This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 1954.
Events
- January 4 — Elvis Presley records a 10-inch acetate demo at the Memphis Recording Studio; the two songs are "Casual Love Affair" and "I'll Never Stand In Your Way".[1]
- February 20 — "Slowly" by Webb Pierce becomes the first No. 1 song on Billboard's country charts to feature the pedal steel guitar.
- June 19 — Top recording "I Don't Hurt Anymore" by Hank Snow begins 20-week run at #1 on Best Seller list. "One by One" by Red Foley and Kitty Wells begins 21-week run at #2 on same chart, spending a single week at No. 1 later in the year. For most of the summer and fall, "I Don't Hurt Anymore" holds "One By One" out of the top spot.
- July 17 — Ozark Jubilee debuts (on radio) as a weekly live broadcast over KWTO-AM. On August 7, ABC Radio begins carrying 25 minutes of the program nationally, hosted by Red Foley.
- July 6 — Elvis Presley releases his first single, "That's All Right"/"Blue Moon of Kentucky". A month later, Billboard gives the song a positive review, with the reviewer calling Presley a "strong new talent," and by September is a No. 1 hit in Memphis.[2]
- October 2 — Elvis Presley makes his one and only appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Two weeks later, debuted on the Louisiana Hayride and is soon making regular appearances.
- November 13 — A Billboard disc jockey poll reports that disc jockeys are playing 11 percent country on radio stations, compared to 42 percent pop and 5 percent rhythm and blues.[3]
- November 20 — Bartenders in Hammond, Indiana request that disc jockeys at WJOB radio stop playing Ferlin Husky's "The Drunken Driver", about an intoxicated driver who causes a crash that kills two children; the song "is hurting business," the union claimed.[4]
No dates
Top hits of the year
Number one hits
United States
(as certified by Billboard)
- Notes
- 1^ No. 1 song of the year, as determined by Billboard.
- 2^ Song dropped from No. 1 and later returned to top spot.
- A^ Only Billboard No. 1 hit for that artist.
- Note: Several songs were simultaneous No. 1 hits on the separate "Most Played in Juke Boxes," "Most Played by Jockeys" and "Best Sellers in Stores" charts.
Other major hits
US
|
Single
|
Artist
|
8
|
As Far as I'm Concerned
|
Red Foley and Betty Foley[5]
|
2
|
Back Up Buddy
|
Carl Smith
|
15
|
Backward, Turn Backward
|
Pee Wee King
|
9
|
Beware of "It"
|
Johnnie & Jack
|
9
|
Bimbo
|
Pee Wee King
|
10
|
Breakin' the Rules
|
Hank Thompson
|
14
|
Call Me Up (And I'll Come Calling On You)
|
Marty Robbins
|
4
|
Changing Partners
|
Pee Wee King
|
9
|
Cheatin's a Sin
|
Kitty Wells
|
12
|
Christmas Can't Be Far Away
|
Eddy Arnold
|
3
|
Courtin' in the Rain
|
T. Texas Tyler
|
4
|
Cry, Cry, Darling
|
Jimmy C. Newman
|
7
|
Dog-Gone It, Baby, I'm in Love
|
Carl Smith
|
4
|
Don't Drop It
|
Terry Fell
|
9
|
A Fooler, A Faker
|
Hank Thompson
|
4
|
Go, Boy, Go
|
Carl Smith
|
8
|
Good Deal, Lucille
|
Al Terry
|
3
|
Goodnight, Sweetheart, Goodnight
|
Johnnie & Jack
|
7
|
Hep Cat Baby
|
Eddy Arnold
|
14
|
Hernando's Hideaway
|
Homer and Jethro
|
15
|
Honey, I Need You
|
Johnnie & Jack
|
12
|
Honey Love
|
The Carlisles
|
9
|
Honky-Tonk Girl
|
Hank Thompson
|
9
|
Hootchy Kootchy Henry (From Hawaii)
|
Mitchell Torok
|
3
|
I Love You
|
Ginny Wright and Jim Reeves
|
2
|
I'll Be There (If You Ever Want Me)
|
Ray Price
|
12
|
I'm a Stranger in My Home
|
Kitty Wells and Red Foley
|
3
|
I'm Walking the Dog
|
Webb Pierce
|
3
|
If You Don't Somebody Else Will
|
Jimmy & Johnny
|
8
|
If You Don't Somebody Else Will
|
Ray Price
|
7
|
Jilted
|
Red Foley
|
4
|
Looking Back to See
|
Goldie Hill and Justin Tubb
|
8
|
Looking Back to See
|
The Browns
|
13
|
Much Too Young to Die
|
Ray Price
|
7
|
My Everything
|
Eddy Arnold
|
15
|
Never
|
Marilyn Myers and Wesley Tuttle
|
3
|
The New Green Light
|
Hank Thompson
|
9
|
Out Behind the Barn
|
Little Jimmy Dickens
|
8
|
Place for Girls Like You
|
Faron Young
|
12
|
Pretty Words
|
Marty Robbins
|
5
|
Release Me
|
Jimmy Heap and Perk Williams
|
6
|
Release Me
|
Ray Price
|
8
|
Release Me
|
Kitty Wells
|
9
|
River of No Return
|
Tennessee Ernie Ford
|
4
|
Rose-Marie
|
Slim Whitman
|
8
|
Run 'Em Off
|
Lefty Frizzell
|
2
|
Secret Love
|
Slim Whitman
|
15
|
Shake-a-Leg
|
The Carlisles
|
14
|
She Done Give Her Heart to Me
|
Sonny James
|
4
|
Singing Hills
|
Slim Whitman
|
4
|
Sparking Brown Eyes
|
Webb Pierce and The Wilburn Brothers
|
5
|
Tain't Nice (To Talk Like That)
|
The Carlisles
|
8
|
Thank You for Calling
|
Billy Walker
|
10
|
That Crazy Mambo Thing
|
Hank Snow
|
15
|
Then I'll Stop Loving You
|
Jim Reeves
|
3
|
This Is the Thanks I Get (For Loving You)
|
Eddy Arnold
|
2
|
This Ole House
|
Stuart Hamblen
|
14
|
Thou Shalt Not Steal
|
Kitty Wells
|
11
|
Two Glasses, Joe
|
Ernest Tubb
|
10
|
We've Gone Too Far
|
Hank Thompson
|
4
|
Whatcha Gonna Do Now
|
Tommy Collins
|
7
|
You All Come
|
Arlie Duff
|
2
|
You Better Not Do That
|
Tommy Collins
|
8
|
You Can't Have My Love
|
Wanda Jackson with Billy Gray
|
4
|
You're Not Mine Anymore
|
Webb Pierce
|
Births
- April 29 — Karen Brooks, female vocalist best known for her No. 1 duet with T.G. Sheppard, "Fakin' Love."
- July 13 -- Louise Mandrell, female vocalist/musician. Was part of the Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell sisters TV show on NBC 80-82. Had a series of country albums and hits 70's and 80's. Starred in her own theater for 8 years in Pigeon Forge TN.
- July 18 — Ricky Skaggs, artist who fused bluegrass and contemporary country sounds in the 1980s.
- October 30 — T. Graham Brown, blues-styled country artist of the 1980s.
- October 30 — Jeannie Kendall, daughter half of The Kendalls.
- December 13 — John Anderson, honky tonk-styled singer since the early 1980s.
- December 25 — Steve Wariner, singer-songwriter and guitarist since the early 1980s.
Deaths
References
- ^ Rolling Stone Rock Almanac: The Chronicles of Rock & Roll," Collier Books, MacMillan Publishing Co., New York and London, 1983, p. 6. ISBN 0-02-081320-1
- ^ Rolling Stone Rock Almanac, p. 7-8.
- ^ Rolling Stone Rock Almanac, p. 9.
- ^ Rolling Stone Rock Almanac," p. 9.
- ^ Barry McCloud (1995) Definitive Country: The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Country Music and Its Performers, p. 290, ISBN 0-399-52144-5
Further reading
- Kingsbury, Paul, "Vinyl Hayride: Country Music Album Covers 1947–1989," Country Music Foundation, 2003 (ISBN 0-8118-3572-3)
- Millard, Bob, "Country Music: 70 Years of America's Favorite Music," HarperCollins, New York, 1993 (ISBN 0-06-273244-7)
- Whitburn, Joel. "Top Country Songs 1944–2005 – 6th Edition." 2005.