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Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys Free Music

Biography

Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys Free Music

Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys

Effective period / Period of releases: 1935 - 2015

Members: Bob Fitzgerald, Merle Haggard, Tommy Morrell, Joe Andrews, Danny Alguire, Glen Duncan, Bob Wills, Johnny Gimble, Tommy Allsup, Jesse Ashlock, Johnnie Lee Wills, Tiny Mott, Tommy Duncan, Al Stricklin, Joe Ferguson (3), Cliff Johnson, Benny Garcia, Jr., Herb Remington, Jody Nix, Tiny Moore, Eldon Shamblin, Millard Kelso, Joe Holley, Ocie Stockard, Billy Jack Wills, Junior Barnard, Monte Mountjoy, Bob White (6), Noel Boggs, Johnnie Edwards, Darrell Jones (3), Luke Wills, Tag Lambert, Leon McAuliffe, Lee Ross, Alex Brashear, Evelyn McKinney, Roy Honeycutt, Johnny Cuviello, Dean McKinney, Louis Tierney, Kenny Lowery, Vance Terry, Cotton Roberts, Mancel Tierney, Sleepy Johnson, Milton Brown (5), Jimmy Belken, Jimmy Wyble, Leon Rausch, Les Anderson, Ramona Reed, Doc Lewis, George Clayborn, Keith Coleman, Smokey Dacus, Tommy Perkins, Cameron Hill, Gene Crownover, Leon Huff (2), Billy Briggs (2), Jack Loyd (2), Louise Rowe, Jack Greenback, Ted Adams, Glen Rhees, Hoyle Nix, Gene Gasaway, Lou Walker, "Rusty" McDonald, Billy Bowman (2), Bob Koefer, Kermit Whalen, Tubby Lewis, Robert "Zeb" McNally, Gene Tomlin, Paul McGhee, Skeeter Elkin, Billy Carter (2), Bob Boatright, Clarence Cagle, Frankie McWhorter, Sam Poplin, Laura Lee (8), Bob White (21), June Whalin, Billy McBay (2), Woody Wood (3), John Patterson (25), Bobby McBay, Jamie McIntosh, Cotton Whittington, Jay Roberts (7), Gary Cummings (4), Wayne Johnson (26)

Western swing band founded in 1934 by Bob Wills after leaving The Light Crust Doughboys, active until 1965, reuniting for a final recording session with an ailing Wills in 1973. Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1968, and into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame (as "Early Influence") in 1999.

See also Bob Wills & Tommy Duncan, The Texas Playboys.

After the initial breakup in 1965, the band continued performing briefly as The Texas Playboys, led by Leon Rausch. They would reunite again as The Original Texas Playboys Under The Direction Of Leon McAuliffe from 1973-1986, until the death of pianist Al Stricklin. At that point, Leon Rausch and Tommy Allsup purchased the rights to use the name Bob Wills' Texas Playboys from Betty Wills and continued touring.

More than 600 artists played with the Texas Playboys during their lifetime.

Original Lineup:
Founded in Waco, Texas, 1933
Fiddle - Bob Wills
Piano, Vocals - Tommy Duncan
Steel Guitar - Kermit Whalen
Tenor Banjo - Johnnie Lee Wills
Bass/Rhythm Guitar - June Whalin

Rock And Roll Hall of Fame Inductee Lineup:
Fiddle/Mandolin/Vocals - Bob Wills
Vocals - Tommy Duncan
Fiddle - Joe Holley
Fiddle/Electric Mandolin - Johnny Gimble, Tiny Moore
Steel Guitar - Leon McAuliffe, Herb Remington
Guitar - Eldon Shamblin
Piano - Al Stricklin

Final Lineup:
(Selected by Wills for the 1973 reunion For The Last Time)
Leader - Bob Wills
Fiddle – Hoyle Nix, Keith Coleman, Merle Haggard
Fiddle/Mandolin - Johnny Gimble
Steel Guitar – Leon McAuliffe
Electric Guitar – Eldon Shamblin
Piano – Al Stricklin
Bass – Leon Rausch
Drums – Jody Nix, Smokey Dacus

More Pictures of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys

External Pages

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Wills#The_Texas_Playboys

countrymusichalloffame.org/Inductees/InducteeDetail/bob-wills

rockhall.com/inductees/bob-wills-and-his-texas-playboys