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Live Fast, Love Hard

The Faron Young Story

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

As one of the best-known honky tonkers to appear in the wake of Hank Williams's death, Faron Young was a popular presence on Nashville's music scene for more than four decades. The Singing Sheriff produced a string of Top Ten hits, placed over eighty songs on the country music charts, and founded the long-running country music periodical Music City News in 1963. Flamboyant, impulsive, and generous, he helped and encouraged a new generation of talented songwriter-performers that included Willie Nelson and Bill Anderson. In 2000, four years after his untimely death, Faron was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Presenting the first detailed portrayal of this lively and unpredictable country music star, Diane Diekman masterfully draws on extensive interviews with Young's family, band members, and colleagues. Impeccably researched, Diekman's narrative also weaves anecdotes from Louisiana Hayride and other old radio shows with ones from Young's business associates, including Ralph Emery. Her unique insider's look into Young's career adds to an understanding of the burgeoning country music entertainment industry during the key years from 1950 to 1980, when the music expanded beyond its original rural roots and blossomed into a national (ultimately, international) enterprise. Echoing Young's characteristic ability to entertain and surprise fans, Diekman combines an account of his public career with a revealing, intimate portrait of his personal life.

| Contents ®FL¯ Preface 1. Faron Young—A Study in Contrasts 2. A Shreveport Beginning 3. On To Nashville 4. ®MDUL¯Goin' Steady®MDNM¯—And into the Army 5. The Young Sheriff—Living Fast and Loving Hard 6. Country Music on Life Support 7. Legends in the Making 8. ®MDUL¯Hello Walls,®MDNM¯ Goodbye Capitol Records 9. Family Matters 10. Wings and Wheels 11. ®MDUL¯Music City News®MDNM¯ 12. Making Music in the 1960s 13. Faron and Friends 14. Business on Music Row 15. A Drunk, Not an Alcoholic 16. From Severed Tongue to Number One 17. "This Little Girl of Mine" 18. The Sheriff and His Deputies 19. There He Was in Tulsa 20. Giving Hilda a Break 21. After the Top Tens 22. D-I-V-O-R-C-E 23. Closing out a Career 24. Last Call Epilogue Acknowledgments Appendix: Timeline of Country Deputies Notes Index |

"Diekman has done such a thorough job that there is unlikely ever to be another Faron Young biography to compete with it. She has uncovered a great deal of information that will be news to even Faron Young's most passionate fans and friends."—Paul Kingsbury, editor of The Encyclopedia of Country Music and Will the Circle Be Unbroken: Country Music in America


"I've never read a book on someone in the music business that inspired so many different feelings—laughter, sadness, pity, and even crying!" —Glenn Sutton, member of Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame


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Diane Diekman is the author of Navy Greenshirt: A Leader Made, Not Born and A Farm in the Hidewood: My South Dakota Home. A retired U.S. Navy captain, she was acquainted with Faron Young for the 26 years before his death in 1996.

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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2007
      Faron Young (193296) was an important force as a country music recording artist and concert performer from the 1950s to the 1990s and the founder of the periodical "Music City News". By the time of his suicide, however, Young's career was on the wane and his chart success largely forgotten. An acquaintance of Young's from 1970 to 1996, Diekman ("Navy Greenshirt; A Farm in the Hidewood") tells more than the story of Young's musical careershe also covers his notoriety as a heavy drinker, womanizer, and verbally abusive bandleader. According to Diekman, Young's career and musical style were interwoven with the challenges country music faced, including the decline of the industry during the onslaught of rock 'n' roll and the battles over the mergers of country and pop music in the 1960s and 1970s. Incorporating published accounts, interviews, and personal insights, this balanced book is important in keeping the memory of a chart-topping country artist alive and in putting the country music scene of the period into perspective. Recommended for all public libraries, especially those with significant country music and pop culture collections.James E. Perone, Mount Union Coll., Alliance, OH

      Copyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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