 Artist: Hank Snow
   Artist: Hank Snow   Genre(s): 
Country   
Discography:
 Singing Ranger Vol.4: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)
    Singing Ranger Vol.4: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 23
 Singing Ranger Vol.4 (Promo)
    Singing Ranger Vol.4 (Promo)   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 9
 Singing Ranger Vol.3: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)
    Singing Ranger Vol.3: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 26
 Singing Ranger Vol.2: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)
    Singing Ranger Vol.2: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 27
 Singing Ranger Vol.1: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)
    Singing Ranger Vol.1: the Complete Early 50's Hank Snow (1949-1953)   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 26
 The Essential Hank Snow
    The Essential Hank Snow   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 20
 The One And Only Hank Snow
    The One And Only Hank Snow   Year:    
Tracks: 10
 Les triuphes De Las Country Music Vol.10
    Les triuphes De Las Country Music Vol.10   Year:    
Tracks: 25
Canada's  sterling contribution to land medicine, Hank  Snow  was historied for his "travelling" songs. It's  no wonderment. At  historic geological period 12 he ran away from his Nova  Scotia  home and united the Merchant  Marines,  operative as a cabin boy and manual jack for quad age. Once  back up on shore, he listened to Jimmie  Rodgers  records and started playing in public, structure up a following in Halifax.  His  original nickname, the Yodelling  Ranger,  was modified to the Singing  Ranger  when his high voice changed to the keen baritone voice horn that graced his hit records. In  1950, the yr he became an Opry  regular, his self-penned "I'm  Moving  On"  (the first class honours point of his many corking traveling songs) became a ruin hit, stretch telephone number one and left there for 21 weeks. "Lucky  Rocket"  (as good 1950) and "I've  Been  Everywhere"  (1962), 2 other hits, show his womb-to-tomb love for trains and go. But  he was as much at house with dickens other styles, the pose and the rhumba/boogie. Among  his many great ballads are "Bluebird  Island"  (with Anita  Carter  of the Carter  Family),  "Befool  Such  as I,"  and "How-do-you-do,  Love,"  a hit when Snow  was 60 years old. Snow  appeared regularly on the Opry  into the '90s, proving that his improbable voice suffered no going of timbre o'er the last half-century, as well as what a tasteful, unpretentious guitar stylist he is. With  small stature and immense voice, Snow  was a rural area diehard world Health  Organization  gave practically more than to the business concern than he took.
Born  and raised in Nova  Scotia,  Snow  (born Clarence  Eugene  Snow)  affected in with his gran when he was eighter age old, following the dissociate of his parents. Four  years later, he re-joined his mother when she re-married, just his stepfather was an abusive, violent human being world Health  Organization  frequently scramble Hank.  Tired  of the ill-treat, Snow  ran away from home when he was 12 geezerhood old, joining a sportfishing boat. For  the side by side quaternity geezerhood, he served as a cabin boy, oftentimes singing for the sailors onboard. When  he was 16, he returned home, where he began on the job queer jobs and nerve-wracking to launch a playing vocation. His  mother had granted him a push-down list of Rodgers  records which inspired him greatly. Within  a few weeks of earreach Rodgers,  Snow  ordered a inexpensive, mail order guitar and tested to learn his idol's hallmark gamey yodel. For  the side by side few geezerhood, he sang around Nova  Scotia  before finally mustering the courage to journey to Halifax  in 1933. Snow  landed a weekly unpaid appearance on CHNS'  Down  on the Farm,  where he was billed as both the cattleman Blue  Yodeller  and Clarence  Snow  and His  Guitar.  The  undermentioned twelvemonth, CHNS'  boss announcer, Cecil  Landry,  suggested to Snow  that he should change his nominate to Hank,  since it sounded more than Western.
Snowfall  continued to perform in Halifax  for the side by side 3 geezerhood, oftentimes struggling to catch by. The  severeness of the financial situation was compounded when he married Minnie  Aaiders  in 1936, but the duet was soon relieved when he landed a regular paying program on the network Canadian  Farm  Hour,  billed as Hank  the Yodelling  Ranger.  By  the end of the twelvemonth, Snow  had signed a portion out with RCA  Victor's  Montreal  branch and recorded deuce original songs: "The  Prsoned  Cowboy"  and "Solitary  Blue  Yodel."  The  songs were hits, source a twine of Canadian-only  hit singles that ran for the following ten years; during that time, he recorded most 90 songs. In  the early '40s, he had a regular show on CBC,  based in Montreal  and New  Brunswick.  In  1944, he switched to CKCW  in New  Brunswick.  Around  that time, he switched his stage appoint to Hank  the Singing  Ranger,  since his voice had deepened and he could no yearner yodel.
Though  he had become a principal in Canada,  the American  market remained untapped. Snow  tried to break into the U.S.A.  several multiplication, playing The  Wheeling  Jamboree  in West  Virginia,  in brief moving to Hollywood,  and playacting concerts with his trick pony Shawnee,  only he was having no chance determination fans. The  trouble part lies with the fact that he was nerve-racking to find an audience that wasn't in that respect, since most citizens were concentrating on World  War  II.  Another  stumbling immobilize was RCA  Records  themselves, world Health  Organization  refused to let Snow  release records in America  until he was long-familiar in the country. By  1948, Snow  was tattle on The  Big  D  Jamboree  in Dallas,  TX,  where he befriended the honkey tonk caption Ernest  Tubb.  ET  pulled enough exercising weight at the Grand  Ole  Opry  to engender Snow  a slot on the show in early 1950, and by that fourth dimension, RCA  had agreed to record him for the American  consultation.
Snow's  American  debut single, "Matrimony  Vow,"  became a minor run into at the end of 1949, only it fell off the charts after a week. Similarly,  his debut appearance at the Grand  Ole  Opry  in January  was not well-received, prompt him to weigh moving back up to Canada.  However,  those ideas were presently abandoned when his find arrived in the summer of 1950. That  July,  "I'm  Moving  On"  began its noteworthy ascent up the charts, finally landing at number unrivaled and staying in that respect for a full 21 weeks. In  the class after the release of "I'm  Moving  On,"  "The  Golden  Rocket"  and "The  Rhumba  Boogie"  both run into number one (the latter staying thither for ashcan School  weeks), establishing Snow  as a literal hotshot. Between  1951 and the closing of 1955, Snow  had a noteworthy 24 Top  Ten  hits, including the massive run into individual "I  Don't  Hurt  Anymore,"  which washed-out 20 weeks at number one in 1954. Snow  not only played his trademark travel songs, merely likewise land boogie-woogie, Hawaiian  music, rhumbas, and cowboys songs. By  the middle of the tenner, he was a star not only in the United  States  and Canada,  only passim the world, gaining a particularly warm following all over the geezerhood in the United  Kingdom.
About  1954, Snow  formed a booking government agency with Colonel  Tom  Parker,  world Health  Organization  would by and by get notorious for being Elvis  Presley's  coach. Indeed,  Snow  played a plastic function in Presley's  early career, convincing the Grand  Ole  Opry  to give the isaac Merrit  Singer  a opportunity in 1954. Though  Elvis'  appearance at the Opry  was ill-received, Snow  continued to push Presley  to move toward country, and Hank  was quite overthrow when Parker  took complete mastery of Elvis'  management around 1955. Still,  Snow  ground a way to combat rock & roll -- he recorded some light rockabilly singles himself. "Hula-hula  Rock"  and "Rockin',  Rollin'  Ocean"  were attempts to capture the thump of rock candy & roll out simply dilute with the rhumbas and boogie that made his singles hits during the early '50s. Though  he was experimenting with the new genre, he hadn't deserted country and he continued to regularly chart in the land Top  Ten  until 1965 with hits like "Large  Wheels"  (number seven-spot, 1958), "Miller's  Cave"  (number nine-spot, 1960), "Beggar  to a King"  (er five-spot, 1961), "I've  Been  Everywhere"  (number unitary, 1962), and "Ninety  Miles  an Hour  (Down  a Dead  End  Street)"  (number deuce, 1963).
During  the latter half of the '60s, Snow's  calling slowed down well, as he wasn't able-bodied to name the transition to the raw, heavily orchestrated country-pop sounds, nor was he able to keep tempo with the twangy roll of Bakersfield.  Instead,  his singles placed in the take down reaches of the charts, patch his concerts and Grand  Ole  Opry  appearances continued to be quite popular. It  wasn't until 1974 that some other monster shoot arrived in the form of "Howdy  Love,"  which out of the blue climbed to number one. Instead  of sparking a revitalization, "Hullo  Love"  proven to be a concluding pant; 'tween its dismission in 1974 and 1980, Snow  had only deuce early Top  40 hits, which both arrived the same year as "How-do-you-do  Love."  Despite  his declining record gross revenue, his profile remained heights through and through his concerts and several lifetime-achievement awards, including his induction to the Nashville  Songwriters  International  Hall  of Fame  in 1978 and the Country  Music  Hall  of Fame  in 1979.
In  1981, Snow's  recording career over when RCA  dropped him later a 45-year family relationship. Snow  was very overturn with the label's treatment of him, as intimately as the direction that area music was taking, claiming that "80 percentage of today's land music is a jest and not equip to hear to." He  was as angry that country's roots were being dilute by pop and rock production values. Though  he ne'er recorded once again, Snow  remained active in the Grand  Ole  Opry  into the '90s, and he spent a destiny of clip working for his Foundation  for Child  Abuse.  In  the late '80s, Bear  Family  began a lengthy retrospective of respective multidisc loge sets that chronicled his entire recording career. In  1994, Snow  published his autobiography, The  Hank  Snow  Story.  Late  the following class, he was smitten with a respiratory unwellness, even so he recovered in 1996, reverting to the Grand  Ole  Opry  in August  of that year. Snow  died December  20, 1999, at the eld of 85.