- Sammy Masters
Sammy Masters (born
July 18 1930 ,Sasakawa ,Oklahoma ) is an Americanrockabilly musician .Career
Masters showed skill in music from an early age. At age 12 he debuted on the
radio station KTUL inTulsa withBob Wills . When he was 16 his family moved toCalifornia , and Masters began playing in country groups in the Los Angeles area alongsideSpade Cooley andOle Rasmussen . He recorded his first solo single, "Lost Little Nickel in the Big Juke Box" onCormac Records in 1950, and followed it with "Crazy River". After these were released Masters served in theKorean War in the Army, where he often performed for fellow soldiers.In 1954, he returned to California and signed with 4-Star Publishing as a
songwriter anddemo tape recorder.Patsy Cline recorded his "Turn the Cards Slowly" for a minor hit. Interested in furthering his chances at a successful career in rockabilly, Masters recorded "Pink Cadillac" and "Whop-T-Bop" with guitaristJimmy Bryant and released them on 4-Star in 1956, but neither sold well. Follow-ups "Angel" and "Jodie" were no more successful, even after Masters's touring schedule andtelevision appearances on "The Jack Benny Show " and "Town Hall Party ". His contract with 4-star ended in 1957, and he wrote for "American Music " for a few years before signing with Lode Records in 1960. Lode issued "Rockin' Red Wing" that year, which became a regional hit in Los Angeles and was picked up byWarner Bros. Records for national distributions. It eventually reached #64 on theBillboard Hot 100 . His next single, "Golden Slippers", was released nationally byDot Records , but it was not a success, and neither was "Pierre the Poodle", his last release before losing hisrecording contract .He became friends with
Willie Nelson in 1961, and his song "Who Can I Count On?" became the B-side to Nelson's "Crazy", a multplatinum smash forPatsy Cline . In the wake of "Crazy"'s success, singers such asBobby Darin andWayne Newton covered "Who Can I Count On?". That same year Masters founded his own label, Galahad Records, which was not avanity label , though Masters did release analbum , "May the Good Lord Bless You and Keep You", in 1964, as well as a few singles, on the label. He co-hosted a television program onKCOP withJohnny Horton in the 1960s and 1970s, and increasingly found work in TV production in the following decades.In 1997, Masters signed with
Dionysus Records and released "Everybody Digs Sammy Masters" withDeke Dickerson andRay Campi , hoping to make a comeback on the rockabilly revival scene in Europe andJapan . He toured in both areas at the end of the decade.ingles
* Version of "Pink Cadillac" with additional drumsReferences
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:knfixq8hldae~T1 Sammy Masters] at
Allmusic
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