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Artist
As a songwriter, performer, and recording artist, Rex Griffin bridged the gap between Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams -- indeed, it can be said that he bridged the gap between Rodgers and Buddy Holly, and between Rodgers and the Beatles. Griffin was among the first country music stars to record using his own material almost exclusively, and among the least of his accomplishments, one of his songs was covered (albeit without proper credit) by the Beatles. Griffin is the author of the original version of "Everybody's Tryin' to Be My Baby," which Carl Perkins later adapted into his own song, and the Beatles subsequently covered to the profit of all except Griffin, who'd been dead about six years when all of this happened. Griffin is one of those pre-war figures in country music whose legacy has been unjustly overlooked. He had no hits of his own after 1939, although his biggest hit from that year -- "The Last Letter" -- continues to get recorded at the end of the century. He was also a direct inspiration to both Hank Williams (whose recording of "Lovesick Blues" was virtually a copy of Griffin's from ten years earlier) and Lefty Frizzell. One of country music's first singer/songwriters, Griffin was the model for figures including Floyd Tillman, Willie Nelson, and Merle Haggard (and one could even throw Buddy Holly in there). And, like Williams, his personal demons in love and substance abuse brought a premature end -- albeit not as suddenly as Williams' -- to Griffin's perform
American Yodeling

Hillbilly Classics
American Yodeling 1911-1946

The History of Country & Western Music Vol 6
TTRH 3 - 24 - Clearance Sale

American Yodeling 1911 - 1946
The History of Country & Western Music, Volume 6
American Yodeling 1909-1940
The Last Letter
The History Of Country & Western Music
Dixieland Sweetheart
Hillbilly Fever: Vol. 2 - Legends Of Honky Tonk