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Glen Travis Campbell (born April 22, 1936, in Delight,
Arkansas) is a Grammy Award, Dove Award winning, and two time nominated Golden
Globe Award American country pop singer and guitarist and occasional actor. He
is best known for a series of hits in the 1960s and 1970s, as well as for
hosting a television variety show called The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour on CBS
television.
Campbell’s hits include “Gentle On My Mind”, “By the Time I Get to Phoenix”,
“Wichita Lineman”, “Southern Nights” and “Rhinestone Cowboy”. Campbell made
history by winning a Grammy in both country and pop categories in 1967: “Gentle
On My Mind” snatched the country honors, and “By The Time I Get To Phoenix” won
in pop. He owns trophies for Male Vocalist of the Year from both the CMA and the
ACM, and took the CMA’s top honor as Entertainer of the Year.
During his 50 years in show business, Campbell has released more than 70 albums.
He has sold 45 million records and racked up 12 RIAA Gold albums, 4 Platinum
albums and 1 Double-Platinum album. Of his 75 trips up the charts, 27 landed in
the Top 10. Campbell was hand-picked by actor John Wayne to play alongside him
in the 1969 film True Grit, which gave Campbell a Golden Globe nomination for
Most Promising Newcomer, and gave Wayne his only Academy Award. Campbell sang
and had a hit with the title song (by the same name) which was nominated for an
Academy Award. He performed it live at that year’s Academy Awards Show.
In 2005, Campbell was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Biography
1950s-early 1960s: session musician and the Beach Boys
Campbell, one of twelve children born right outside the tiny community of
Delight in Pike County, Arkansas, in a town called Billstown, then a community
of fewer than one hundred residents, started playing guitar as a youth without
learning to read music. Though widely reported that Glen is a seventh son of a
seventh son, that information is not true.
By the time he was eighteen, he was touring the South as part of the Western
Wranglers. In 1958, he moved to Los Angeles to become a session musician. He was
part of the 1959 line-up of the group The Champs, famous for their surf
instrumental “Tequila”.
Campbell was in great demand as a session musician in the 1960s. He was part of
the famous studio musicians clique known as “The Wrecking Crew,” many of whom
went from session to session together as the same group. In addition to
Campbell, Hal Blaine on drums and Carol Kaye on bass guitar were part of this
elite group of session musicians that defined many pop and rock recordings of
the era. They were also heard on Phil Spector’s “Wall of Sound” recordings in
the early 1960s.
He is heard on some of the biggest-selling records of the era by such artists as
Bobby Darin, Ricky Nelson, The Kingston Trio, Merle Haggard, The Monkees, Elvis
Presley, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Frankie Laine, The Association, Jan & Dean,
and The Mamas & the Papas.
He was a touring member of The Beach Boys, filling in for an ailing Brian Wilson
in 1964 and 1965. He played guitar on the group’s Pet Sounds album, among other
recordings. On tour, he played bass and sang high harmony.
Other classics featuring his guitar playing include: “Strangers in the Night” by
Frank Sinatra, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” by The Righteous Brothers and
“I’m a Believer” by The Monkees.
He can be seen briefly in the 1965 film Baby the Rain Must Fall, playing guitar
in support of Steve McQueen.
Late 1960s: By The Time He Gets To Phoenix, Glen was a Wichita Lineman dreaming
of Galveston
As a solo artist, he had moderate success regionally with his first single “Turn
Around, Look at Me.” “Too Late to Worry; Too Blue to Cry” and “Kentucky Means
Paradise” (cut with a bluegrass group called the Green River Boys) were
similarly popular within only a small section of the country audience.
In 1962, Campbell signed with Capitol Records and released two instrumental
albums and a number of vocal albums during his first five years with the label.
However, despite releasing singles written by Brian Wilson (”Guess I’m Dumb” in
1965) and Buffy Sainte-Marie the same year (”The Universal Soldier”), Campbell
was not achieving major success as a solo artist. It was rumored that Capitol
was considering dropping him from the label in 1966 when he was teamed with
producer Al DeLory and together they collaborated on 1967’s Dylanesque “Gentle
On My Mind”, written by John Hartford.
The overnight success of “Gentle On My Mind” proved Campbell was ready to break
through to the mainstream. It was followed by the even bigger triumph of “By The
Time I Get To Phoenix” later in 1967, and “I Wanna Live” and “Wichita Lineman”
in 1968.
Campbell would win two Grammy Awards for his performances on “Gentle On My Mind”
and “By The Time I Get To Phoenix”.
His biggest hits in 1968–1969 were with evocative songs written by Jimmy Webb:
“By the Time I Get to Phoenix”, “Wichita Lineman,” “Where’s The Playground
Susie?”, and “Galveston”. An album of mainly Webb-penned compositions Reunion:
The Songs of Jimmy Webb was released in 1974 but it produced no hit single
records.
“Wichita Lineman” was selected as one of the greatest songs of the 20th century
by Mojo magazine in 1997 and by Blender in 2001.
1970s: The Goodtime Hour, Rhinestone Cowboy and Southern Nights
After he hosted a 1968 summer replacement for television’s The Smothers Brothers
Comedy Hour variety show, Campbell hosted his own weekly variety show, The Glen
Campbell Goodtime Hour, from January 1969 through June 1972. At the height of
his popularity, a 1970 biography by Freda Kramer, The Glen Campbell Story, was
published.
With Campbell’s session-work connections, he hosted major names in music on his
show including: The Beatles (on film), David Gates and Bread, The Monkees, Neil
Diamond, Linda Ronstadt, Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Waylon
Jennings, Roger Miller and helped launch the careers of Anne Murray, Mel Tillis
and Jerry Reed who were regulars on his Goodtime Hour program.
In 1973, Banjo player Carl Jackson joined Campbell’s band for 12 years and went
on to win two Grammy awards.
During the late 1960s and early 1970s, Campbell released a long series of
singles and appeared in the movies True Grit (1969) with John Wayne and Kim
Darby and Norwood (1970) with Kim Darby and Joe Namath.
In 1971, Campbell took his show The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour on the road for
two nights to The Muny in Forest Park, (the largest and oldest outdoor theater
in America) in St. Louis, Missouri.
After the cancellation of his CBS series in 1972, Campbell remained a regular on
network television. He co-starred in a made-for-television movie, Strange
Homecoming with Robert Culp and up and coming teen idol, Leif Garrett. He hosted
a number of television specials, including the 1976 Down Home, Down Under with
Olivia Newton-John. He co-hosted the American Music Awards from 1976–1978 and
headlined the 1979 NBC special, “Glen Campbell: Back To Basics” with stars Seals
and Crofts and Brenda Lee. He was a guest on many network talk and variety shows
including: Donny & Marie, The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, Cher, The Redd
Foxx Comedy Hour, Merv Griffin, The Midnight Special with Wolfman Jack, DINAH!,
Evening at Pops with Arthur Fiedler and The Mike Douglas Show. From 1982–1983 he
hosted a 30 minute syndicated music show on NBC.
In the mid-1970s, he had more big hits with “Rhinestone Cowboy”, “Southern
Nights” (both U.S. #1 hits), “Sunflower” (U.S. #39) (written by Neil Diamond),
and “Country Boy (You Got Your Feet in L.A.) (U.S. #11).
“Rhinestone Cowboy” was Campbell’s largest-selling single, initially with over 2
million copies sold in a matter of months. Campbell had heard the songwriter
Larry Weiss’ version while on tour of Australia in 1974 and felt it was the
perfect song for him to record. It was included in the Jaws movie parody song
“Mr. Jaws” which also reached the top 10 in 1975. “Rhinestone Cowboy” continues
to be used in movie soundtracks and TV shows, including “Desperate Housewives”
in 2006. Movies to feature the song include Daddy Day Care and High School High.
It was the inspiration for the 1984 Dolly Parton/Sylvester Stallone movie
Rhinestone.
Campbell made a techno/pop version of the song in 2002 with UK artists Rikki &
Daz and went to the top 10 in the UK with the dance version and related music
video.
“Southern Nights,” by Allen Toussaint, his other #1 pop-rock-country crossover
hit was generated with the help of Jimmy Webb who turned Campbell onto the song
and Jerry Reed who inspired the famous guitar lick introduction to the song,
which was the most-played jukebox number of 1977.
1980s-2000s: Later Career and Country Music Hall of Fame Induction
After his #1 crossover chart successes in the mid- to late 1970s, Campbell’s
career cooled off. He left Capitol Records in 1981 after a reported dispute over
the song “Highwayman” written by Jimmy Webb that the label would not release as
a single. The song would become a #1 country hit in 1985 when it was performed
by The Highwaymen, a quartet of country legends: Willie Nelson, Kris
Kristofferson, Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash.
Campbell made a cameo appearance in the 1980 Clint Eastwood movie Any Which Way
You Can, for which he recorded the title song.
Although he would never reach the top 40 pop charts after 1978, Glen Campbell
continued to reach the country top 10 throughout the 1980s with songs such as
“Faithless Love”, “A Lady Like You”, “Still Within The Sound of My Voice” and
“The Hand That Rocks The Cradle” (a duet with Steve Wariner).
When Campbell began having trouble reaching the charts, and began to abuse
himself with drugs, he was a frequently featured in the tabloids during his
affair with Tanya Tucker. By 1989, however, he had quit drugs and was regularly
reaching the country Top 10; songs like “She’s Gone, Gone, Gone” were extremely
popular.
In the 1990s, Campbell had slowed from recording, though he has not quit
entirely. In all, over 40 of his albums reached the charts. In 1992, he voiced
the character of Chanticleer in the animated film, Rock-A-Doodle. In 1994, his
autobiography, Rhinestone Cowboy, was published.
In 1999 Campbell was featured on VH-1’s Behind the Music, A&E Network’s
Biography in 2001, and on a number of CMT programs. Campbell ranked 29th on
CMT’s 40 Greatest Men of Country Music in 2003.
He is also credited with giving Alan Jackson his first big break. Campbell met
Jackson’s wife (a flight attendant with Delta Air Lines) at the Atlanta Airport
and gave her his publishing manager’s business card. Jackson went to work for
Campbell’s music publishing business in the early 1990s and later had many of
his hit songs published in part by Campbell’s company, Seventh Son Music.
Campbell also served as an inspiration to Keith Urban. Urban cites Campbell as a
strong influence on his performing career.
Although for almost a decade Campbell had professed his sobriety to fans at
concerts and in his autobiography, in November 2003 he was arrested for drunk
driving that included a charge of battery to a police officer (later
dropped).[2] He was sentenced to 10 days in jail and community service, due to
the high level of intoxication.
In 2005, Campbell was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. He performed
with Andy Williams at the Moon River Theater in Branson, Missouri in May and
June 2007.
In February 2008, Glen will perform with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra at The
Sydney Opera House in his ‘Farewell to Australia’ tour. In the lead up to the
tour, Campbell spoke with Country HQ in Dec 2007 in an interview where he not
only reflected on his stellar career, but also his plans for the upcoming tour
and more details on proposed CD with songwriter Jimmy Webb.
It was announced in April 2008 that Campbell was returning to his signature
label, Capitol, to release his new album, Meet Glen Campbell. The album was
released on August 19. He branched off in a different musical direction,
covering tracks from artists such as Travis, U2, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers, Jackson Browne and Foo Fighters. It was Campbell’s first release
on Capitol in over 15 years. Musicians from Cheap Trick and Jellyfish will
contribute to the album as well. The first single, a cover of Green Day’s “Good
Riddance (Time of Your Life)”, was released to radio in July 2008.
Personal life
Campbell has been married 4 times and is the father of eight children, now
ranging in age from 20 to 52 (5 sons and 3 daughters). He has been married to
the former Kimberly Woolen since 1982. Woolen was a Radio City Music Hall
Rockette when she and Glen met on a blind date in 1981. Glen’s eldest daughter,
Debby, has been touring across the globe with her father since 1994 and performs
many of the duets made famous by Campbell with Bobbie Gentry and Anne Murray.
Glen is an avid golfer and hosted his namesake GLEN CAMPBELL LOS ANGELES OPEN
Golf Tournament at the Riveria Country Club from 1971-83. It was a major event
on the PGA circuit. Glen was ranked in the top #15 celebrity golfers list by
Golf Digest magazine in 2005. |