Best remembered as one of
Bill Monroe's original
Blue Grass Boys, singer/songwriter/string player
Clyde Moody also played in almost every other subgenre of country music during his over fifty-year career, and even performed as a solo artist. During the '40s, he was known as the "Hillbilly Waltz King" after his song "Shenandoah Waltz" became a certified gold hit.
Moody was born and raised in Cherokee, North Carolina, and was very influenced by the traditional mountain music he heard there. During the mid-'30s, he and Jay Hugh, the brother of
Roy Hall, teamed up to appear as the Happy-Go-Lucky Boys on the radio in Spartanburg, North Carolina. They then joined
Wade Mainer, and with fiddler
Steve Ledford they became the Sons of the Mountaineers.
Moody joined
Monroe in 1940 and performed with the
Blue Grass Boys at WSM and at the Grand Ole Opry. About this time,
Monroe and his
Boys were becoming a bluegrass band, and the changes can clearly be heard in
Moody's mandolin playing on the classic "Six White Horses." A year later,
Moody spent a few months in Burlington, North Carolina playing radio duets with
Lester Flatt. He later returned to
the Blue Grass Boys and remained with them until again attempting a solo career in 1945.
He joined the Opry as a featured artist for a few weeks and then recorded for Columbia. He had his biggest hit, the sentimental "Shenandoah Waltz," in 1947, and followed it up with a series of similar tunes such as "Cherokee Waltz" and "I Waltz Alone." He had a few more hits through the end of the decade and then moved to Washington, D.C. to work for Connie B. Gay. In 1952,
Moody signed with Decca, but only had a few singles up through the mid-'50s, when his health began to fail. He left music to become a mobile home salesman, but returned in 1962 with a solo album. He then tried a modern country album. During the folk revival, he played at bluegrass festivals and moved back to Nashville in 1972, where he performed both bluegrass and country music until his death in 1989. ~ Sandra Brennan