While he never gained the same fame and public recognition as such fellow West Coast rockabilly pioneers as
Eddie Cochran and
Ricky Nelson,
Glen Glenn's talent far outweighed his luck in the music business, and his classic sides became the stuff of legend among rockabilly fans as well as such roots rock giants as
Bruce Springsteen,
Tom Petty, and
Bob Dylan, all of whom covered his tunes on-stage.
Glenn was born
Orin Glenn Troutman on October 24, 1934, in Joplin, Missouri.
Troutman was raised on the classic traditional country sounds of the deep South (and was related to
Porter Wagoner by marriage), and when his family relocated to San Dimas, California in 1948, his enthusiasm for classic country and Western swing sounds continued to grow. By the time he was 17, he had bought a guitar and had started jamming with Gary Lambert, a gifted guitar picker who went to the same high school as
Troutman and had also started listening to the new R&B sounds which were pouring into California's airwaves. He and Lambert formed a country duo called the Missouri Mountain Boys, and began making the rounds of Los Angeles's country bars, with
Troutman dropping out of high school to devote himself to music full-time.
Eventually,
Troutman and Lambert landed a regular spot on a local television show devoted to country music, where they became friends with another local artist with a distinctive style,
Eddie Cochran. Lambert cut some demos with
Cochran, and
Troutman was strongly influenced by
Cochran's blend of country twang and R&B rhythm. Soon
Troutman was dropping R&B and rockin' country tunes into their sets, and after editing his name to
Glen Trout, he began touring steadily and cutting demos for a variety of labels, mostly with, but occasionally without, Lambert. In late 1957,
Troutman finally landed a deal with L.A.'s
ERA Records, and in January of 1958 his first single was released, the superb "Everybody's Rockin'" backed with "I'm Glad My Baby's Gone." However,
Troutman soon received two less-than-welcome surprises -- without consulting him,
ERA had bestowed a new stage name on him,
Glen Glenn, and the rising star received his draft notice in the mail. (Lambert was also drafted around the same time.) While
ERA continued to release material by
Glenn, with the artist unable to promote the records, most received little notice, and while rockabilly collectors would later regard such sides as "Blue Jeans and a Boy's Shirt," "One Cup of Coffee," and "Laurie Ann" as classics, outside of California they fell upon deaf ears.
When
Glenn and Lambert were discharged from the Army in 1960, they attempted to pick up their careers where they left off, but by that time rockabilly had fallen out of favor and
ERA had moved
Glenn to their subsidiary label Dore Records, where they tried to polish him into a well-scrubbed pop crooner. While the results weren't as dire as one might fear, the records didn't sell especially well, and
Glenn dropped out of music full-time shortly afterward, though both he and Lambert continued to perform on weekends. A country side
Glenn and Lambert cut in 1961 found a belated release in 1964, which would have marked the end of
Glenn's recording career if a British label hadn't released a compilation of his rare rockabilly material in 1977. Like many lesser-known American rockabilly artists,
Glenn soon developed a passionate following in the U.K., and in 1984 he cut a new
Glenn album with Lambert for the Ace label.
Glenn became a regular fixture on the California club scene, and staged occasional European tours.
Glen Glenn died on March 18, 2022; he was 87. ~ Mark Deming