DAVE'S
DIARY - 20 NOVEMBER 2003 - RIP SPEEDY WEST
SPEEDY
WEST RIP AT 79
BORN
JANUARY 25, 1924, - SPRINGFIELD, MISSOURI.
DIED TULSA, OKLAHOMA - NOVEMBER 15, 2003
WESLEY
SPEEDY WEST
|
Steel
guitar great Wesley Speedy West, who played with electric guitarist
Jimmy Bryant, to record some of country's greatest instrumentals,
has died at 79.
Speedy, born Wesley West, had been in poor health for years after
he suffered heart and congestive problems.
Born in Springfield, Missouri, Speedy started playing the steel
guitar when he was 13.
He was the son of Finley G West - a linotype operator at a gospel
publishing company who played guitar and sang gospel songs.
In 1941, at age 17, Wesley married his first wife, Opal Mae. They
lived in St. Louis for a year, where Wesley worked at a factory
that made machine gun bullets on behalf of the war effort.
Speedy
West
|
Approximately
1942, Wesley and Opal moved to Strafford, near Springfield, Missouri,
where they lived on the family 200-acre farm.
Farming was
vital to the war effort.
One of their main crops was tomatoes - he also milked up to 33 cows daily.
After the war Wesley continued to farm but found more time to play music
and develop his skills.
EDDY ARNOLD
In 1946,
a Grand Ole Opry tent show came to Springfield starring Eddy Arnold and
Minnie Pearl.
Speedy, inspired by Arnold's steel guitar player, Little Roy Wiggins,
began to play the steel locally on jam sessions broadcast over KWTO radio
in Springfield.
A major turning point occurred when a sailor, passing through town, told
Wesley about the wonderful musical opportunities available in Southern
California.
He told him he could make as much as $25 a night, which sounded like a
gold mine just waiting for him.
On June 13, 1946, with only $150 in his pocket, Speedy and his wife and
their 2-1/2 year old son, Donnie, packed all they could into a 1936 Lincoln
Zephyr and headed to Southern California.
During the first few months after arriving in Los Angeles, Speedy worked
during the day at a drycleaners.
After working all day he played steel guitar at night, starting out with
a group called the Missouri Wranglers, all part-time musicians, who played
a VFW Hall in Southgate.
SPADE
COOLEY
Speedy found
a new steel guitar idol - Joaquin Murphy, who played with the Spade Cooley
band.
In the spring of 1948, Spade Cooley - a character in James Ellroy crime
novels with a 23-piece western swing band that included a full horn section
- hired Speedy.
Cooley also hosted the Hoffman Hayride TV variety show, broadcast by KTLA
on Saturdays, and played dances.
But Speedy's job with Cooley lasted only 5 months.
Cooley's erratic behaviour caused him to repeatedly fire and then attempt
to rehire several band members.
Speedy chose not to accept being rehired after he fell victim to one of
his tirades.
EDDIE
KIRK
Speedy's
first recording session was in 1949 with Eddie Kirk who sang "Candy
Kisses".
Speedy worked full time doing recording sessions.
He
joined the Hank Penny western swing band in early 1949 where he
was allowed to be more creative in his playing.
In 1950 Speedy's steel guitar career and reputation were given a
boost after a recording session with Tennessee Ernie Ford and Kay
Starr.
The songs recorded were "I'll Never Be Free" and
"Ain't Nobody's Business But My Own", and both
reached the top hits on country charts as well as the pop field.
Because of his style of playing on "I'll Never Be Free",
Speedy landed an instrumentalist contract with Capitol.
He
did his first session in January 1951, with Bryant accompanying
him.
This was the beginning of the West/Bryant recordings that resulted
in making their style very well known and recognisable, not only
on the west coast, but internationally as well.
|
|
6,000
RECORDING SESSIONS
Between 1950 and 1955, Speedy (with and without Bryant) played on over
6,000 recordings with a total of 177 different artists.
Artists include Frankie Laine, Jo Stafford, and Paul Weston's Orchestra,
Billy May's Orchestra, Betty Hutton, Helen O'Connell, Doris Day, Johnnie
Ray, Ella Mae Morse, Spike Jones, Jean Shepard, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra
and many others.
Mitch Miller, A&R man for Columbia Records, was so impressed by Speedy's
playing on Frankie Laine's 1951 recording of "Hey Good Lookin"
that he paid him double on that session as well as future sessions.
BOBBY
BARE
In the mid-1950's
Speedy helped Bobby Bare get started in show business. He first met him
following Bobby's trip to L.A. via hitchhiking and riding rail cars.
Bobby presented himself as a songwriter when he came to KXLA radio station.
He asked Speedy to listen to some songs he had written.
They both went to Studio B at the station where Bobby sang several songs.
Speedy told him he should record them himself.
Bobby stayed with Speedy for several weeks during which time they went
to Bakersfield to record some demo dubs.
Speedy started promoting them to various record companies. As a result
Ken Nelson at Capitol Records signed him up as an artist.
Bobby then recorded four songs with Speedy's band on Capitol.
WESTERN
MOVIES
In the early
1950's, Speedy appeared in three Western movies, while still working the
daily Hometown show at KXLA and the Saturday night show and dance.
During this time he continued to work on recording sessions.
He also landed a guest spot on Red Foley's ABC-TV show, "Ozark Jubilee",
from Springfield and a TV show hosted by bandleader Bob Crosby.
He enjoyed another guest spot on Lawrence Welk's very popular ABC-TV and
Dinah Shore's NBC Chevrolet Shows.
FLAMING
GUITARS
Speedy West and Jimmy Bryant first met when playing in different bars
on the same street in 1947.
Cliffie Stone put them together on his "Hometown Jamboree" radio
and TV programs for 11 years.
Stone also recommended West and Bryant to Capitol where they recorded
together until splitting in 1958.
Among albums were "Two Guitars Country Style" in 1954
and "West of Hawaii" four years later.
Speedy and Jimmy's final recording session for Capitol, as a team, was
October 9, 1956.
But Speedy's contract with Capitol was renewed and he continued to record
solo until 1962.
West and Bryant, known as the Flaming Guitars, played on Los Angeles sessions
for many artists country and non-country as well as recording five albums
on their own.
Their sound was a healthy hybrid of Texas swing and jazz.
Bryant died in 1980 at 55.
A year later, West suffered a stroke, curtailing his performances.
LORETTA
LYNN DEBUT
Back in the
spring of 1960, Speedy was asked to report to a small studio in L.A. where
an unknown singer from Washington and her husband were to arrive to record.
|
The
singer turned out to be Loretta Lynn and husband, Mooney.
Impressed with her voice, Speedy suggested that they release the musicians
in the studio and hire some capable studio pickers and rent a better
studio.
He rounded up some of the Hometown people he had recorded with for
years, such as Roy Lanham, Harold Hensley, Roy Harte and Billy Liebert.
Speedy also suggested that Loretta overdub harmonies on her original
song, Honky Tonk Girl, an idea that he borrowed from Patti Page. |
SPEEDY
DOWN UNDER
In 1963,
the famed Queensland born LeGarde Twins, latter day Nashville residents,
invited Speedy to Australia.
While here for 44 days Speedy performed on country TV shows, concerts
and radio stations.
Although not able to play anymore because of a stroke in 1981, Speedy
attended various events promoting the steel guitar, such as the annual
Steel Guitar conventions in St. Louis, Dallas and Tulsa.
top
/ back to diary
|