Redd Stewart

Redd Stewart

* En anglais uniquement

Singer Redd Stewart formed several bands in and around Louisville, KY, in the 1930s with moderate success before meeting and teaming up with a brash young accordionist and bandleader named Pee Wee King and achieving widespread popularity. Though the band did well in the late '30s, it wasn't until after WWII that the group really hit full stride. It was during that time that Stewart began writing and, inspired by his service time, wrote a smash hit for Ernest Tubb in the weepy "A Soldier's Last Letter." And with King as a writing partner, the team churned out hits such as "Bonaparte's Retreat" and the enduring country classic "Tennessee Waltz." The hits kept coming with "Slow Poke" and "You Belong to Me" topping the charts in the early '50s, and the duo continued to play in bands together throughout the '60s. ~ Steve Kurutz

Nom légal

Henry Ellis Stewart

Type

Personne

Née

27 mai 1923

Né en

Ashland City

Décédés

2 août 2003 (âgé de 80)

Mort en

Louisville

Code IPI

00029637953

Liens externes