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Joe Allison

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Name
  
Joe Allison


Role
  
Songwriter

Joe Allison nashvillesongwritersfoundationcomthemesuploads


Full Name
  
Joe Marion Allison

Born
  
October 3, 1924 (
1924-10-03
)
McKinney, Texas, United States

Cause of death
  
Respiratory failure from lung disease

Occupation
  
Songwriter, radio and television personality, record producer, country music business executive

Died
  
August 2, 2002, Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Awards
  
Academy of Country Music Awards Jim Reeves International Award

Nominations
  
Grammy Award for Song of the Year

Similar People
  
Hank Cochran, Hank Thompson, Merle Travis, Roy Clark, Charles Randolph Grean

Remembering joe allison avi


Joe Marion Allison (October 3, 1924 – August 2, 2002) was an American songwriter, radio and television personality, record producer, and country music business executive.

Contents

Joe allison performing i m a pilgrim


Early life and career

Allison was born in McKinney, Texas. He worked as a commercial artist before embarking on a career in the entertainment industry, first as a disc jockey on a Paris, Texas radio station. In 1945, after a few years on radio, Allison took a job as the emcee for the North American tour of country music singing star Tex Ritter. While working on tour, he offered Ritter a song he had written called "When You Leave, Don't Slam the Door", which the singer turned into a No. 1 hit on the country music charts. This success ultimately led to Allison moving to a radio station in Nashville, Tennessee where he remained until accepting an offer from a station in Pasadena, California.

While working on radio and television on the West Coast, Allison continued writing music, many of which were co-authored with his first wife, Audrey. He scored a success with a song recorded by country singer Faron Young and a major hit when teen idol Tommy Sands recorded his song, "Teen Age Crush'". In 1959, Joe and Audrey Allison wrote their most famous song, "He'll Have to Go", which was initially recorded by Billy Brown. A subsequent version by Jim Reeves become a platinum record, and the song would be recorded successfully by more than one hundred other artists including Elvis Presley, Bing Crosby, Tom Jones, Eddy Arnold, and even big band leader Guy Lombardo. That same year, Allison was hired by Liberty Records to create their country music department. At Liberty he signed Willie Nelson to his first recording contract.

Allison is listed as a co-writer for the answer song "He'll Have to Stay" that went to #4 on the US pop chart by Jeanne Black in 1960.

In 1965, Allison returned to Nashville as head the country music department at Dot Records. After two years with the Dot label, he took over as the head of Capitol Records country music department where he stayed until 1974. During the early 1960s Allison recorded five-per-week one-hour Country Music radio programs for the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS). The programs were distributed on 33-1/3 RPM transcription disks which were "bicycle networked" (broadcast on one AFRS station and then sent forward) from one military base/US ship to another. In 1974, semi-retired, he then set up his own part-time business to produce records while dabbling in a passion with his wife as a dealer of paintings and antiques.

During his time in the music business, Joe Allison won seven ASCAP awards for record producing and five BMI performance awards. In 1976, he was elected to the Disc Jockey Hall of Fame and two years later was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. An active promoter of the industry, Joe Allison was a founding member of the Country Music Association and served as President of the Nashville Songwriters Association International (NSAI).

Death

Allison died in Nashville in 2002 and his remains were interred in the Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery.

References

Joe Allison Wikipedia


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