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Hylo Brown

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Birth name
  
Frank Brown

Website
  
Hylo Brown CMT Webpage

Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter

Name
  
Hylo Brown


Instruments
  
Vocals, Guitar, Bass

Role
  
Singer

Years active
  
1939 –1991

Genres
  
Country, Bluegrass

Hylo Brown Hylo Brown HiLobrow

Born
  
April 20, 1922River, Kentucky, United States (
1922-04-20
)

Associated acts
  
Buckskin Boys (The Timberliners)

Died
  
January 17, 2003, Mechanicsburg, Ohio, United States

Albums
  
Bluegrass Balladeer, Rose of Love, Lovesick And Sorrow

Similar People
  
Arthur Lee "Red" Smiley, Lonesome Pine Fiddlers, Raymond Fairchild, Earl Scruggs, Mac Wiseman

Hylo Brown -- Knoxville Girl


Sings Blue Grass With 5 String Banjo [1963] - Hylo Brown


Hylo Brown (April 20, 1922 – January 17, 2003) was a bluegrass and country music singer, guitarist and bass player.

Contents

Hylo Brown countrymusichighwaycomimageshylobrown3jpg

Biography

Hylo Brown Hylo Brown The Hills of Georgia 1962 YouTube

Frank "Hylo" Brown, Jr. was born in River, Johnson County, Kentucky and began his career as a performer on radio station WCMI in Ashland, Kentucky in 1939. Soon, he moved to WLOG in Logan, West Virginia and their "Saturday Jamboree". Six months later, he moved with his family to Springfield, Ohio. He began composing songs and performing on local radio stations in Ohio. During an appearance at WPFB in Middletown, Ohio he received his nickname "Hylo" because Smoky Ward, who was on the show, couldn't remember his name and started calling him "Hi-Lo". That nickname was a humorous indication of Brown's presumed vocal range. In 1950, he recorded with Bradley Kincaid at WWSO studio in Springfield. Four years later, Brown wrote a song, Lost To A Stranger, that was sent to Ken Nelson, the A & R man of Capitol Records. The song was meant to be recorded by Kitty Wells but instead, Nelson offered Brown a recording contract if he recorded it himself. On November 7, 1954, he cut his first recordings for Capitol Records. Lost To A Stranger became his first hit. In early 1955, he formed the "Buckskin Boys" performing on the WWVA Jamboree in Wheeling, West Virginia. In 1957, he joined Flatt & Scruggs on their "Martha White Mills" shows, and he was regularly featured in solo performances as well as with the Foggy Mountain Boys. He renamed the "Buckskin Boys" calling them "The Timberliners". The Timberliners consisted of Brown on guitar, Red Rector on mandolin, Jim Smoak on banjo, Clarence "Tater" Tate on fiddle and Joe "Flap Jack" Phillips on bass. After his Capitol contract had expired, Brown signed with Starday Records in 1961. He retired in 1991 and moved to Mechanicsburg, Ohio. Hylo Brown died on January 17, 2003. He is interred in Rose Hill Burial Park, Springfield, Clark County, Ohio.

Selected discography

Hylo Brown Hylo Brown Lost to a Stranger YouTube

  • Hylo Brown - Capitol (1959)
  • Bluegrass Balladeer - Starday Records (1962)
  • Bluegrass Goes To College - Starday Records (1963)
  • Sing Me A Bluegrass Song - Starday Records (1963)
  • Hylo Brown and The Timberliners - Rural Rhythm (1966)
  • Sings Folk Songs of Rural America - Rural Rhythm Records (1967)
  • Legends & Tall Tales - Rural Rhythm Records (1967)
  • Sings Country Gospel Songs - Rural Rhythm Records (1967)
  • Hylo Brown and the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys - Rural Rhythm Records (1968)
  • Sings the Blues - Rural Rhythm Records (1968)
  • America's Favorite Balladeer - Rural Rhythm Records (1968)
  • Hylo Brown & The Timberliners, 1954-1960 - Bear Family Records (1992)
  • In Concert (recorded in 1959) - Copper Creek Records (1996)
  • 20 Old-Time Favorites (Re-Issue of "Hylo Brown and the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys") - Rural Rhythm Records (1997)
  • References

    Hylo Brown Wikipedia


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