Monday, January 24, 2011

Well howdy there dear blog followers and internet surfers,


No music this time around on the ol' blog, but this has been a tremendous week for me and I thought I might go ahead and write one of those mass emails to tell every single person I know or have ever communicated with or who I might in the future communicate with...

My family's health is improving (this is the best news!), my work here at Indiana University is going very well of late (a very exciting thesis project is in the works), my bluegrass-rockabilly EP with Sean Mencher, Al Hawkes, and Event Records friends is finished and looks great (so many thanks to Fred Chao!!), I just finished a new rockabilly-hillbilly bop recording project with some of my favorite people (Jerry Miller, Shane Kiel, and Mike Lee), and... wait for it... seriously, big news... worth waiting one more second... ok, THE STARDAY BOOK IS FINALLY OUT!!!


As the blog followers here know, I've spent the better part of the last many years researching and writing the history of Starday Records, one of, if not THE, most important independent record label in country music history. All those years of work, for which I have so, so many people to thank (which I tried to do in the Intro to the book, but my sincerest apologies if I missed anyone), has finally culminated in 288 pages bound by colorful hardness. I'm mighty proud of the ol' paper weight and just wanted to let all of my friends, colleagues, acquaintances, and even mortal enemies, know that it's real, available, and lookin' great!


If anybody is interested in obtaining a copy (this here being a callout to all those interested in mid-century American popular music, country music, bluegrass, rockabilly, honky-tonk, gospel music, old-time, independent music, george jones, stanley brothers, willie nelson, roger miller, nashville, tn, the record business, record collecting, nate gibson, etc), I will be giving a lecture on the IU campus about my Starday research on Feb. 4 (Morrison Hall, 1165 E. 3rd St, Room 006, High Noon) and will have several copies on hand. If you are not in the Bloomington, Indiana vicinity, the publisher (University Press of Mississippi) has recommended that y'all: Buy this book online at Amazon, from the publisher, or at your local neighborhood bookstore. As a head's up, the book is presently on sale for the lowest price since Amazon put it on pre-order back in May (less than $40, shipping included). For those that come to the lecture on Feb 4 (details below), I will be able to match the current Amazon price as well. I would greatly appreciate the support, by either purchase, just coming to listen, or even passing the word along to people you think might like enjoy the book (specific details below)!


Lots of other great stuff is happening in my life (seriously, i'm so grateful for everything as of late!!), but I don't want to bore the world with too many overly gushy details... So, there are several ways in which you could find out more if you are so inclined...
1. Write me an email. This is not the best option if you are seeking a speedy reply, as I am in the midst of grant application season. But I'd love to hear from you and will reply as soon as I am able.
2. Stalk my book or band on Facebook, "liking" and "poking" things and keeping abreast of my current highlights...
3. Check out some of my new recordings on my Facebook/Reverbnation band page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nate-Gibson-and-the-Gashouse-Gang/134266376606754... You can also buy the new Nate Gibson and the Grass House album here (CD or digital download)
4. Check out the new updates to my website (my eternal thanks to Garet!!) and learn more about the book and other projects I'm working on: www.nathandgibson.com. More updates coming soon, including many never-heard-before MP3s!
5. Check Youtube for new Nate Gibson videos. We had a show this weekend to celebrate the book's overnight express arrival http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvxJ-kbsP3Y
and you can also find me playing upright bass for numerous bands in and around Bloomington, IN.

I send to you all my very best and thank you for sharing my joy in the release of the Starday book. For those still on the fence about making the purchase, below is a writeup and a few quotes from several writers and scholars whom I greatly admire and for which I'm mighty thankful. I send my best wishes to everyone and look forward to our paths crossing again in the near future!!


Country Musically,
Nate






The Starday Story—The House That Country Music Built, is the first book entirely dedicated to one of the most influential music labels of the 20th century. In addition to creating the largest bluegrass catalogue throughout the 1950s and '60s, Starday was also known for its legendary rockabilly catalogue, an extensive Texas honky-tonk outpouring, classic gospel and sacred recordings and as a Nashville independent powerhouse studio and label. Written by Nathan D. Gibson with label president and co-founder Don Pierce, the book retraces the label's origins in 1953 through 1968 and the Starday-King merger. Interviews with artists and their families, employees and Pierce contribute to the stories of famous hit songs including "Y'all Come," "A Satisfied Mind," "Why Baby Why," "Giddy-Up Go," "Alabam," and many others. Gibson's research and interviews also shed new light on the musical careers of George Jones, Arlie Duff, Willie Nelson, the Big Bopper, Roger Miller, the Stanley Brothers, Cowboy Copas, Dottie West, Red Sovine, Johnny Bond, and countless other Starday artists.
Conversations with the children of Pappy Daily and Jack Starns provide a unique perspective on the early days of Starday and extensive interviews with Pierce offer an insider glance at the country music industry during the Golden Era of country music. Weathering through the storm of rock and roll and, later, the Nashville Sound, Starday was a home to traditional country musicians and became one of the most successful independent labels in American history. Ultimately, the Starday Story is the preservation of a country music label that played an integral role in preserving our nation's musical heritage.

Features:

Interviews were conducted with many of the artists and employees themselves including Betty Amos, Glenn Barber, Bobby Black, Eddie Bond, Chuck Chellman, Bill Clifton, Jimmy Dean, Charlie Dick, Patsy Elshire, Freddie Frank, Tillman Franks, Luke Gordon, Rudy "Tutti" Grayzell, Aubrey Holt, Loyd Howell, Orangie Ray Hubbard, George Jones, Merle Kilgore, W.D. Kilpatrick, Sleepy LaBeef, Billy Linneman, Hoss Linneman, Jesse McReynolds, Rose Lee Maphis, Frankie Miller, Lattie Moore, James O'Gwynn, Arnold Parker, Tom Perryman, Kenny Roberts, Shelby Singleton, Eddie Skelton, Roni Stoneman, Howard Vokes, Link Wray and many others

Features 60 photos, the majority of which have never before been published, including many from Don Pierce's personal collection

A near-complete listing of Starday Records and affiliated labels (including Dixie, Mercury-Starday, Nashville, Juke Box Oldies and the custom series) issued between 1953-1970

What they're saying:

"Nathan Gibson's The Starday Story: The House that Country Music Built is among the best books I've read on the subject of country music in Starday's era (1953-1968). It covers not merely the history and activities of a very important independent record label, but also offers valuable insights on artist and song selection, studio recording, and the production, distribution, and marketing of records during that time. Starday Records has been often overlooked through the years, despite the role it played in the early careers of such eventual stars as George Jones, Roger Miller, Willie Nelson, and many others. Don Pierce, who led the company throughout its active years, was something of an administrative and innovative marketing genius, for which he, like the label itself, never got the credit deserved. That is all remedied by The Starday Story. The book is thoroughly researched and well written; anyone with a serious interest in American popular culture ought to have a copy."
—Nolan Porterfield, author of Jimmie Rodgers: The Life and Times of America's Blue Yodeler

"If we are ever able to understand the complete story of country music, and the ways in which it touched, enriched, and explained the lives of ordinary people, it will be because of books like The Starday Story. Nathan Gibson has given us a meticulously-researched and highly-detailed account of one of the most important record labels that helped to introduce country music to an international public. The Starday Story is not simply an entertaining account of some of country music's most colorful and influential performers, it is also an insightful study of American working class history, and the ways in which plain people interrelated with their musical messengers and spokesmen. I am pleased to give the book my unqualified endorsement."
—Bill C. Malone, professor emeritus of history at Tulane University and author of Country Music U.S.A. and Don't Get above your Raisin': Country Music and the Southern Working Class

"The story of Starday, Nashville maverick of the fifties and sixties, is told well in this book for which Nathan Gibson was fortunate to have the help of Starday's glory years' president, the late Don Pierce. At a time of turmoil in Nashville, Pierce found ways to record and market a diversity of gritty music that's stood the test of time: rockabilly, gospel, bluegrass, honky-tonk, old-time, historic country and more. Pierce's own comments and insights mix enthusiasm and business acumen in unique ways that make for fascinating reading. Gibson's meticulous research pulls in new threads and offers fresh insights into the workings of mid-20th century popular music."
—Neil V. Rosenberg, professor emeritus of folklore at Memorial University of Newfoundland and coauthor of Bluegrass Odyssey: A Documentary in Pictures and Words, 1966-86

"Starday is arguably the greatest maverick country music label of the 1950s-60s. Despite minimal investments in sessions and infrastructure, Starday produced lasting classics by George Jones, the Stanley Brothers, Cowboy Copas, Minnie Pearl, the Country Gentlemen, Ola Belle Reed, Charlie Monroe, Red Sovine, the Blue Sky Boys, Buzz Busby, Harry Choates, Johnny Bond, Carl Story, Jim & Jesse, the Stoneman Family, the Lewis Family, and many more, from celebrities to obscurities. Nate Gibson quotes Starday CEO Don Pierce extensively as he illuminates Starday's beginnings, growth, successes, failures and demise. This fascinating account includes rare insights into country music and the industry it built over half a century ago."
—Dick Spottswood, author of Banjo on the Mountain: Wade Mainer's First Hundred Years and producer and online host of The Dick Spottswood Show, www.bluegrasscountry.org

"Based on a close collaboration between Starday founder Don Pierce and musician/scholar Nathan Gibson, The Starday Story is more than a company history; it's also the story of a man who believed in American grassroots music—from honky tonk to southern gospel to bluegrass—and tirelessly worked from 1953 until 1970 to build one of the largest, broadest-based, and most artistically successful post-World War II independent record companies."
—Kip Lornell, editor, with Tracy E. W. Laird, of Shreveport Sounds in Black and White

"In The Starday Story, Nate Gibson, musician, scholar, and sprightly writer, assembles a wealth of facts and photos, and establishes the record label as a productive locus for an investigation of the relations between art and commerce and the connections among the varieties of American country music."
—Henry Glassie, Professor Emeritus of folklore at Indiana University and author of fourteen books, including The Spirit of Folk Art, Passing the Time in Ballymenone, and The Stars of Ballymenone

1 comment:

  1. Congratulations on all the great news, Nate. The book is really a major accomplishment.

    Best wishes,

    Carlyle

    ReplyDelete