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Pat
Boone is the SeniorSite expert on music from the '40s, '50s and '60s. He
sold more records in the '50s than any other artist except one - Elvis
Presley.
Besides breaking boundaries in pop music, he starred in 15 motion pictures,
wrote several best selling books and songs, hosted his own TV variety series -
The Chevy Showroom - and became a Magna Cum Laude graduate from Columbia
University.
With his wealth of entertainment knowledge, Pat offers recommendations on
music and movies that will bring back precious memories for you and your
family.
Currently, Pat is not accepting any email correspondence.
» Pat Boone's top picks
for Crooners » Pat Boone's top picks
for The Songbirds and Great Groups of the '50s
» Pat Boone's top picks
for The Big Bands
Pat Boone Background Information
In the years immediately
prior to the British Invasion, only one performer rivaled the chart dominance
of
Elvis
Presley,
and that was Pat Boone. With his trademark white buck shoes, perfectly combed
hair
and gleaming smile, Boone was the very essence of wholesome American values,
and at a time when the rise of rock & roll was viewed as a sign of the
apocalypse, he made the music appear safe and non-threatening, earning
some 38
Top 40 hits in the process.
It's fitting that his achievements rank
closest to those of Presley; after all, both claimed the sound of the black
R&B culture for their own, in the process straddling both sides of the
color line and popularizing a form of music which otherwise might never
have gained
widespread acceptance. Of course, while Elvis -- with his flashy suits,
swiveling hips and suggestive leer - remained persona non grata throughout
many corners of mainstream America, Boone was embraced by teens and parents
alike; his music polished rock's rough edges away, making songs like "Tutti
Frutti" and "Ain't That a Shame" palatable to white audiences
raised on the soothing pop traditions of a vanishing era.
Charles Eugene Patrick Boone was born June 1,
1934 in Jacksonville, Florida; a descendant of American frontier hero Daniel
Boone, he attended high school in Nashville, and was voted student body
president. After graduating, Boone married Shirley Foley, the daughter of
country star Red Foley, and after a period at Nashville's David Lipscomb
College, he transferred to North Texas State University.
There, after taking top honors at a local
talent show, he earned the right to appear on the The Ted Mack Amateur Hour,
leading to a year-long tenure on The Arthur Godfrey Show. In 1954, Boone made
his first recordings for the small Republic label, followed a year later by
his Dot Records debut "Two Hearts, Two Kisses."
As 1955 drew to a close, he notched his first
number one hit, a sedate rendition of Fats Domino's aforementioned "Ain't That
a Shame"; in the years to come he would record numerous cover versions of
songs first credited to black performers, among them Little Richard, the El
Dorados, the Flamingos and Ivory Joe Hunter -- indeed, to the chagrin of
purists, for many listeners Boone's records remain better known than the
original performances.
Between 1956 and 1963, Boone made some 54
chart appearances, many of them with two-sided hits; his biggest smashes
included the number one records "Don't Forbid Me," "Love Letters in the Sand"
and "April Love," all three issued in 1957. That year he also began hosting
his own ABC television series, The Pat Boone-Chevy Showroom; he also conquered
film, starring in 15 features including 1957's Bernadine and April Love.
Although his TV program ceased production in 1960, Boone remained a major star
as the new decade dawned, and in 1961 again topped the charts with "Moody
River." He even became an author, writing a series of self-help books for
adolescents including Twixt Twelve and Twenty, Between You, Me and the
Gatepost and The Care and Feeding of Parents.
Although the rise of Beatlemania put the
brakes on Boone's run as a teen idol -- after 1962, he failed to again crack
the Top 40 -- he continued recording for Dot through the late 1960s, and in
his live performances regularly appeared with his wife and their four
daughters, further reinforcing his family-friendly image. By the 1970s, Boone
had shifted almost exclusively to recording gospel material, although he later
scored a handful of country hits (on, of all places, Motown); in 1977, his
daughter Debby topped the charts with a smash of her own, the wedding
perennial "You Light Up My Life."
In 1981, Boone published Pray to Win, and in
1983 he began hosting a long-lived contemporary Christian syndicated radio
show, all in addition to his extensive charity work. While his recording
career continued to taper off, he did issue "Let Me Live," which became an
anthem for the anti-choice movement. By and large, Boone spent much of the
1980s and 1990s out of the secular media spotlight, but in 1997 he made a
splash with the LP No More Mr. Nice Guy, a tongue-in-cheek collection of
covers of heavy metal tunes like "Smoke on the Water" and "Stairway to
Heaven."
Much of the singer's Christian contingent
failed to get the joke, however, and after Boone appeared at the American
Music Awards clad in black leather and sporting temporary tattoos, he was
dismissed from his Trinity Broadcasting Network program Gospel America.
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