51
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (22) First Song - Leave Me With A Smile 16:34
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (23) First Song - Yes Sir, That's My Baby 15:14
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (24) First Song - I Was Doing Alright 14:25
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (25) First Song - Tumblin' Tumbleweeds 15:53
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (26) First Song - Skip To My Lou 15:38
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (27) First Song - The West Texas Stomp 15:01
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (28) First Song - The Whitesboro Jump 16:01
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (29) First Song - Chinese Breakdown 15:37
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (30) First Song - Kilham 14:59
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (31) First Song - Bluezies 15:31
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (32) First Song - Old Uncle Zeke 16:16
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (33) First Song - Milenburg Joys 15:12
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (34) First Song - Jealous 15:44
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (35) First Song - The Bear Creek Hop 15:38
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (36) First Song - Rural Rhythm 15:31
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (37) First Song - Under The Moon 14:08
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (38) First Song - Down The River of Golden Dreams 14:40
Pappy O'Daniel 39-xx-xx (39) First Song - Little Box Of Pine on the 7 29 14:48
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (40) First Song - Hoppin' Lucy 15:27
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (41) First Song - Lazy River 15:01
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (42) First Song - Sweet Jennie Lee 16:03
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (43) Fill-in Program- Kooky Todd 11:31
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (44) First Song - Rosalee 14:35
The Hillbilly Boys 39-xx-xx (45) First Song - Tugboat 14:31

Reviews

Crazy juxtaposition


(3 stars)

For more about the Crazy Hillbillies see https://www.ncpedia.org/crazy-water-crystals I hope someone can tell us a bit more about these particular episodes... including the personnel and any overlap with the hillbilly flour Hillbillies.

Correction to Correction


(0 stars)

Pat is correct. Pat was Pappy's son. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_O%27Daniel_and_His_Hillbilly_Boys

Correction


(3 stars)

It should be "Pappy" not "Pat."