- Jimmy Swan
Jimmy Swan (Nov. 18, 1912 - 1995) was an American
country music ian.Swan came from a rural
Alabama farming family; his father abandoned the family when Swan was very young, and he was brought up in Birmingham. His mother died in the late 1920s, and he was destitute for most of his teenage years. At age 15, he won a talent show at an Alabama radio station, but didn't make anything of it at first. He married at age 17 and quickly had several children, and was unable to put together a band until the beginning of the 1940s. In 1944 he metHank Locklin , and occasionally hadHank Williams play with him.He moved to
Hattiesburg, Mississippi and worked in local radio as well as thehonky tonk circuit. Disappointed with the drunken, violent lifestyle of honky tonk bars, he quit music to become adisc jockey in 1948, returning only in 1952 after an offer fromTrumpet Records . Swan saw success with "I Had a Dream" and "The Last Letter", the latter a tribute to Hank Williams, who had died in 1953. He signed withMGM Records and was groomed to be a successor act to Hank Williams, but he chafed at the more pop-oriented music the label wanted him to record in favor of a morehillbilly music sound. One of Swan's biggest nationwide hits was his single "Good and Lonesome" written by Bobby Enlow a guitarist from Foxworth, Mississippi and one of Swan's band members. He recorded into the 1960s but quickly fell from national view.In Swan's later life, he retired from music completely and went into
politics , running forsheriff of Hattiesburg and then running forgovernor of Mississippi in 1966, which he lost.Swan's first issue on CD was with
Bear Family Records in 1993.Discography
References
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:kifuxq9hldhe~T1 Jimmy Swan] at
Allmusic
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