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1987 Black Gold Festival
Glen
Campbell has performed three concerts at three different locations in Hazard. He
appeared at Daniel Field n 1973, at La Citadell in 1985 and in front of the
Perry County Court House at the Black Gold Festival in 1987. Over the years,
Campbell became friends with L.D. Gorman of Hazard, and it was not uncommon to
see him in the area. You might see Campbell sking at Buckhorn Lake or walking
down the streets of Hazard. Campbell is an old school
country boy who has become one of the most successful stars in the music
business over the course of 25 years. Born in
Delight, Ark., Glen Travis Campbell is the seventh son in a family of 12. Each
of his siblings played an instrument, and Campbell was no exception. He learned
to play a Sears mail-order guitar when he was four years old. By
the age of 14, Campbell had left home to pursue a music career. He landed in
Houston, where he started a three-piece band. Soon after, he moved to
Albuquerque to join his uncle's swing band. There he was exposed to everyone
from the Sons of the Pioneers to such eclectic tastes as the jazz of Django
Reinhardt and Barney Kessell and church choir music. When
Campbell turned 24, he moved to Los Angeles and began working as a session
musician, while occasionally touring with the Champs, who found fame with the
1958 hit "Tequila." Campbell released his first hit, "Turn
Around, Look at Me," on the Crest Label, and quickly signed with Capitol,
where he showcased his bluegrass album, Bit Bluegrass Special. During
this time, Campbell continued to play session work on records by Frank Sinatra,
Nat King Cole, Merle Haggard, Elvis Presley, Ray Charles and the Mamas and the
Papas. He even toured with the Beach Boys in 1965. But
by 1967, Campbell began to make it in his own right. A reworking of a loosely
structured, rambling set of lyrics netted him what was to become his signature
song, "Gentle on My Mind." He followed that hit up with the Jimmy Webb
ballad "By the Time I Get to Phoenix." Never
one to stagnate himself in one medium, Campbell guest hosted the Smothers
Brothers show for a summer in 1968, after which he was offered his own show,
called The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, which ran until 1972. The extra
exposure garnered him even more fame, and throughout the 1970s he released
several more gold singles, including "Galveston" and his signature
song, "Rhinestone Cowboy." Campbell also
made appearances in the motion pictures True Grit and Norwood, and
in 1985, he hosted his own HBO special. By 1987,
Campbell signed with MCA, and released another hit-yielding effort called Still
Within the Sound of My Voice. In recent years,
Campbell has made a journey back to his gospel roots. His last albums came out
on Christian label New Haven Records.
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