NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (June 11, 2015) – Jim Ed Brown, a star of the Grand Ole Opry for
more than fifty years and a newly elected member of the Country Music
Hall of Fame, died Thursday, June 11th at Williamson Medical Center in
Franklin, TN after battling cancer.
Mr. Brown scored major country hits as a solo artist, as a duet
singer, and as a member of The Browns with sisters Maxine and Bonnie.
The Browns’ 1959 crossover smash “The Three Bells” topped Billboard’s country chart for ten consecutive weeks, and it spent four weeks atop Billboard’s all-genre singles chart.
“If you listen to The Browns, it’s a very pretty sound,” Mr. Brown
said earlier this year, in an interview with Peter Cooper of the Country
Music Hall of Fame and Museum. “It was sibling harmony, a sound that
was very pleasing. I’ve never heard anybody that could come close to
that particular sound. It couldn’t be imitated.”
James Edward Brown was born April 1, 1934, in Sparkman, Arkansas. He
spent the first decade of his life on a farm, without electricity or
running water. On Saturday nights, the family would tune a battery
operated radio to WSM-AM (650) and listen to the Grand Ole Opry. As a
teenager, Jim Ed would mimic the vocal styles of Opry stars –
his Hank Snow impersonation was particularly effective – and in 1952
Maxine entered him into a talent competition at KLRA radio in Little
Rock.
He didn’t win the contest, but was asked back to appear on the station’s Barnyard Frolic show. Soon, he invited Maxine to sing with him on the Frolic,
and their harmonies impressed touring musician Wayne Raney, who
championed Jim Ed and Maxine to record labels. In 1954, they signed with
Abbott Records and recorded their first Top 10 country hit, the Jim
Ed-and Maxine-penned “Looking Back to See.” Bonnie Brown soon joined her
siblings, and the duo became a trio.
As The Browns, Jim Ed, Maxine, and Bonnie notched Top Twenty country
hits with “Here Today and Gone Tomorrow,” “I Take the Chance,” “Just As
Long As You Love Me,” “Money,” “I Heard the Bluebirds Sing,” “Would You
Care,” and “Beyond the Shadow.” But in 1959 the trio was pondering
retirement. Mr. Brown’s service in the U.S. Army and the sisters’ family
lives had distracted musical attentions, and Mr. Brown was running his
father’s sawmill. The Browns—who by then were signed to RCA Records—told
producer Chet Atkins that they were thinking of quitting the music
business, but Atkins asked them to come to Nashville and record again.
“Chet asked if there was anything we wanted to do that we hadn’t
recorded,” Mr. Brown said. “We told him about a song called ‘The Three
Bells’ that we sang coming from Pine Bluff to Nashville. We recorded it,
and after the session Chet said, ‘You kids may think you’re about to
retire, but I think you’ve just recorded the biggest song we’ve ever
done.’”
Mr. Brown was driving a truck in Arkansas in 1959 when he parked,
walked into a drive-in to buy a Coca-Cola, and heard “The Three Bells”
playing on the radio. The song resonated with country and pop audiences,
impressed and inspired the Beatles, and ensured that Mr. Brown need not
spend his life at the sawmill. The Browns joined the Grand Ole Opry in
1963, on the strength of “The Three Bells” and follow-ups including
“Scarlet Ribbons (for Her Hair),” “The Old Lamplighter” and “Send Me the
Pillow You Dream On.” But in 1967, Maxine and Bonnie decided to retire.
Mr. Brown stayed in Nashville as a solo artist on RCA, and he recorded
his signature solo song in 1967 with “Pop a Top,” a No. 3 country single
that was later revived by Alan Jackson on Jackson’s Under the Influence album.
From 1967 through 1974, Mr. Brown also reached the Top Ten of the
country charts with singles “Morning,” “Southern Loving,” “Sometime
Sunshine” and “It’s That Time of Night.” In 1976, he began recording
duets with Helen Cornelius, logging a No. 1 country hit with “I Don’t
Want to Have to Marry You.” With Cornelius, Mr. Brown won a CMA Vocal
Duo of the Year award and reached country’s Top 10 with “Saying Hello,
Saying I Love You, Saying Goodbye,” “If the World Ran Out of Love
Tonight,” “Lying in Love with You,” Fools,” and “Morning Comes Too
Early.”
Mr. Brown’s easygoing manner made him an effective host on the Opry
and on numerous television programs. He helmed shows including the
syndicated Nashville on the Road and The Country Place and The Nashville Network’s You Can Be a Star and Going Our Way. In 2003, he began hosting syndicated radio program, Country Music Greats Radio Show.
In September 2014, Mr. Brown was diagnosed with lung cancer. While he was undergoing treatments, Plowboy Records released In Style Again,
Mr. Brown’s first solo effort in 40 years. Fellow Opry stars Vince Gill
and Sharon and Cheryl White joined him on the critically acclaimed
album. In March 2015, Mr. Brown and The Browns were elected along with
Grady Martin and The Oak Ridge Boys as the newest members of the Country
Music Hall of Fame.
“Fame is fleeting, hit records change every week, award show winners
and nominees change every year, but being inducted into the Country
Music Hall of Fame will be forever,” Mr. Brown said, in response to
receiving country music’s highest honor. The Browns’ official induction
will come in October, but CMA CEO Sarah Trahern, Country Music Hall of
Famer Bill Anderson, and Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle
Young visited Mr. Brown in the hospital on June 4 to present him with a
medallion commemorating his Hall of Fame membership.
Mr. Brown died at peace with himself and with his place in country music.
“I’ve always loved to sing,” he said. “My grandmother nicknamed me
‘Jaybird,’ because I’d go around singing all the time. I’ve gone through
some hard times, but some good times, too. If push comes to shove, I’ll
do it again.”