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Billy Mize

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Name
  
Billy Mize


Role
  
Guitarist

Billy Mize CIMMcast Audio Interview with Billy Mize and the

Music director
  
Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound

Albums
  
A Salute to Swing, Make It Rain

Awards
  
Academy of Country Music Award for New Male Vocalist of the Year

Nominations
  
Academy of Country Music Award for Single Record of the Year

Similar People
  
Johnny Bond, Glen Campbell, Gordon Terry, Merle Haggard, Ray Price

Billy mize and the bakersfield sound trailer


Billy Mize (Born William Robert Mize on April 29, 1929 in Arkansas City, Kansas) is a steel guitarist, band leader, vocalist, songwriter, and TV show host.

Contents

Billy Mize News

La film festival 2014 billy mize the bakersfield sound trailer documentary hd


Biography

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Mize was raised in the San Joaquin Valley of California, an area steeped in country music thanks to relocated Okies. He originally learned to play guitar as a child, but fell in love with the steel guitar he received for his 18th birthday.

Billy Mize Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound TRAILER YouTube

Mize moved to Bakersfield, California and formed his own band playing local gigs and also working as a disc jockey on KPMC. In 1953, he, Bill Woods and Herb Henson put together a local TV show called The Cousin Herb Trading Post Show on KERO-TV Bakersfield (then channel 10), where he became affectionately known as Billy The Kid. The signal from that show was so strong the show could be seen as far as Fresno, all the way over to the central coast and Los Angeles. The show was wildly popular because it not only featured fledgling acts such as Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Tommy Collins, Jean Shepard, Bonnie Owens, Ferlin Husky, but many national acts such as Hank Williams and Patsy Cline. He stayed with the show for thirteen years.

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In 1955, Billy Mize began to appear on a local Los Angeles television show hosted by Hank Penny. By 1957 he was working on seven different weekly shows in the LA area, including the Hank Penny Show, Cal Worthington Show, Country Music Time and the legendary Town Hall Party. He recorded for Decca (Solid Sender/It Could happen - 1957), Challenge and Liberty, finally hitting the country charts in 1966 with You Can't Stop Me for Columbia. That year he began hosting and performing on Gene Autry's Melody Ranch network show on KTLA as well as starting his own syndicated Billy Mize Show from Bakersfield. During the next decade he managed eleven chart hits as well as writing hits for others such as Who Will Buy The Wine (Charlie Walker), My Baby Walks All Over Me (Johnny Sea) and Don't Let The Blues Make You Bad (Dean Martin). Dean Martin cut three of his songs in one day in June 1966, including "Terrible Tangled Web."

He won the Academy of Country Music's "TV Personality of the Year" award three years in a row between 1965 and 1967. In 1972 he taped two pilots of the "Billy Mize Music Hall," which he hoped to sell into national syndication. With Merle Haggard on the one show and Marty Robbins on the other it seemed a sure fire bet, but it wasn't picked up.

He was a mainstay of Merle Haggard's band, playing steel and rhythm on many of Merle's classics. In the early '80s, Billy hooked up with his brother Buddy for various television projects.

A critically acclaimed documentary chronicling the life of Billy Mize and his impact on the country music industry was released in 2015. Titled "Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound," it screened at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2014. For more information see www.billymizemovie.com.

Discography

  • Solid Sender/It Could Happen (Decca, 1957)
  • Please Don't Let The Blues Make You Bad (Columbia, 1965)
  • You Can't Stop Me (Columbia, 1966)
  • It's Gonna Get Lonely (Columbia, 1966)
  • Lights Of Albuquerque (Columbia, 1967)
  • This Time and Place (Imperial, 1969)
  • You're All Right With Me (United Artists, 1971)
  • Love'N'Stuff (Zodiac, 1976)
  • Billy Mize's Tribute To Swing (G&M, 1986)
  • A Salute to Swing (Hag Records, 2006)
  • Make it Rain (Sharecropper Records, 2006)
  • References

    Billy Mize Wikipedia