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A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry
 
 
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A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry [Hardcover]

Charles K. Wolfe (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 28, 1999
The Story of the Opry's Humble Beginnings.
Winner of a Ralph J. Gleason Music Book Award
Winner of The ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award

Vanderbilt University Press and the Country Music Foundation Press are Proud to Bring You the Story of the Opry's Humble Beginnings.



On November 28, 1925, a white-bearded man sat before one of Nashville radio station WSM's newfangled carbon microphones to play a few old-time fiddle tunes. Uncle Jimmy Thompson played on the air for an hour that night, and throughout the region listeners at their old crystal sets suddenly perked up. Back in Nashville the response at the offices of National Life Insurance Company, which owned radio station WSM ("We Shield Millions"), was dramatic; phone calls and telegrams poured into the station, many of them making special requests. It was not long before station manager George D. Hay was besieged by pickers and fiddlers of every variety, as well as hoedown bands, singers, and comedians -- all wanting their shot at the Saturday night airwaves. "We soon had a good-natured riot on our hands," Hay later recalled. And, thus, the Opry was born.



Or so the story goes. In truth, the birth of the Opry was a far more complicated event than even Hay, "the solemn old Judge," remembered. The veteran performers of that era are all gone now, but since the 1970s pioneering country music historian Charles K. Wolfe has spent countless hours recording the oral history of the principals and their families and mining archival materials from the Country Music Foundation and elsewhere to understand just what those early days were like. The story that he has reconstructed is fascinating. Both a detailed history and a group biography of the Opry's early years, A Good-Natured Riot provides the first comprehensive and thoroughly researched account of the personalities, the music, and the social and cultural conditions that were such fertile ground for the growth of a radio show that was to become an essential part of American culture.



Wolfe traces the unsure beginnings of the Opry through its many incarnations, through cast tours of the South, the Great Depression, commercial sponsorship by companies like Prince Albert Tobacco, and the first national radio linkups. He gives colorful and engaging portraits of the motley assembly of the first Opry casts -- amateurs from the hills and valleys surrounding Nashville, like harmonica player Dr. Humphrey Bate ("Dean of the Opry") and fiddler Sid Harkreader, virtuoso string bands like the Dixieliners, colorful hoedown bands like the Gully Jumpers and the Fruit Jar Drinkers, the important African American performer DeFord Bailey, vaudeville acts and comedians like Lasses and Honey, through more professional groups such as the Vagabonds, the Delmore Brothers, Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys, and perennial favorite Roy Acuff and his Smoky Mountain Boys.



With dozens of wonderful photographs and a complete roster of every performer and performance of these early Opry years, A Good-Natured Riot gives a full and authoritative portrayal of the colorful beginnings of WSM's barn dance program up to 1940, by which time the Grand Ole Opry had found its national audience and was poised to become the legendary institution that it remains to this day.



Co-published with the Country Music Foundation Press


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

When Nashville's National Life and Accident Insurance Company created radio station WSM as an advertising vehicle--the call letters representing their corporate slogan, "We Shield Millions"--no one suspected its "old-time music" program would one day be country music's shining star. In A Good-Natured Riot, author Charles Wolfe offers a thorough, valuable examination of the Grand Ole Opry's formative years, answering the questions that the genre's recorded history cannot (simply because most of the Opry's earliest stalwarts were part-time musicians who were rarely recorded). Interestingly, WSM wasn't the first station to broadcast old-time music, and the citizens of Nashville, who considered theirs to be an erudite and cultured city, despised hillbilly music and any association with it. Nevertheless, the nearby Tennessee hills offered a wealth of authentic old-time music, and rural folks from all across the U.S. (the airwaves were quite clear at the time) adored the sounds of Uncle Jimmy Thompson and Dr. Humphrey Bate. Soon enough, the music's popularity led WSM station manager George Hay to create a weekly Barn Dance program in the fall of 1925.

The bulk of Wolfe's chronicle is told through discussions of the Opry's stars, their lives, and their music, adding station logs, repertoire listings, press releases, and news clippings to his own extensive interviews and research. He progresses from early staples like Bate, Thompson, DeFord Bailey, and Uncle Dave Macon (the only early member who was actually a well-known professional musician), to innovators like the McGee Brothers, Fiddlin' Arthur Smith, and the Delmore Brothers, to Roy Acuff and Bill Monroe, who brought country music into the modern age. By the time Acuff and Monroe held sway, circa 1940, the Opry had become a nationally syndicated NBC show and most of its stars were actively and successfully making records. Wolfe documents the first 15 years of the Opry in incredible detail, and in doing so illustrates the development of old-time music from homespun, informal diversion to finely honed commercial powerhouse. --Marc Greilsamer

From Publishers Weekly

Perhaps there is no commercially successfully genre of music as misunderstood as country: even its most ardent fans seem content to embrace its aw-shucks image. Wolfe makes no such mistake, affectionately chronicling the savvy business decisions that gave birth to the Opry and to its careful "rustication." Emerging from 25 years of research on the Opry's beginnings, Wolfe's book includes an unprecedented number of interviews with the performers and their families and associates. Although he sometimes favors depth of detail over narrative shape, his work will be invaluable to historians of country, and of American music more broadly. Wolfe depicts a number of eager, opportunistic (not to mention talented and pioneering) performers and businessmen who made big bucks by fashioning old-time music into a slick commodity with mass appeal. Knowing that early Opry stars Uncle Dave Macon and Uncle Jimmy Thompson were in it for as much glory and money as they could come by should not decrease our appreciation of their music; no one minds that Elvis and the Beatles built fortunes along with their legends. Wolfe's book should help both country music's proponents and opponents realize that country is an important and substantial chunk of the music business, and that it has always involved both smarts and flair.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Vanderbilt Univ Press - Country Music Foundation Press; 1st edition (May 28, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 082651331X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826513311
  • Product Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #520,797 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A riveting history of the Grand Ole Opry, July 26, 2000
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This review is from: A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry (Hardcover)
This book excels all that I have read about a fascinating subject! Contrary to most history books, you'll read this one until you finish it, I promise.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Early Years of a Radio Classic, November 21, 2002
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Kevin Fontenot (New Orleans, LA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry (Hardcover)
Using biographies of early stars, Charles Wolfe deftly weaves the history of one of the longest running radio programs. The result is a highly readable, entertaining, and educational survey of the Opry's first two decades. This period was dominated by string bands, such as those led by Dr. Humphrey Bate, Theron Hale, and the Brinkley Brothers. But individuals soon came to dominate the program. Chief among them the irrepressable Uncle Dave Macon and the man who would become the living embodiment of the Opry, Roy Acuff. Wolfe is equally adept at discussing both entertainers' personalities and the business of radio and programing. This book belongs in every Country music and radio lover's collection.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great!!, September 30, 2011
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Very smooth transaction,fast shipment. The book was in like new condition,I give you all A's. Thank you for a great product.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THERE ARE TWO WAYS TO LOOK at the Grand Ole Opry as it emerged through its first fifteen years: as a radio show and as a collection of talented musicians. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hoedown bands, barn dance orchestra, homespun voice, barn dance program, early string bands, fiddling contests, harmonica wizard, solemn old judge, more pretty girls, early country music, old familiar tunes, dance fiddler, radio listings, country music history, many biscuits, duet act, radio logs, steamboat whistle, staff musicians, fiddle tunes, talking blues, string trio
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Uncle Dave, Uncle Jimmy, Grand Ole Opry, National Life, Humphrey Bate, Arthur Smith, New York, Crook Brothers, Middle Tennessee, Sid Harkreader, George Hay, Roy Acuff, Pee Wee, Uncle Joe, Golden West Cowboys, Harry Stone, Theron Hale, Delmore Brothers, Paul Warmack, Uncle Bunt, Henry Bandy, Henry Ford, Skillet Lickers, Civil War, David Stone
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