Charlie McCoy

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Orange Blossom Special 02:50 Tools
Last Time Blues 00:00 Tools
I Really Don't Want To Know 00:00 Tools
Baltimore Blues 00:00 Tools
Today I Started Loving You Again 02:34 Tools
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry 02:33 Tools
Motherless And Fatherless Blues 00:00 Tools
Keep It Clean 00:00 Tools
Shenandoah 02:59 Tools
After Hours 00:00 Tools
Cherry Berry Wine 00:00 Tools
Lovesick Blues 02:18 Tools
A Tribute To Little Walter 02:44 Tools
On The Road Again 00:00 Tools
Wabash Cannonball 00:00 Tools
Crazy 00:00 Tools
Blues Stay Away From Me 00:00 Tools
Wayfaring Stranger 00:00 Tools
St. Louis Blues 00:00 Tools
(I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle 00:00 Tools
Release Me 00:00 Tools
Candy Man Blues 00:00 Tools
John Henry 00:00 Tools
Silver threads and golden needles 00:00 Tools
Precious Memories 00:00 Tools
I Can't Help It If I'm Still In Love with You 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Waltz 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good - Part I 00:00 Tools
Walkin' After Midnight 00:00 Tools
Working Man's Blues 00:00 Tools
Basin Street Blues 00:00 Tools
Columbus Stockade Blues 00:00 Tools
Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue 00:00 Tools
Night Life 00:00 Tools
Boogie Woogie 00:00 Tools
Will The Circle Be Unbroken 00:00 Tools
It's Hot Like That 00:00 Tools
12 - Keep It Clean 00:00 Tools
How Great Thou Art 00:00 Tools
Motherless Blues 00:00 Tools
Just A Closer Walk With Thee 00:00 Tools
Amazing Grace 00:00 Tools
Charity Blues 00:00 Tools
Here Comes My Baby Back Again 00:00 Tools
You Needed Me 00:00 Tools
Six Days on the Road 00:00 Tools
Blue Heaven Blues 00:00 Tools
Cherry Berrywine 00:00 Tools
Scotland 00:00 Tools
You Gonna Need Me 00:00 Tools
I've Been Blue Ever Since You Went Away 00:00 Tools
Love Lifted Me 00:00 Tools
Unclouded Day 00:00 Tools
That Lonesome Train Took My Baby Away 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel No. 1(T For Texas) 02:38 Tools
Always In Love With You 00:00 Tools
I Saw The Light 00:00 Tools
It Is Well With My Soul 00:00 Tools
Softly And Tenderly 00:00 Tools
Whispering Hope 00:00 Tools
Cold Cold Heart 00:00 Tools
In The Sweet By And By 00:00 Tools
San Antonio Rose 00:00 Tools
Lookin' For Love 00:00 Tools
Whiskey Before Breakfast 00:00 Tools
Sweet Hour Of Prayer 00:00 Tools
The Real McCoy 00:00 Tools
Easy Lovin 00:00 Tools
I Believe 00:00 Tools
Woman Sensuous Woman 00:00 Tools
Times Ain't What They Used To Be 00:00 Tools
Wayfaring Stranger (feat. Lulu Roman) 00:00 Tools
Only Daddy That'll Walk The Line 00:00 Tools
Today I Started Lovin' You Again 00:00 Tools
Peace In the Valley 00:00 Tools
Your Valves Need Grinding 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good - Part II 00:00 Tools
What A Friend We Have In Jesus 00:00 Tools
Too Long 00:00 Tools
You Were Always On My Mind 00:00 Tools
Jackson 00:00 Tools
The Northern Starvers Are Returning Home 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossom Special - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
How Can I Unlove You 00:00 Tools
One O'clock Jump 00:00 Tools
Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again) 00:00 Tools
Cotton Eyed Joe Harmonica 00:00 Tools
Georgia On My Mind 00:00 Tools
Help Me Make It Through The Night 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossom Special (New Version) 00:00 Tools
The Old Rugged Cross 00:00 Tools
I Heard That Lonesome Whistle Blow 00:00 Tools
Blue Bayou 00:00 Tools
Southern Comfort 00:00 Tools
Me And Bobby Mcgee 00:00 Tools
Hangin' On 00:00 Tools
Barefootin' 00:00 Tools
It Is So Good - Part 1 00:00 Tools
Rooster Blues 00:00 Tools
Mississippi I'm Longing For You 00:00 Tools
Glad Hand Blues 00:00 Tools
Harmonica Jones 00:00 Tools
Delta Dawn 00:00 Tools
Staggering Blues 00:00 Tools
I Can't Stop Loving You 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel No.1 (T For Texas) 00:00 Tools
Fate Of Chris Lively And Wife 00:00 Tools
Take The New River 00:00 Tools
Take Me Home Country Roads 00:00 Tools
Rocky Top 00:00 Tools
East Time Blues 00:00 Tools
Introduction 00:00 Tools
You Don't Know Me 00:00 Tools
Choo Choo Ch' Boogie 00:00 Tools
Today I Started Love Again 00:00 Tools
You Win Again 00:00 Tools
I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You) 00:00 Tools
I Love To Tell the Story 00:00 Tools
Country Road 00:00 Tools
Christmas Cheer 00:00 Tools
It Is So Good - Part 2 00:00 Tools
I Started Loving You Again 00:00 Tools
Grade A 00:00 Tools
For Jim 00:00 Tools
Lord's Prayer/ If There Were Only Time For Love 00:00 Tools
Easy Loving 00:00 Tools
Lark In The Morning 00:00 Tools
I Heard It Throught The Grapevine 00:00 Tools
I'll Fly Away (feat. The Jordanaires) 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Blues 00:00 Tools
Evil Devil Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Swamp Thing 00:00 Tools
Texas (When I Die) 00:00 Tools
The funky duck 00:00 Tools
Angels We Have Heard On High 00:00 Tools
foggy river harmonica 00:00 Tools
Honky Tonk Attitude 00:00 Tools
The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face 00:00 Tools
Stand By Me 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossom Special.MP4 00:00 Tools
Blue Yodel N°1 00:00 Tools
Woman, Sensuous Woman 00:00 Tools
Don't Worry 'Bout Nothin' (feat. The Music City Tonight Singers) 00:00 Tools
Rock my World Little Country Girl 00:00 Tools
I Really Don't Want To Know (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Sugarfoot Rag 00:00 Tools
School Girl Blues 00:00 Tools
Midnight Flyer 00:00 Tools
Danny Boy 00:00 Tools
Smooth Sailing 00:00 Tools
To Get To You 00:00 Tools
Shenandoha 00:00 Tools
Long Gone Lonesome Blues 00:00 Tools
I'm So XLonesome I Could Cry 00:00 Tools
Rollin' in My Sweet Baby's Arms 00:00 Tools
Fingertips 00:00 Tools
Little Maggie 00:00 Tools
Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues 00:00 Tools
Alten Moor 00:00 Tools
In the Garden (feat. Laney Hicks) 00:00 Tools
From a Distance 00:00 Tools
No One Will Ever Know 00:00 Tools
My Special Angel 00:00 Tools
Cripple Creek 00:00 Tools
The Water Is Wide 00:00 Tools
Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms - Live Olympia 1975 00:00 Tools
Ha-Ha Blues 00:00 Tools
Mind Your Own Business (With Ricky Scraggs & Roy Clark) 00:00 Tools
Katy Hill 00:00 Tools
Silver Wings 00:00 Tools
Irish Jig Medley: Kesh Jig / Tripping Up the Stairs / Morrison's Jig 00:00 Tools
Your Cheatin' Heart (Featuring Jet Williams) 00:00 Tools
Sailor's Jig 00:00 Tools
Silver Treads And Golden Needles 00:00 Tools
Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms - (L.Flatt) 00:00 Tools
The Way You Do The Things You Do 00:00 Tools
The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year 00:00 Tools
Under the Boardwalk 00:00 Tools
Jambalaya (On The Bayou) With Jet Williams 00:00 Tools
You Belong to Me 00:00 Tools
Cry Me A River 00:00 Tools
How Insensitive [Denis Solee, Tenor Sax] 00:00 Tools
Just the Way You Are 00:00 Tools
Sunset Waltz 00:00 Tools
The Nearness of You 00:00 Tools
On The Road Again - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
I Told You So (feat. Roddy Smith) 00:00 Tools
Rainy Night in Georgia 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good - Pt.1 00:00 Tools
Fireball Mail 00:00 Tools
The Hank Williams Song 00:00 Tools
Kdo to obchazi muj dum ( Who's Knockin' at My Door) 00:00 Tools
Rollin' My Sweet Baby' Arms 00:00 Tools
Yesterday 00:00 Tools
Choo Choo Boogie 00:00 Tools
Boogie Woogie (Also Known As T.D.'s Boogie Woogie) 00:00 Tools
She Knows How To Treat Me Right 00:00 Tools
Birdland 00:00 Tools
Invitation To The Blues 00:00 Tools
A Little Bit of Soap 00:00 Tools
Fannie Mae 00:00 Tools
Victoria's Dream 00:00 Tools
Chatanooga Choo Choo 00:00 Tools
In The Pines 00:00 Tools
Easy Lovin' 00:00 Tools
Jet Williams Introduction 00:00 Tools
You Got It All Over Him 00:00 Tools
Funky Country Living 00:00 Tools
Tennessee Waltz - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
I can't help it 00:00 Tools
Somewhere, Over the Rainbow 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good - Part 1 00:00 Tools
White Christmas 00:00 Tools
Lover's Key 00:00 Tools
Cotton Eyed Joe 00:00 Tools
Chattanooga Choo Choo 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good, Pt. 1 00:00 Tools
Soul Song 00:00 Tools
Going to America 00:00 Tools
Love Bug 00:00 Tools
Paper Roses 00:00 Tools
Basin Dtreet Blues 00:00 Tools
Closing Remarks And Credits 00:00 Tools
Ruby (Are You Mad At Your Man) 00:00 Tools
I Saw The Light (With Hank & Jet Williams & The Drifting Cowboys) 00:00 Tools
Today I Started Loving You Again - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
Bayou Lafayette 00:00 Tools
Saturday Blues 00:00 Tools
Ashoken Farewell (feat. Richard Kiser & Jason Coleman) 00:00 Tools
My Funny Valentine 00:00 Tools
One Woman 00:00 Tools
The Boy From England 00:00 Tools
Till I Get It Right 00:00 Tools
Concrete Jungle (feat. Laney Hicks) 00:00 Tools
Cold, Cold Heart 00:00 Tools
Something 00:00 Tools
The Holyoaks 00:00 Tools
Hidin' on Me 00:00 Tools
Only Our Rivers Run Free 00:00 Tools
You Can't Get Off With Your Shoes On 00:00 Tools
Orange Blossom Special - Live Olympia 1975 00:00 Tools
Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
Vicksburg Stomp 00:00 Tools
Louisiana Man 00:00 Tools
Mind Your Own Business with Ricky Skaggs and Roy Clark 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song 00:00 Tools
Wind Beneath My Wings 00:00 Tools
Cry Me A River [Andy Reiss, Guitar] 00:00 Tools
How Insensitive 00:00 Tools
I Love New Orleans Music 00:00 Tools
Leather Britches 00:00 Tools
Kyoto By Night 00:00 Tools
Drums of Donegal 00:00 Tools
After Hours (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
McKenna Brigh 00:00 Tools
Shenandoah (Feat. Mary Alice Hoepfinger) 00:00 Tools
Sticks and Stones 00:00 Tools
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas 00:00 Tools
Motherless & Fatherless Blues 00:00 Tools
Shenandoah [Featuring Alice Hoepfinger] 00:00 Tools
Sleigh Ride 00:00 Tools
An Aire for Patricia 00:00 Tools
Funky Country Music 00:00 Tools
Bethlehem Medley (It Came Upon Midnight Clear/Oh Little Town of Bethlehem/Hark the Herald Angles Sing) 00:00 Tools
An Irish Pedigree 00:00 Tools
Cotton-Eyed Joe 00:00 Tools
Kid On the Mountain 00:00 Tools
I'm Ready 00:00 Tools
Out on a Limb 00:00 Tools
The Fastest Harp In The South 00:00 Tools
Maybe You'll Be There 00:00 Tools
T for Texas [Blue Yodel No. 1] 00:00 Tools
Sweet Alberta 00:00 Tools
Together Again 00:00 Tools
Minor Miner 00:00 Tools
Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain 00:00 Tools
La fête de l'orient 00:00 Tools
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
Rocky Top - (B.& F.Bryant) 00:00 Tools
Shenandoah (Feat. Mary Alice Hoepfinger) 00:00 Tools
Stone Fox Chase 00:00 Tools
Irish Aire 00:00 Tools
Ricky Scaggs & Roy Clark Introductions 00:00 Tools
Leona 00:00 Tools
Lost and Found 00:00 Tools
John Henry Jones 00:00 Tools
Lonesome Eyes 00:00 Tools
When Paddy Went to Dublin 00:00 Tools
Den Toppede Høne 00:00 Tools
Christmas in Country Kerry 00:00 Tools
Blue Christmas Angel (feat Donna Fargo) 00:00 Tools
Carrickfergus 00:00 Tools
Irish Reel Medley: Collier's Reel / Banshee Reel 00:00 Tools
Mountain Laurel 00:00 Tools
Crazy Arms 00:00 Tools
Step Inside Love 00:00 Tools
Baby King (feat The Jordanaires) 00:00 Tools
It Wasn't his Child (feat Laney & Lindsay Hicks) 00:00 Tools
Behind Closed Doors 00:00 Tools
Go Tell it on the Mountain/ Silent Night 00:00 Tools
If There Were Only Time For Love 00:00 Tools
Rose Garden 00:00 Tools
You Belong To Me [George Ridwell, Fluegelhorn] 00:00 Tools
Women of Ireland 00:00 Tools
Walkin' After Midnight - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 00:00 Tools
You Needed Me - Classic Country: Charlie McCoy Album Version 03:31 Tools
It There Were Only Time For Love 00:00 Tools
Winter Wonderland (feat Jett Williams) 00:00 Tools
Crazy Arms (Harmonica) 00:00 Tools
Silver Bells (feat Tamra Rosanes) 00:00 Tools
Kian's Song 00:00 Tools
Juke 00:00 Tools
Don't Touch Me 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Good 00:00 Tools
Keep It C 00:00 Tools
I.C.3 00:00 Tools
'Tis a Fine Thing You're Doin' 00:00 Tools
Oh Beautiful Star of Bethlehem (feat Country Sisters) 00:00 Tools
Hangin' Around the Mistletoe (feat Moore & Moore) 00:00 Tools
My Little Woman 00:00 Tools
Irish Waltz 00:00 Tools
Love Me Tender 00:00 Tools
The Girl I Left Behind / Speedy Return 00:00 Tools
Risky Whiskey 00:00 Tools
Flowers of Edinburg 00:00 Tools
Oh Come All Ye Faithful (feat Wenche) 00:00 Tools
Boogie Woogie (Also Known As T.D.'s Boogie Woogie) 00:00 Tools
Fool On The Hill 00:00 Tools
Leaving On a Jet Plane 00:00 Tools
Harmonica 00:00 Tools
Pretty Magic 00:00 Tools
Streets Of London 00:00 Tools
Friendship Song 00:00 Tools
Let Me Be There 00:00 Tools
Ruby 00:00 Tools
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There are two artists known as Charlie McCoy: #1 Charles "Papa Charlie" McCoy (May 26, 1909 – July 26, 1950) was an African American delta blues musician and songwriter. #2 Charles Ray "Charlie" McCoy (born March 28, 1941 in Oak Hill, West Virginia) is an American session musician noted for his work on a wide variety of instruments. In his career, McCoy has backed several notable musicians including Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Tom Astor, Elvis Presley and Ween. He has also recorded thirty-seven studio albums, including fourteen for Monument Records. Thirteen of his singles have entered the Billboard country charts. He was a member of Area Code 615 and Barefoot Jerry. #1 Charlie McCoy was born in Jackson, Mississippi, he was best known by the nickname 'Papa Charlie'. He became one of the major blues accompanists of his time. A guitarist and mandolin player, he played in the Mississippi area with his band, The Mississippi Hot Footers. McCoy recorded several sides with Bo Carter as the 'Mississippi Mud Steppers'. Among the tracks recorded with Carter were two variations of Cow Cow Davenport's "Cow Cow Blues" . The first, an instrumental, was released as "The Jackson Stomp". The second, with lyrics and vocals by McCoy, as "The Lonesome Train, That Took My Girl From Town". They also wrote and recorded "The Vicksburg Stomp" which was resurrected and recorded by Mike Compton, of O Brother, Where Art Thou? fame. His nimble, sensitive guitar work enriched recordings from performers including Tommy Johnson and Ishman Bracey. He recorded regularly in the late 1920s, often alongside Walter Vincson. He dated blues singer and guitar player Geeshie Wiley around 1928. He also sat in with the Mississippi Sheiks, Rubin Lacy, Son Spand and the many other Delta bluesmen who passed through the Jackson area in the years that followed. He also backed his then sister-in-law, Memphis Minnie in the mid 1930s. As a slide guitarist, McCoy recorded as under the name of Tampa Kid, and released "Keep On Trying". McCoy also joined and performed with his brother (Kansas Joe McCoy) for many years, and they released records under the title of "The McCoy Brothers". He eventually migrated to Chicago where he organized two bands, "Papa Charlie's Boys" and with his older brother Kansas Joe McCoy, the Harlem Hamfats, that performed and recorded during the second half of the 1930s. However, service with the United States Army during World War II cut short McCoy’s career. In poor health, McCoy never returned to music after the war, and he died in Chicago, Illinois in 1950 from paralytic brain disease, only a few months after his brother had died. They are both buried in the Restvale Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois. McCoy's composition, "Too Long" was recorded several times by both black and white artists. #2 Charlie McCoy and his family moved to nearby Fayetteville when he was a boy and then to Miami, Florida. At age eight, he began playing the harmonica and the guitar and later, in his teens, he also learned to play the bass and trumpet. In high school in Miami his skills had developed to such an extent that he decided to pursue a career in music. He joined a local rock and roll band as guitarist and singer. When he was sixteen years old he reluctantly accompanied a friend to visit a country barn dance radio show in Miami called the "Old South Jamboree". Upon their arrival, McCoy's friend left him in the crowd and went to talk to Happy Harold, the host of the show, with the intention of coaxing McCoy up on stage to sing. McCoy's performance that night, along with the positive response from the show's audience, led to him and his rock band being signed to the Old South Jamboree. His band consisted of Donny Young, later known as Johnny Paycheck, on bass; Bill Johnson on steel-guitar; Charlie Justice on guitar; and Bill Phillips, vocal. About this time the band took part in a local rock and roll contest winning first prize. Following an invitation from Mel Tillis, the eighteen-year-old McCoy went to Nashville, Tennessee for a week's stay in 1959. During his stay in Nashville he visited numerous producers and record companies but all to no avail. Since his efforts to start a musical career in Nashville had failed he went back to Miami. He enrolled at the Miami University[citation needed] majoring in musical education. His goal was now to become a teacher. Meanwhile he continued to perform on the "Jamboree". When Miami faculty members discovered that he was playing rock and roll for a square dance they warned him to continue with this "lower forms of music". McCoy replied that he was willing to quit his work at the barn dance if they would give him a scholarship. The faculty rejected his request. McCoy, who still wanted to make a career in music, applied for the vacant job as guitarist in John Ferguson's band. But when he arrived in Nashville, due to some misunderstanding, his job was already taken by guitarist Vance Bullock. After a short discussion Ferguson decided to hire McCoy as a drummer instead. McCoy bought a drum set and joined the band. John Ferguson's band was unsuccessful and shortly they disbanded. After a month of unemployment he joined Stonewall Jackson as a drummer. The job came to an end in the autumn that year. Then he received a call from the booking agent Jim Denney who informed him that Archie Bleyer of Cadence Records had listened to McCoy's tapes and wanted to sign him. McCoy cut his first single for the Cadence label and "Cherri Berri Wine" reached No. 99 in the Billboard chart. In Nashville, Denney gave him the advice to do demo sessions and to concentrate on the harmonica. Next, McCoy joined Wayne Moss as a bass player performing at Fort Campbell in Kentucky. Chet Atkins heard one of McCoy's demo tapes and immediately hired him in May 1961. Thus, his first recording as a harmonica player was on a song, "I Just Don't Understand", by Ann-Margret for RCA. Fred Foster of Monument Records also heard about McCoy and hired him as harmonica player on Roy Orbison's song "Candy Man". It became a million-seller. McCoy's reputation as harmonica player and studio musician increased. McCoy continued to record for the Monument label without a written contract. Although some of his singles and albums at this time did not sell, Foster believed in McCoy's music. Tex Davis, the promotion manager of Monument Records, was persuaded by Charlie Dillard of WPFA to release "Today I Started Loving You Again" as a single. It had previously been released on McCoy's second LP. When the single came out in 1972 it sold 750 000 copies. The single went to No. 16 in the Billboard country charts. For his next album, "The Real McCoy", he won a grammy from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. His album "Good Time Charlie" reached No. 1 in the Billboard country chart. In the 1970s, McCoy, as a studio musician, took part in more than 400 sessions a year. He has won 2 CMA Awards and 7 ACM Awards. From there, he went on to play harmonica for other acts, Elvis Presley, Perry Como, Joan Baez, Johnny Cash, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Kris Kristofferson, Paul Simon, Ringo Starr, Barefoot Jerry, "Gene Summers In Nashville" LP and Ween. He also played guitar on Dylan's "Desolation Row", from the album Highway 61 Revisited, and "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands", from the album Blonde on Blonde,) bass guitar (on all the tracks from Bob Dylan's John Wesley Harding,) keyboards, and drums plus on several wind and brass instruments. For 19 years McCoy worked as music director for the popular television show, Hee Haw, and was a member of the Million Dollar Band. On May 17, 2009 Charlie was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame along with Roy Clark and Barbara Mandrell. He is also a member of the International Musicians' Hall of Fame, and the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame. Charlie has two children with his first wife, and five grandchildren. All of his grandchildren have contributed to one of his albums in some way. His second granddaughter did the artwork for one of the albums covers (Somewhere Over The Rainbow) and sang on one of his Christmas CDs. His oldest granddaughter has played flute and sang on a few of his albums. All of the youngest three kids have sung on one of his albums, as has his son (Charlie, Jr.) and daughter (Ginger). Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.