|
PEOPLE IN AMERICA - Country
and Western Singer Hank Williams Wrote Songs About Love and Heartbreak
29 April 2006
¡¡
» Download MP3 Audio
¡¡
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
PEOPLE IN AMERICA -- a program in Special English by the Voice of America.
(THEME)
Every week at this time, we tell you a story about people who played a
part in the history of the United States. I'm Tony Riggs. Today, Larry
West and I tell the story of country and western singer and songwriter,
Hank Williams.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
That was the record Hank Williams made when he first tried to interest
recording companies in his music. None of the companies liked it at the
time. But a few years later, the high sharp voice of Hank Williams would
cut like a knife through the music world. When he sang his songs, people
listened. They are still listening, long after his death.
VOICE ONE:
Hank Williams was born in nineteen twenty-three on a small farm near Mount
Olive, Alabama. Like most people at that time in the southern United
States, the Williams family was poor. Hank's father could not work. He had
been injured in World War One. He spent many years in a hospital when Hank
was a boy.
The Williams family did not own many things. But it always had music. Hank
sang in church. When he was eight years old, he got an old guitar and
taught himself to play. From then on, music would be the most important
thing in his life.
VOICE TWO:
By the time Hank was fourteen, he had already put together his own group
of musicians. They played at dances and parties. They also played at a
small local radio station. They were known as "Hank Williams and his
Drifting Cowboys."
For more than ten years, Hank remained popular locally, but wasunknown
nationally. Then, in nineteen forty-nine, he recorded his first major hit
record. The song was "Lovesick Blues."
(MUSIC)
Hank Williams and his group performed "Lovesick Blues" on the stage of the
Grand Ole Opry house in Nashville, Tennessee. People in the theater would
not let him stop singing. They made him sing the song six times. After
years of hard work, Hank Williams had become a star.
VOICE ONE:
Hank wrote many songs in the years that followed. Singers are still
recording them today. They may sing the songs in the country and western
style -- the way Hank wrote them. Or they may sing them in other popular
styles. Either way, the songs will always be his.
Hank Williams wrote both happy songs and sad songs. But the sad songs are
remembered best.
¡¡
 |
|
Hank
Williams |
When Hank sang a sad song,
those who listened knew it was about something that had happened to him.
Somehow, he was able to share his feelings in his music. One of the most
famous of these sad songs is "Your Cheatin' Heart." One music expert said:
"Your Cheatin' Heart" is so sad, it sounds like a judge sentencing
somebody to a punishment worse than death itself.¡±
(MUSIC)
"Your Cheatin' Heart" was written in the early nineteen fifties. It has
been recorded by more than fifty singers and groups in almost every style
of popular music.
VOICE TWO:
Many years after Hank Williams' death, new fans of his music have asked
why he could put so much of his life into his songs. There is no easy
answer to that question.
Hank Williams had many problems during his life. He and his wife Audrey
did not have a happy marriage. Many of his songs seemed to ask: ¡°Why can't
we make this marriage work?¡± Many people knew that when Hank sang this
song, "Cold Cold Heart", he was singing about his wife and their problems.
Those who had similar problems felt that Hank was singing about them, too.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
Hank Williams drank too much alcohol. Those who knew Hank Williams say he
did not have the emotional strength to deal with his problems. They say he
often felt he had no control over his life.
Everything seemed to be moving too fast. He could not stop. And he could
not escape. He had money and fame. But they did not cure his loneliness,
his drinking, or his marriage problems.
Hank was always surrounded by people, especially after he became famous.
None, however, could break through the terrible sadness that seemed to
follow him everywhere. One song, "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry", expresses
his feelings of loneliness.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
When Hank Williams began to record his songs, country and western music
was not popular with most Americans. It was the music of the poor farming
areas of the South. However, because Hank's songs told of real-life
troubles with such great emotion, something unusual began to happen to his
music.
Radio stations that had never played country and western music began to
play Hank Williams' songs. Famous recording stars who never sang country
and western music began recording songs written by Hank Williams. He had
created a collection of music that stretched far past himself and his
times.
Hank Williams' life and career were brief. He died on New Year's Day,
nineteen fifty-three. He was twenty-nine years old.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
You have been listening to PEOPLE IN AMERICA, a program in Special English
by the Voice of America. Your narrators were Larry West and Tony Riggs.
PEOPLE IN AMERICA was written by Paul Thompson.
¡¡
VOAÂýËÙÓ¢ÓïÍø
www.voanews.com.cn |