Dave Dudley


Dave Dudley was an American country music singer best known for his truck-driving country anthems of the 1960s and 1970s and his somewhat-slurred bass. His signature song was "Six Days on the Road", and he is also remembered for "Vietnam Blues", "Truck Drivin' Son-of-a-Gun", and "Me and Ol' C.B.". His other recordings include a duet with Tom T. Hall, "Day Drinking", and his own top-10 hit, "Fireball Rolled a Seven", supposedly based on the career and death of Edward Glenn "Fireball" Roberts.

Biography

Early life and rise to fame

Born in Spencer, Wisconsin, United States, Dudley's grandparents came from Königsberg in East Prussia, Germany. His father, then a local tavern owner, gave Dudley his first guitar at the age of 11.
Baseball was his first love and in high school he was a standout pitcher. In 1942, the New York Yankees obtained his option. At the time, he was serving in the U.S. Navy in the South Pacific, having convinced his mother to sign his enlistment papers when he was 17. She also signed the baseball option on his behalf. After his military service, his contract was transferred to the Chicago White Sox organization, In April 1948, the White Sox assigned him to their Wisconsin Rapids affiliate for spring training in Hot Springs, Arkansas and was later transferred him to the Gainesville Owls of the Big State League in Texas. After an arm injury abruptly ended his baseball career, he dropped by WTMT in Wausau, Wisconsin and began hosting his, "Texas Stranger Show.", playing Country Western music while also performing on air.
In early 1951, Dudley began performing in taverns across northeastern Wisconsin, usually as part of a trio that worked under a variety of names and lineups. They were billed at different times as Dave Dudley and His Rodeo Riders and Dave Dudley and His Country Caravan before eventually settling on The Dave Dudley Trio.
That May, the group began an 18-week residency at The Flame in Green Bay, Wisconsin, where they performed mostly country-western songs alongside a few numbers from the Hawaiian songbook each night.
By May 1952, they had recorded their first single, “Nashville Blues” backed with “You Don't Care,” a 78 rpm disc released on Pfau Records of Milwaukee,
Dudley continued playing tavern residencies and gradually built a local following. In March 1953, he appeared on WTMJ-TV in Milwaukee, which further boosted his popularity.
In 1955, Dudley signed with King Records, a Cincinnati label recognized for its roster of country, R&B, and early rock ’n’ roll artists. Over the next two years, King released three of his 45 rpm singles. In 1959, National Recording Corporation released his single, "Where's There's a Will"
In 1960, Dudley moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he started performing under the billing, Dave Dudley and the Country Gentlemen. He also began hosting his own radio show again, this time on KEVE in Minneapolis. On December 3, 1960, while packing away his guitar after a performance, he was seriously injured when struck by a car. Following a lengthy recovery, Dudley returned to performing and reached the Top 40 county charts for the first time with “Maybe I Do” in 1961 and “Under Cover of the Night” in 1962.

Height of his career

In 1963, Jimmy C. Newman gave Dudley the demo for "Six Days on the Road." Soon after, while running under time during a recording session, the song was cut unrehearsed and completed on the second take. It was released as a single on Golden Wing Records, a label Dudley had founded using settlement money from his earlier accident. Released in late-April 1963, “Six Days on the Road” became Dave Dudley's breakout hit, roaring up the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and peaking at number two that summer. The only song standing between him and the number-one spot was Johnny Cash's “Ring of Fire,” which dominated the charts at the same time. The record spent 21 weeks on the chart and also crossed over to the pop market, peaking at number 32 on the Billboard Hot 100. One of the first radio stations to play the single was WOKY-AM, a Milwaukee rock station. The song would go on to sell over one million copies.
"It's amazing to hear the record was selling 10,000 copies a day," Dudley later recalled to the Nevada State Journal in 1973. "It's also amazing how many companies will offer you a contract that wouldn't before."
The success of “Six Days on the Road” led to a recording contract with Mercury Records and by the end of 1963, he released his first single from the label, "Last Day in the Mines". Dudley scored more big hits in the 1960s, including "Truck Drivin' Son-of-a-Gun", "Trucker's Prayer", and "Anything Leaving Town Today". "Six Days on the Road" was subsequently recorded by several other artists, including George Thorogood and the Destroyers, Steve Earle, the Flying Burrito Brothers, and Sawyer Brown.
Dudley continued to have success into the 1970s, while continuing to record for Mercury Records. He had some country top 10s in the 1970s, including "Comin' Down" and "Fly Away Again". By the late 1970s, his success on the charts was beginning to fade, although Dudley amassed 33 top-40 country hits.
In 1978, Dudley's name became known to the audience in Germany after the German country band Truck Stop had a single top-10 hit in Germany, titled "Ich möcht’ so gern Dave Dudley hör’n" ("I would like to listen to Dave Dudley so much".

Late career and death

In the 1980s, Dudley continued to record sporadically, and remained popular in concert. During this time, he was elected to the Nashville Teamsters Truck Drivers Union, receiving a solid gold membership card from the union. He also found out that he had a big fan base in Europe, and decided to try to appeal more to this market. Dudley purchased Staples Lake Resort in the mid 1970s, and ran a successful business/resort there until the mid- to late 1980s with wife, Marie. During his ownership, he also sponsored several country music festivals on the property.
In total, Dudley recorded more than 70 albums, but he did not manage to reclaim his past success, and neither his single "Where's That Truck?", recorded with disc jockey Charlie Douglas, nor the track "Dave Dudley, American Trucker", recorded in 2002 in the wake of the September 11 attacks, helped revive his career. Few of his hits have made it onto CDs and albums, creating a market for his vintage vinyl recordings.
Dudley died on December 22, 2003, aged 75, after suffering a heart attack in his car in a parking lot in Danbury, Wisconsin.

Discography

Albums

Singles