Arthur Smith

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Guitar Boogie 03:24 Tools
Just Joshing 00:00 Tools
Goober Peas 00:00 Tools
Dueling Banjos 00:00 Tools
Guitar Bustin' 00:00 Tools
Cannonball Blues 00:00 Tools
Hell Among The Yearlings 00:00 Tools
Feudin' Banjos 00:00 Tools
12th Street Rag 00:00 Tools
The Sheik of Araby 00:00 Tools
Deuling Banjos 00:00 Tools
Boomerang 00:00 Tools
Conversation With A Mule 00:00 Tools
Duelling Banjos 00:00 Tools
Hot Rod Race 00:00 Tools
South 02:51 Tools
Dixie 00:00 Tools
Twelfth Street Rag 00:00 Tools
Blue Boogie 00:00 Tools
Guitar Jump 00:00 Tools
Stompin' At the Savoy 00:00 Tools
Indian Boogie 00:00 Tools
Deliverance: Duelo de Banjos 00:00 Tools
Dance All Night 00:00 Tools
Fingers On Fire 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie 00:00 Tools
Remington Ride 00:00 Tools
Teen-Age Rebel 00:00 Tools
Silver Bells 00:00 Tools
Seventh Street Boogie 00:00 Tools
In The Pines 00:00 Tools
Guitar Boogie (Smith) 00:00 Tools
The Golden Vanity 00:00 Tools
Riffin' 00:00 Tools
Stuff and Such 00:00 Tools
I'm Bound To Ride 00:00 Tools
String Menagerie 00:00 Tools
Rainbow 00:00 Tools
Banjo Rag 00:00 Tools
Mandolin Boogie 00:00 Tools
Banjo Boogie 00:00 Tools
Battling Banjos Polka 00:00 Tools
Pennsylvania Polka 00:00 Tools
Bye & Bye 00:00 Tools
Shortnin' Bread 00:00 Tools
Yakety Sax 00:00 Tools
Duelin' Banjos 00:00 Tools
The Darktown Strutters' Ball 00:00 Tools
More Guitar Boogie 00:00 Tools
Drifting and Dreaming 00:00 Tools
Jimmie Brown The Newsboy 00:00 Tools
Guitar Artistry 00:00 Tools
Banjo Buster 00:00 Tools
Who Shot Willie? 00:00 Tools
Arthur Smith Sings Leonard Cohen 00:00 Tools
Down In Dixie 00:00 Tools
Who Shot Willie 00:00 Tools
Cady Hill 00:00 Tools
Mocking Bird 00:00 Tools
Little Footprints In The Snow 00:00 Tools
The Darktown Strutter's Ball 00:00 Tools
After You've Gone 00:00 Tools
Rock and Rye Polka 00:00 Tools
Paris Waltz 00:00 Tools
Chicken 00:00 Tools
Mountain Be Bop 00:00 Tools
Mr. Stalin, You're Eating Too High on the Hog 00:00 Tools
Dueling Banjos - From "Deliverance" 00:00 Tools
Indian Creek 00:00 Tools
Introduction 00:00 Tools
I'm Afraid Of Wimmin' 00:00 Tools
Dickson County Blues 00:00 Tools
Be Bop Rag 00:00 Tools
I.H. Boogie 00:00 Tools
Mr Stalin 00:00 Tools
Mr. Stalin 00:00 Tools
Five String Banjo Boogie 00:00 Tools
Guitar And Piano Boogie 00:00 Tools
Wildwood Flower 00:00 Tools
Peacock Rag 00:00 Tools
Country Boogie (0'Clock Jump) 00:00 Tools
I'm Only Telling You (What They Told Me) 00:00 Tools
Guitar Jamboree 00:00 Tools
teenage rebel 00:00 Tools
Over the Rainbow - From "Wizard of Oz" 00:00 Tools
Guitar Boogie (1945) 00:00 Tools
Memphis Five String 00:00 Tools
Don't Look For Trouble 00:00 Tools
The Old Chisholm Trail 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack 00:00 Tools
Heartaches 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie - Instrumental 00:00 Tools
Blue Moon Waltz 00:00 Tools
Pretty Little Red Wing 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossom Special 00:00 Tools
Adieu false heart 00:00 Tools
Redeliverance (Blackberry Rag) 00:00 Tools
Country Boogie (o'Clock Jump) 00:00 Tools
Express Train Boogie 00:00 Tools
The Double Eagle 00:00 Tools
Pickin' The Blues 00:00 Tools
Golden Vanity 00:00 Tools
Follow Me Boogie - Instrumental 00:00 Tools
No O'Clock Jump 00:00 Tools
Tulsa Hop 00:00 Tools
Dixieliner's Ramble 00:00 Tools
North Carolina Brakedown 00:00 Tools
Napoleon's Retreat 00:00 Tools
Cumberland Waltz 00:00 Tools
Follow Me Boogie (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Little Widow 00:00 Tools
Straw Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Have A Little Fun 00:00 Tools
Chicken Strut 00:00 Tools
Bonapart's Retreat 00:00 Tools
Little Darling 00:00 Tools
Just Lookin' 00:00 Tools
12th Street Rag - Instrumental 00:00 Tools
Cracker Boogie 00:00 Tools
Wildflower Guitar 00:00 Tools
Gypsy's Warning 00:00 Tools
Fiddler's Blues 00:00 Tools
Battling Banjo Polka 00:00 Tools
Black Mountain Rag 00:00 Tools
Louise 00:00 Tools
Whistler's Fever 00:00 Tools
Darling Honey 00:00 Tools
Careless Hands 00:00 Tools
Going to Town 00:00 Tools
Rubber Doll Rag 00:00 Tools
Little Rock Getaway 00:00 Tools
Red Apple Rag 00:00 Tools
K C Stomp 00:00 Tools
Ringing Banjos 00:00 Tools
Just Joshin' 00:00 Tools
Foggy Mountain Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Maple Leaf Waltz 00:00 Tools
Dime A Dozen 00:00 Tools
The Memphis Blues 00:00 Tools
Glow worm 00:00 Tools
Cheatham County Breakdown 00:00 Tools
Take Me Back to Tennessee 00:00 Tools
Georgia Camp Meeting 00:00 Tools
The Shiek Of Arabia 00:00 Tools
Cubanola Glide 00:00 Tools
Fools of Forty-Nine 00:00 Tools
Chew Tobacco Rag 00:00 Tools
Cheatham County Hoedown 00:00 Tools
River Rag 00:00 Tools
Hi-Lo Boogie 00:00 Tools
Lady Of Spain 00:00 Tools
One O'clock Jump 00:00 Tools
I've Had a Big Time Today 00:00 Tools
Nine String Boogie 00:00 Tools
Smith's Rag 00:00 Tools
It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels 00:00 Tools
He Went That-A-Way 00:00 Tools
Dickson County Blues No 2 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Hesitating Blues 00:00 Tools
Down Yonder 00:00 Tools
Hard Boiled Boogie 00:00 Tools
Hello Dolly - From "Hello Dolly" 00:00 Tools
Mule Train 00:00 Tools
Florida Blues 00:00 Tools
Guitar Boogie Shuffle 02:55 Tools
Weary Weary World 00:00 Tools
Three D Boogie 00:00 Tools
Fence Jumper 00:00 Tools
Sioux City Sue 00:00 Tools
Grandfather's Clock 00:00 Tools
Hi Lo Boogie 00:00 Tools
Pickin' And Playin' (Ragged But Right) 00:00 Tools
First Star 00:00 Tools
buzz-saw 00:00 Tools
12th Street Rag (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Express Boogie 00:00 Tools
Arthur Smith - Guitar Boogie 00:00 Tools
June 6 00:00 Tools
Over The Rainbow 00:00 Tools
Flat Top Hari Kari 00:00 Tools
The Sheikh Of Araby 00:00 Tools
Ragtime Annie (instr.) 00:00 Tools
My Name Is Daphne Fairfax: A Memoir 00:00 Tools
Panhandle Rag 00:00 Tools
Three-Way Boogie 00:00 Tools
Guitar Polka 00:00 Tools
The Sailor and His Truelove 00:00 Tools
Guitar And Piano Boggie 00:00 Tools
My Name is Daphne Fairfax 00:00 Tools
Banjo Buster - Bonus Track 00:00 Tools
Twelve String Rag 00:00 Tools
After You're Gone 00:00 Tools
Listen To The Mocking Bird 00:00 Tools
Philadelphia Guitar 00:00 Tools
Maggie Blues On Guitar 00:00 Tools
Guitar Hop 00:00 Tools
In the Good Old Summertime 00:00 Tools
Darktown Strutter's Ball 00:00 Tools
No Directories Anymore 00:00 Tools
Guitar Hop 00:00 Tools
In the Good Old Summertime 00:00 Tools
May 16 00:00 Tools
Blackberry Blossom 00:00 Tools
February 4 00:00 Tools
February 28 00:00 Tools
No Parking 00:00 Tools
Women Think It's OK 00:00 Tools
April 7 00:00 Tools
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There are more artists with this name; #1 Fiddlin' Arthur Smith (April 10, 1898 - February 28, 1971) was an American old time fiddler and a big influence on the old time and bluegrass music genres. #2 Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith (April 1, 1921 - April 3, 2014) was an American country music instrumental composer, guitarist, fiddler, and banjo player who had a major hit with the instrumental "Guitar Boogie". The song earned him the moniker Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith (to differentiate him from Tennessee fiddler and 1930s Grand Ole Opry star Fiddlin' Arthur Smith). Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith composed the banjo instrumental "Feudin' Banjos". #1 Fiddlin' Arthur Smith was born and raised on a farm near Bold Springs, Tennessee. He learned to play the fiddle at an early age, his first influence being the fiddlers Grady Stringer and Walter Warden. He married in 1914 at the age of sixteen. Initially he began performing at local dances and fiddlers' conventions. He teamed up with his wife Nettie, his cousin Homer Smith and fiddler Floyd Ethredge. In 1921, Smith began working as a logger and a linesman for a railroad company in Dickson, Tennessee. In his work he had to make extensive travels and that enabled him to meet other musicians along the way. He attended several fiddle contests across Tennessee winning the bulk of them. Smith made his solo debut as a fiddler on the Grand Ole Opry on December 23, 1927. He was made a member of The Opry in the 1920s. Within weeks he was accompanied by his cousin Homer Smith. In the meantime, Fiddlin' Arthur Smith continued to work on the railroad. In the 1930s, Smith formed "The Dixieliners" together with the McGee Brothers and his daughter Lavonne who played the piano. They became a regular act on the Opry in May 1932 performing popular songs such as Walking In My Sleep, Pig In the Pen and Blackberry Blossom. The Dixieliners toured the countryside featuring Uncle Dave Macon and the Delmore Brothers on some of these tours. In January 1935, Smith made his first recordings with the Delmore Brothers on the Bluebird label. In 1936, Smith began to sing on his recordings on songs such as, Chittlin' Cookin' Time in Cheatham County, There's More Pretty Girls Than One and his signature song Beautiful Brown Eyes. That particular song, recorded in August 1937, led Smith to take action in court against some cover artists who had recorded the song as if it was in the public domain. He ended up winning the suit. Because of the hard work it took to maintain two full-time jobs, on the railroad and as a professional musician, Smith fell into hard drinking. In February 1938, it led to a temporary three-month suspension from the Opry. With assistance from Roy Acuff, Smith returned to the music circuit. In 1938, Smith's first recordings as "Arthur Smith & His Dixieliners" appeared on Bluebird,[2] a band name he would again and again revisit, into the 1960s. In 1939, Smith joined the "Tennessee Valley Boys", consisting of Howdy Forrester and Georgia Slim Rutland. The following year, he left to join the "Shelton Brothers" in Shreveport, Louisiana. Once again, he left and instead formed a new group, "The Band of Arthurs", in Decatur, Alabama with his daughter Lavonne and some other musicians all named Arthur. In the early 1940s, Smith joined the "Bailes Brothers," and published two songbooks, Songs From the Hills of Tennessee and Arthur Smith's Original Song Folio no.1. In the following years, he performed with artists like Rex Griffin and Jimmy Wakely. This led to an invitation from Hollywood in 1944 to appear in some low budget westerns. His film career ended in 1948. Smith signed with Capitol Records, but to avoid confusion with the newcomer Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith, Fiddlin' Arthur Smith's recordings were released under the name of "The Original Arthur Smith and His Dixieliners". After a brief stint with Billy Walker, Smith retired, and briefly worked as a carpenter in Nashville. Roy Acuff performed and recorded Smith's song, Beautiful, Brown Eyes. This led to several cover artists recording the song believing it was in the public domain, and Smith had to sue them in court. He eventually won the suit and received a lump sum. Smith made a come-back and joined up with Merle Travis. In 1957, Mike Seeger arranged a recording session with Smith and the McGee Brothers held in Kirk McGee's living room. Eight years later, the recordings were released on an album resulting in great approval from old time music fans. In 1965, Smith and the McGee Brothers appeared at the Newport Folk Festival. He made his last appearance in 1969 with Sleepy Marlin and Tommy Riggs. Smith died in 1971 and was buried near McEwen, Tennessee. #2 Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith born in Clinton, South Carolina, was a textile mill worker who became a celebrated and respected country music instrumental composer, guitarist, fiddler, and banjo player who had a major hit with the instrumental "Guitar Boogie". The song earned him the moniker Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith (to differentiate him from Tennessee fiddler and 1930s Grand Ole Opry star Fiddlin' Arthur Smith) and was recorded by numerous others including Tommy Emmanuel. Renamed "Guitar Boogie Shuffle", it became a rock and roll hit by Frank Virtue and the Virtues. Virtue served in the Navy with Smith and counted him as a major influence. Other musicians who have been influenced by Smith include Nashville studio ace Hank "Sugarfoot" Garland, Roy Clark, Glen Campbell and surf music pioneers the Ventures. Smith was the son of Clayton Seymour Smith, a textile worker and music teacher who also led the town band in Kershaw, South Carolina; Smith's first instrument was the cornet. Arthur Smith, along with his brothers Ralph and Sonny formed a Dixieland combo, the Carolina Crackerjacks, who appeared briefly on radio in Spartanburg, South Carolina; they had limited success with their jazz format, and became a more popular country music group before Arthur moved to Charlotte, North Carolina to join the cast of the WBT Carolina Barndance live show and radio program. Before World War II, he was an occasional member of the WBT Briarhoppers band. After wartime service in the US Navy, Smith returned to Charlotte; joined by his brothers, his wife Dorothy and vocalist Roy Lear, he continued his recording career and started his own radio show Carolina Calling on WBT. Smith emceed part of the first live television program broadcast in 1951 by the new television station, WBTV, in Charlotte. The Arthur Smith Show was also the first country music television show to be syndicated nationally, and ran for 32 years in 90 markets coast to coast. The band, now renamed Arthur Smith & His Crackerjacks, became an institution in the Southeast area through the new medium; their daily early-morning program, Carolina Calling, was carried on the CBS-TV network as a summer-replacement during the 1950s, increasing Smith's national visibility. The band was unusual for a country music band in that it relied on tight arrangements with written "charts" for most of their music. In 1955, Smith composed a banjo instrumental he called "Feudin' Banjos" and recorded the song with five-string banjo player Don Reno. Later the composition appeared in the popular 1972 film Deliverance as "Dueling Banjos" played by Eric Weissberg and Steve Mandel. Not given credit, Smith had to proceed with legal action that eventually gave him songwriting credit and back royalties. It was a landmark copyright infringement suit. As a composer, Smith has nearly 500 copyrights. Among his copyrights, Smith has over 100 active inspirational and/or gospel music compositions including million sellers "The Fourth Man" and "I Saw A Man". In total, his compositions have been recorded numerous times by artists including Chet Atkins, Glen Campbell, Johnny Cash, the Statesmen Quartet, the Cathedrals, Al Hirt, Barbara Mandrell, Willie Nelson, the Gatlin Brothers, Oak Ridge Boys, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty, Boots Randolph, George Beverly Shea,[2] the Stamps, the Statler Brothers, Ricky Van Shelton and many more. A portion of his Crackerjacks group sang and recorded gospel music under the moniker The Crossroads Quartet. Among the members throughout the years were Smith, Tommy Faile, Ray Atkins, Lois Atkins, brother Ralph Smith, and Wayne Haas. Smith built and managed the first commercial recording studio in the Southeast in Charlotte; in addition to recording Smith, the Crackerjacks and its various members, such as vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Tommy Faile, it produced sides from many other acts, including rhythm and blues star James Brown, whose "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" was cut in Smith's studio. In this facility, Smith also created and produced nationally syndicated radio programs hosted by Johnny Cash, Chet Atkins, Richard Petty, James Brown, and George Beverly Shea. Billy Graham's Hour of Decision radio program was first produced in Smith's studio. Smith also produced and hosted his own radio program, Top of the Morning, which was syndicated for an unbroken span of 29 years. In the 1970s, Smith produced a weekly, 30-minute videotaped program syndicated in more than 90 TV markets at its peak. He produced radio and television shows for a number of other artists, including Johnny Cash, and gospel singer George Beverly Shea. The Crackerjacks band employed a number of noted country musicians at various times, including Don Reno, fiddler Jim Buchanan (later with Jim & Jesse's Virginia Boys, Mel Tillis), banjoists David Deese, Carl Hunt and Jeff Whittington, resonator guitarist Ray Atkins (Johnny & Jack, Carl Story) and country singer George Hamilton IV. Other regular cast members included Wayne Haas, Maggie Griffin, Don Ange, and Jackie Schuler, along with Ralph Smith and Tommy Faile. As of fall 2006, Smith was retired; his extensive publishing interests, production company, and management business are managed by his son, Clay Smith. The younger Smith, a noted recording artist, ran Johnny Cash's businesses in the late 1970s and returned to the family business in 1982. His albums include Clay Smith - Smith & Son; Clay Smith & Arthur Smith – Guitars Galore; Clay Smith Decoupage; Clay Smith – Follow the River. Clay Smith is also an award-winning network television producer and record producer following in Arthur Smith's footsteps. Arthur and Clay Smith have collaborated on 12 major motion picture soundtracks including Black Sunday[disambiguation needed], Death Driver and Living Legend. The father-son team received the Grand Prize-First Place Award for Original Music in the International Real Life Adventure Film Festival in Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy. He died at his home on April 3, 2014. Smith's career includes the following awards: BMI Song of the Year Award 1973; Grammy - Dueling Banjos (1973) (original writer); Council on International Nontheatrical Events - Golden Eagle Award (1980); The Gold Squirrel Award (Grand Prize – First Prize) Festival International Film & Adventura, Cortina D’Ampezzo, Italy (1981); International Real Life Adventure Film Festival, 1st Place Award (1981); State of North Carolina Order of The Long Leaf Pine (1984); Southeast Tourism Society Award (1985); American Advertising Federation Silver Medal Award (1986); Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI) Special Citation of Achievement (over 1 million broadcast performances of original compositions); The Broadcasters Hall of Fame – North Carolina Association of Broadcasters (1990); South Carolina Broadcasters Association (2006); South Carolina Hall of Fame (1998); North Carolina Folk Heritage Award (1998); North Carolina Award (2001); Legends Award – Western Film Festival 2003; Lifetime Achievement Award - South Carolina Broadcasters Association (2006); BMI Legendary Songwriter Award (2006). Smith was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2010. #3 Arthur Smith is a British stand-up comedian, writer and performer. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.