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Buck Owens

Buck Owens (born August 12, 1929) is an American country singer who defined the gritty "Bakersfield sound."

Alvis Edgar Owens, Jr. was born in Sherman, Texas, the son of sharecroppers. He chose the nickname "Buck" after a family horse (or a mule — reports seem to vary). In 1937, his family joined many others fleeing the hardships of Dust Bowl farming during the Great Depression. They packed 10 family members in a Ford sedan, and left Texas for California. Their trailer hitch broke in Mesa, Arizona, and there they stayed.

Owens worked the fields while teaching himself to play several instruments with the aid of his mother, father, and uncles. At age 13, Owens dropped out of high school to earn a living. He worked a number of odd jobs, and eventually found work playing music in bars for $5 a night. In the late 1940s, he began running produce between Arizona and the San Joaquin Valley of California, and was impressed by Bakersfield, finally settling there to work the gritty honky tonks populated by Bakersfield's oil workers. He developed a reputation as one of the best pickers around. He signed on with Capitol Records in 1957, but didn't do as well as he'd hoped. He moved to Puyallup, Washington to work at a radio station. There, he learned radio business from the ground up, and where he met and teamed up with Don Rich, who became his partner and close friend until Rich's death in 1974.

Owens and Rich had some success with a few songs, including a Top 10 with "Under Your Spell Again." They decided to return to Bakersfield, and there, Owens's backup group "The Buckaroos" was put together in 1959.

Four years later, Owens began to enter the top of the charts with regularity. He scored 15 #1 hits between 1963 and 1972. He started a production company called "Buck Owens Productions," which developed a syndicated TV show. Excerpts from the show, "The Buck Owens Ranch Show" were used as country music videos a decade later. He landed a spot as a co-host of the comedy show Hee Haw for seventeen years, sharing the spotlight with Roy Clark. This exposure brought Owens to the attention of a wider audience, but viewers tended to see him as a comedian, rather than a musical talent. He left the show in 1986. By this time, his recording career was in a slump, as audiences were becoming enamored of pop-influenced music coming out of Nashville.

Unlike many fellow artists, Owens avoided drugs and drink, living as a quiet family man. Owens was a rebel at heart doing his music his way, shunning the conventions of Nashville. Health problems such as a stroke and cancer of the tongue have drastically limited his musical activity in the 2000s, but he still occasionally performs in his Bakersfield club "The Crystal Palace" and, on rare occasions, elsewhere in California.


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Health problems such as a stroke and cancer of the tongue have drastically limited his musical activity in the 2000s, but he still occasionally performs in his Bakersfield club "The Crystal Palace" and, on rare occasions, elsewhere in California. They brought out a greatest hits package: Hits and organised a music festival: Auto (held at Rotherham's Magna centre) where they played their last gig before embarking on a temporary hiatus from the music industry. Owens was a rebel at heart doing his music his way, shunning the conventions of Nashville. In 2002 the band announced they were leaving their label, Island. Unlike many fellow artists, Owens avoided drugs and drink, living as a quiet family man. Produced by Scott Walker, it was a much happier and more popular album than Hardcore. By this time, his recording career was in a slump, as audiences were becoming enamored of pop-influenced music coming out of Nashville. Pulp then spent a few years in the wilderness before reappearing in 2001 with a new album, We Love Life, symbolising another new phase in Cocker and Pulp's development.

He left the show in 1986. Pulp also collaborated with Patrick Doyle on the song "Like A Friend" for the soundtrack to the movie Great Expectations. This exposure brought Owens to the attention of a wider audience, but viewers tended to see him as a comedian, rather than a musical talent. Many of the fans who had so enjoyed the happier, more amusing and light-hearted approach of Different Class were somewhat turned off by the darker tone of the new record. He landed a spot as a co-host of the comedy show Hee Haw for seventeen years, sharing the spotlight with Roy Clark. The fallout of all of this, and the ensuing depression induced by finding the one thing he'd been after all his life (fame) and then deciding that it wasn't really up to much, was the subject matter of the follow-up album This Is Hardcore: a trawl through the seedy world of Soho, which during its more navel-gazing, depressed-singer-in-a-hotel-room moments stylistically approached Pink Floyd's The Wall. Excerpts from the show, "The Buck Owens Ranch Show" were used as country music videos a decade later. Cocker was also having difficulty with the celebrity lifestyle, resulting in the breakup of a long-term relationship.

He started a production company called "Buck Owens Productions," which developed a syndicated TV show. It was during this period of intense fame that long time member and major innovator in the band's sound, Russell Senior, decided to call it a day to spend time with his family (and out of the tabloid press). He scored 15 #1 hits between 1963 and 1972. This incident propelled Cocker into even greater notoriety in the UK, and having spent the last 15 years trying to be famous, he grabbed the attention with both hands. Four years later, Owens began to enter the top of the charts with regularity. But domestic attention was never really equaled in the rest of the world, and if Pulp are known beyond the UK at all it is perhaps more likely the result of Cocker's antics at the infamous 1996 Brit Awards, when he invaded the stage in protest during Michael Jackson's performance (for which he spent the night in the cells on the ungrounded charge of having injured some of the children that Jackson was "healing"). Owens and Rich had some success with a few songs, including a Top 10 with "Under Your Spell Again." They decided to return to Bakersfield, and there, Owens's backup group "The Buckaroos" was put together in 1959. saw the opportunity to steal the crown, and "Common People" was arguably the stand-out single of the year, if not the decade.

There, he learned radio business from the ground up, and where he met and teamed up with Don Rich, who became his partner and close friend until Rich's death in 1974. While Blur and Oasis were fighting it out over which band were the true kings of Britpop, Jarvis Cocker and co. He moved to Puyallup, Washington to work at a radio station. This album, with its disco-infused pop-rock, and the trademark sordid yet witty lyrics about sexual encounters and working class life, is for most fans what Pulp are about. He signed on with Capitol Records in 1957, but didn't do as well as he'd hoped. 1995 saw the peak of Pulp's fame, with the release of their No.2 UK Hit single "Common People", their much loved performance at the Glastonbury festival (standing in for the Stone Roses at the last minute) and their Mercury award winning album Different Class (the first album featuring Pulp fan-club president Mark Webber, who became a permanent member of the band on guitar and keyboards). He developed a reputation as one of the best pickers around. This sudden increase in popularity was certainly helped by the massive media interest in a new wave of Britpop ushered by the likes of Suede and Blur, the latter of which Pulp supported on a US tour in 1994.

In the late 1940s, he began running produce between Arizona and the San Joaquin Valley of California, and was impressed by Bakersfield, finally settling there to work the gritty honky tonks populated by Bakersfield's oil workers. These were followed by the Ed Buller produced album His 'n' Hers which reached No.9 in the UK charts, and which, sonically, was not a million miles away from Suede. He worked a number of odd jobs, and eventually found work playing music in bars for $5 a night. Island Records then released the singles "Do You Remember the First Time" and "Lipgloss", to modest chart success. At age 13, Owens dropped out of high school to earn a living. The three singles released on Gift were later compiled on the album Intro which was released when they were signed up by Island Records. Owens worked the fields while teaching himself to play several instruments with the aid of his mother, father, and uncles. Fire attempted to capitalise on this by finally releasing Separations.

They packed 10 family members in a Ford sedan, and left Texas for California. Their trailer hitch broke in Mesa, Arizona, and there they stayed. Frustrated that Separations still hadn't been released, Pulp signed to Warp Records imprint Gift Records in 1992. In 1937, his family joined many others fleeing the hardships of Dust Bowl farming during the Great Depression. In the meantime, however, in 1991, a 12" recording - "My Legendary Girlfriend" became music periodical The NME's single of the week, and it was this that ushered Pulp's first steps towards fame. He chose the nickname "Buck" after a family horse (or a mule — reports seem to vary). Like Freaks, its release was delayed, to an extent lessening the potential impact. was born in Sherman, Texas, the son of sharecroppers. This album, Separations, was a progression of the style of Freaks, with Leonard Cohen-esque ballads on side one and a more disco / Acid House infused track-listing on side two.

Alvis Edgar Owens, Jr. They recorded another album for Fire after a separate deal fell through. Buck Owens (born August 12, 1929) is an American country singer who defined the gritty "Bakersfield sound.". The fold was short-lived however, and a new line-up, consisting of Cocker, Senior, Candida Doyle, Nick Banks (drums) and Steve Mackey (bass) emerged. This gave Cocker ample time to consider his direction, and when, later, Freaks failed to be a success, Pulp folded, with Jarvis going off to London to study film. It was during this mid-80s period that Cocker fell out of a window while trying to impress a girl, and ended up in hospital, and temporarily wheelchair-bound.

It is either loved or hated by fans, and might be considered the antithesis of the happy and optimistic It. Its release ended up being delayed for a year, and the record was not well received. These releases were followed by an album, Freaks in 1986, recorded in one week due to pressure from the label. These tracks were much darker in tone than those on It, and often veered towards the likes of The Fall.

Following her first performance with the band, they were signed to a label called Fire Records, and began to record a number of singles that were later released as the compilation album Masters of the Universe. Having survived a number of ill-fated gigs, Allcard left to be replaced on keyboards by Doyle's sister Candida. The three of them established a new, more experimental, artier, and noisier direction for Pulp, and were subsequently augmented by Peter Mansell (bass) and Tim Allcard (keyboards, saxophone, poetry). He was all set to throw the towel in and go to university, when he decided to hold a practice with Russell Senior (violin, guitar, vocals) and Magnus Doyle (drums).

But fame was still not knocking, and Cocker was becoming unhappy with his chosen musical direction, especially after being forced to cut a single in the style of the then prevalent pop-group Wham!. This largely consisted of jangly, happy-go-lucky, folkish, romantic pop tunes, and was a change of direction from the Peel Sessions. They managed to get enough local backing to record a mini-album in late 1982 entitled It. A new set of musicians was gathered: Simon Hinkler (who later joined The Mission and produced All About Eve), David Hinkler, Wayne Furness, Peter Boam, Gary Wilson, and Cocker's sister, Saskia.

Despite the exposure on national radio, success was not forthcoming, and most of the then line-up left for university. Amazingly they landed a Peel Session, and the tracks they recorded were pretty much in the typical Sheffield sound of the time (cf. Human League, Comsat Angels) - sort of electronic new wave. They played their first proper gig at Rotherham Arts Centre in July 1980, and made a demo tape the following year which they gave to the DJ John Peel. The first line-up was Cocker, David Lockwood (musician), Mark Swift and Peter Dalton, though this soon disintegrated into a fairly un-set membership of Cocker and whoever else was around at the time.

They are most famous in the UK, where their blend of disco-influenced pop-rock coupled with the amusing down-to-Earth kitchen-sink lyrics of lanky, rubber-limbed front-man Cocker, saw them become popular during the mid 1990s. They were originally known as "Arabacus Pulp", but this was soon shortened.
The pop group Pulp were formed in Sheffield, England, in 1978 by then 15-year-old school-boy Jarvis Cocker (vocals, guitar). Mark Sturdy, Truth & Beauty: The Story of Pulp (Omnibus Press, 2003) - comprehensive biography.

April 2002 "Bad Cover Version" #27. October 2001 "Sunrise/The Trees" #23. September 1998 "Party Hard" #29. June 1998 "A Little Soul" #22.

March 1998 "This is Hardcore" #12. November 1997 "Help the Aged" #8. April 1996 "Something Changed" #10. December 1995 "Disco 2000" #7.

October 1995 "Mis-Shapes/Sorted for E's and Wizz" #2. June 1995 "Common People" #2. June 1994 "The Sisters EP" (Babies / Your Sister's Clothes / Seconds / His 'n' Hers) #19. April 1994 "Do You Remember the First Time" #33.

November 1993 "Lipgloss" #50. Hits - greatest hits compilation (2002) #71 UK. Countdown 1992-1983 (1996) #10 UK. Masters of the Universe - non-album singles compilation (1994).

Intro - non-album singles compilation (1993). We Love Life (2001) #6 UK. This Is Hardcore (1997) #1 UK, #114 US. Different Class (1995) #1 UK.

His 'n' Hers (1994) #9 UK. Separations (1991). Freaks (1986). It (1983).