LEE HAZLEWOOD
(9 July 1929 - 4 August 2007)

The Story

Chapitre I |Chapitre II | Chapitre III |Chapitre IV | Chapitre V

Chapitre I

Barton Lee Hazlewood was born on the 9th of July 1929 in the small village of Mannford (Oklahoma) as first child of Gabe and Eva Lee Hazlewood. He has one sister (Sara) who was born in 1935.

His father was an oilman, a so-called wildcatter, and occasionally promoted dances by booking national acts.

One of Lee's earliest memories is of being hoisted up on Bob Wills' shoulders at an appearance booked by his dad.

When Lee was 12 he and his family moved via McClain (Texas), Fort Smith (Arkansas) and Paris (Arkansas) to Port Neches (Texas) in 1943 where Lee attended high school.

In his last year on the Huntsville (Texas) high school he met his future wife Naomi Shackleford. They dated before going off to separate colleges. Naomi went to Sam Houston State College in Huntsville and Lee attended Southern Methodist University in Dallas to study medicine. (It is also said that Lee worked for some time as a projectionist in a cinema and that he studied to become a dentist.) During his study Lee was called to duty in the army. After his basic training in Killeen (Texas) he went to Alaska as a drummer for the 4th Army Division Band. Upon receiving his discharge papers he married Naomi in Port Neches. They have two children Debbie (1954) and Mark (1955). Besides Debbie and Mark Lee has also a step daughter with the name of Samantha from his marriage to Tracy Stewart in 1983.

Lee was again called to duty in the Korean war, where he served as a disc jockey for the military AFRS radio in both Japan and Korea. When he left the army in 1953 he decided to stop his studies and after he and Naomi spent some time in Los Angeles where Lee attended Spears Broadcasting School to hone his disc jockey skills he became a country DJ at KCKY radio in Coolidge (Arizona), a small cotton farming town with a population of around 4.000. Lee earned $40 a week with this job.

 

Lee developed his own on-air style with the help of characters, which he pre-recorded on tape. He talked to them ‘live' on the air. Among them was a Gabby Hayes sound-alike character Lee named Eb X. Preston.

The start of Lee's career in the music industry was in fact caused by the frequent visits to the KCKY radio station in 1994 by the young Duane Eddy, newly arrived from Bath (New York) and whose father worked at the local Safeway store. Duane frequently visited the station to ask if he might relieve them of the excess of country records they received for air-play. Lee stole sufficient records in the following eight months to become fast friends.

The association soon developed into a working one. Duane played guitar on KCKY in a duet with is high school buddy Jimmy Delbridge, on piano. The two had auditioned for Lee at the station singing with a Louvin Brothers harmony vocal style and ended up performing every week for 15 minutes. The duo even formed a band, The Pinal County Twisters and their first job was a show at the Pinal County Fair after much encouragement from mentor Lee Hazlewood. By late 1954 Lee often drove Jimmy and Duane to Phoenix in his 1952 Pontiac convertible for Saturday night country music shows at Madison Square Garden. At these concerts Lee and Duane met 17 year old Al Casey who was playing steel guitar in the house band, The Sunset Riders.

From 1953 on Lee also had been working on his song writing skills while learning the broadcasting business. So his first song registered with BMI was ‘Four bell love alarm' in November of that year. In mid 1955 the trio drove to Ramsey's Recorders in Phoenix for Lee's first try as a producer to record his compositions ‘I want some lovin' baby' and ‘Soda fountain girl'. Hazlewood paid $150 for the custom pressings on the Preston label through Four Star Records in Los Angeles.

In 1955 he started as a DJ at KRUX radio in Phoenix, Arizona after he had been fired by KCKY in Coolidge the day before.

By the end of 1955 he would be pressing and promoting his new Viv label releases and writing his first hit and so his career of writing, arranging, producing, performing and talent discovery started. A career that would last even until 2002 when he performed live in the major European cities and issued two new albums based on demos of the last 25 years.

Lee is very reclusive and lives like a bohemian. Between 1968 and today he changed homes between California, London, Paris, Stockholm, Hamburg, Helsinki, Ireland, Spain, Las Vegas, Phoenix (AZ), Texas and Florida but currently he and his wife Jeane Kelley live in Henderson nearby Las Vegas (Nevada).

In 2005 the doctors diagnosed renal cancer and Lee was undergoing heavy surgery to remove one of his kidneys. Nevertheles in 2006 he made recordings with old friends for his final (?) solo album issued in 2006 titled 'Cake or Death'.

On August 4, 2007 came the sad news that Lee has died at the age of 78 and lost the three year struggle with cancer.

Chapitre II

Lee Hazlewood started his own Viv Record label and Debra Publishing Company in Phoenix in 1955. The Viv name was taken from a popular cosmetic line favored by his wife Naomi. He operated out of his home on 11th Drive. With the help of Ray Odom he recorded the singers he met at Madison Square Gardens in Phoenix and used the house band The Sunset Riders as the backing band. Their leader, Al Casey, should make several records for Highland, M.C.I. and Stacy Records under the guidance of Lee.

The first artist signed was Jimmy Spellman on September 19th, 1955 with Duane Eddy as witness. "In those days Lee was looking for an outlet to get his songs recorded. He even tried to let Frankie Laine use his songs" as Al Casey recalls.

By the end of 1955 his house was full of boxes of 78's and 45's on the white and black Viv label featuring singers like Jimmy Spellman, Jimmy Johnson and Loy Clingman. (These songs and much more can be heard on the 3CD boxed set 'Phoenix Panorama - The Viv labels' issued in Germany in 1995 by Bear Family Records on BCD 15824 CI)

By the start of 1956 there were not only more sessions for the Viv label but also Lee's new composition ‘The fool'. As Al Casey recalls: "Lee always said that it was just a country song, but with the guitar lick it changed the sound. I had been listening to a guy with the name of Hubert Sumlin on Howlin' Wolf's classic record ‘Smokestack lightning'. I just altered it a little for ‘The fool' and all of a sudden it wasn't country anymore. It surprised everybody, Lee most of all". Casey suggested to Lee that his friend since grade school, Sanford Clark, could do justice to his song.

Sanford was born on October 24 in 1935 in Tulsa, Oklahoma and moved to Phoenix, Arizona when he was 9 years old. He advised Lee to go and listen to him at the Phoenix auditorium. Lee liked what he heard and just a week later he took Sanford and Al Casey into Floyd Ramsey's tiny studio in Phoenix to record ‘The fool'. The other sessionists were Corky Casey (Al's wife) on acoustic rhythm guitar, Jimmy Wilcox on bass and Connie Conway on drums.

As Viv was a country oriented label, in March 1956 Lee made a deal with the owners (Jimmy Wilcox, Connie Conway and Floyd Ramsey) of the small M.C.I. label, which leased office space next to Ramsey's Recorders, to release his new composition in return for half of the possible publishing income.

The primitive studio could be compared to the now legendary Sun studio in Memphis, Tennessee. It was only 6 by 12 feet and a home built facility for demonstration sessions. In 1957 Floyd should open the legendary Audio Recorders studio nearby where he created an echo sound by installing a metal grain tank for an echo chamber. They had to stop recording when it rained or if a bird landed on it.

Lee credited the folk-flavored ballad ‘The fool' to his wife Naomi Shackleford under the name of Naomi Ford because he was concerned that as a disc jockey he could get into trouble playing his records on the station. The song was a mixture of the things Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash did but somewhat different. It had a strong air of mystery about it and Sanford's flat, laconic voice permitted the lyrics to stand out as Casey played screaming guitar counterpoint of his Gretsch Country Club guitar. For the drum beat they used a little piece of split bamboo, that was laying out in the street and beat it on the guitar case. They could not get the sound off the drums so they hit the hard shell guitar case. They did more than 100 takes with Casey's deep guitar sound and Sanford's ‘echoey' voice before Lee was satisfied. One wonders how much Elvis' ‘Mystery train' and ‘Heartbreak hotel', which has just entered the charts, influenced Lee Hazlewood's concept of how his song should sound. He told his friends later he was surprised when it got popular air play. The grain tank echo was months away but the basic sound was there that would become the Lee Hazlewood trademark for the next few years. This session marked the real beginning of the under-rated Phoenix music scene.

In May 1956 the song was issued with ‘Lonesome for a letter', a conscious steal of the Presley sound, on the B-side (M.C.I. 1003). Some 500 promotional records were sent to the radio stations but it went nowhere until the Cleveland DJ Bill Randall of radio station WERE liked it enough to send it to Randy Wood, president of Dot Records. They called M.C.I. in Phoenix and made a deal with Lee. Sanford signed with Dot Records, passing on bids from Coral and Decca. Dot re-released ‘The fool' and by August 1956 it hit number 7 on Billboard's pop charts and sold for more than 800.000 copies.

They needed a follow up single and the next session on June 9 produced three extremely different tracks: ‘Don't care', ‘Usta be my baby' and ‘Why did I ever choose you'. Only ‘Usta be my baby' was released but as a flip side of ‘A cheat' which was recorded in October 1956. ‘A cheat' deserved a better fate than it received. It had that same dark air of mystery ‘The fool' had. At the same session they cut the unissued records ‘Don't cry', a teen ballad, and ‘Ain't nobody here but us chicken'. ‘Don't cry' was recorded by Lee himself and issued on the Smash label.in 1961 as the flip side of 'Della'.

By this time Lee, with the help of singer Donnie Owens had moved to radio station KTYL, working the morning drive shift. He was playing more early rock, much to the delight of the students at Arizona State College in Tempe. But the time he needed for song writing, managing and producing would soon put an end to his career as a disc jockey. At the same time the Viv label was becoming a financial drain and Lee was looking for new cash to keep the business going. The first checks for ‘The fool' were months away, so for a $3,000 loan singer Loy Clingman became 1/3 co-owner of Viv/Debra in May 1956.

As Duane Eddy continued high school in Coolidge the young Al Casey became Lee's unofficial musical director. Lee added the credit 'Al Casey, guitar' on the Viv sides as well as on ‘The fool'. Al Casey says: "That was unheard of in those days, it was very nice of him because he certainly didn"t have to do it. No one else was and he did".

In fact the next M.C.I. release after ‘The fool' was Casey's version of ‘The pink panther', written and produced by Lee in July 1956.

Around this time Lee produced a black group, The Tads, performing a soulful version of ‘The pink panther' for the local Liberty Bell label owned by Floyd Ramsey.

Lee knew the more versions of a song, the better the chances for air play and publishing income. In October Lee leased the tape to Dot and that same month Clark's second single, ‘A cheat', was released and it was shortly followed by Casey's two-sided instrumental ‘A fool's blues' and ‘Juice'. By the end of 1956 the money for ‘The fool' started coming in and Lee knew that his writing, publishing and producing efforts were going to pay the bills.

The publishing arrangement with Dot paid him 1½ cent, of which Lee took 1 cent as the writer and ½ cent was split 50/50 between Debra and Desert Palms (M.C.I.'s publishing company). Lee must have been feeling positive about the music business as he purchased his own subscription to ‘Billboard' magazine in December.

Lee hired his own promotion man, John Garton in Los Angeles, to work his releases. He secured a release of the Debra copyright, ‘Why did I choose you', for a Pat Boone EP and in January 1957 Dot offered him a non-exclusive producer position in their R&B division. By March 1957 the Hazlewood family moved to the West Coast and Lee got an office on Melrose Avenue.

As Lester Sill recalls: "In the mid ‘50s I was in business with Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller and we had an office on Melrose with rehearsal rooms and a small demo studio. When Leiber and Stoller decided to move to New York I had this office by myself with eight months left on the lease. I ran into John Garton at the Galety Deli and knew he was a promoter of sorts. One day he comes to the office and asked for the office in return for paper and telephone work. Some weeks after he started he said that he had a friend who was going to work for Dot Records and needed an office. That was the first time I met Lee. He had just gone to work for Randy Wood.

He was looking for money to go to Phoenix and record a couple of acts and I had a good relationship with the Bihari Brothers at Modern Music so I went over and talked to them and they gave me $800 for, I think, eight sides. Lee and I got to Phoenix and that's when we got together. I met Duane Eddy, Al Casey, Bob Taylor and Buddy Wheeler.

Before we took the trip Lee and I formed Gregmark Publishing. My son was Greg and Lee's was Mark. Lee was working for Dot and wanted to keep as much of his publishing as possible and Randy Wood didn't mind.

So we started putting records out on other labels that Dot passed on but we had the publishing". This was the birth of Sill-Hazlewood Productions. Now Lee had someone to do the day-to-day business while he could focus on writing and producing.

One of the first artists signed was Loy Clingman in April 1957, the same month that Dot released his recording of ‘It's nothing to me', written by Pat Patterson (Leon Payne) and published by Gregmark. The Coasters, who were managed by Lester at the time had a big R&B hit with their version. With the Modern Music connection Lee had a steady outlet for his compositions. The Barker Brothers covered his ‘Hey little mama' and B.B. King recorded ‘Don't look now but I've got the blues', both for the Kent label in early 1958. Don Cole made a smoking recording of ‘Snake eyed mama' with Al Casey on piano for the RPM label and ‘Saturday night party time' for Kent. Al Casey had his own release on Liberty with Lee's ‘She gotta shake'.

Lee Hazlewood had a group of players that could play until he was satisfied. The basic team of players was Al Casey on guitar, bass, piano; the late Donnie Owens on rhythm guitar; Buddy Wheeler on electric bass; Jim Simmons on acoustic bass and Bob Taylor on drums.

Shortly after the release of ‘The fool' Lee told Floyd Ramsey he needed a better echo effect like that of the Los Angeles studios. They located a few grain tanks locally and Casey remembers tagging along with Floyd and Lee. "Lee yelled into each tank listening for the right sound". They bought a tank for $200 and placed it outside the tiny studio. The engineer, Ray Stouffer, put a microphone and a small speaker inside the tank to produce a second source of echo that they could mix with the tape recorder echo. As Ramsey recalls: "I didn't have the cash at the time and I told Lee that I would give him $300 worth of studio time if he would loan me the money". Ray Stouffer left shortly after setting the whole thing up and Jack Miller took over the engineering at Ramsey\'s Recorders.

"The first time I met Lee I had just been hired by Floyd at Ramsey's Recorders but I was working next door at Ramsey's Radio and Television in the repair shop. Floyd called me up at home and said we have a session here tomorrow and I'd like you to do it. I said ‘O.K.' and showed up the next morning. I was in the studio with Floyd when the lady singer showed up and she had a little poodle with her. I don't remember her name and shortly after Lee comes in. Lee said ‘who's this' and Floyd said ‘this is my assistant engineer Jack Miller' to which Lee replied ‘The only thing I hate more than assistant engineers are damn poodles'. That was my first impression of Lee".

With the success of ‘The fool' came more business and Ramsey did new investments in his little studio with new equipment and construction. Ramsey's stayed busy with the commercial demands of local advertising agencies. They were also cutting all the master lacquers for the Wakefield Pressing plant.

The months Lee spent at Dot were very frustrating for the productive Arizona transplant. During 1957 most of his creative efforts were released on other labels. "Dot never put out anything I wanted to for a year", Lee says. "When I played Duane for Randy Wood he said it sounded like someone trying to string wire across the Grand Canyon".

To settle a dispute over ‘The fool' publishing royalties, Loy Clingman became 100% owner of the Viv/Debra assets by the middle of the year 1957 and Lee's direct involvement was over. He still received royalties on the songs he wrote for Debra Music however. Later Clingman would find new partners, build a studio and sign a new roster of singers to the Viv label. Randy Wood had his own ideas about the type of music he wanted to be issued by Dot. He wanted Sanford to make recordings in the Pat Boone style but he did not like that.

Al Casey who later on worked with Randy Wood on his Ranwood label to do the 'Exotic Guitars' pop instrumental LP's says Wood felt he could get more sales by drawing on straight pop tunes. Late 1956 and early 1957 the final Phoenix sessions for Dot Records produced Lee's excellent composition ‘Ooo baby' and a credible version of Merle Travis' ‘Nine pound hammer'. Most of the Hollywood sessions, which started in March 1957, produced many unissued songs which were issued for the first time in 1986 in Germany by Bear Family Records. They are a curious mix of excellent songs that should have been issued before and nondescript material.

Even with Randy Wood's experiments Sanford made some excellent recordings such as 'Lou be doo', a slick rocker with a smooth vocal chorus and a hot saxophone solo, 'A cross eyed alley cat', which is an example of the strong influence Sanford had on Ricky Nelson. ‘Love charms' was close to ‘The fool'/'A cheat' style.

In November 1957 Sanford recorded Lee's ‘The man who made an angel cry', which was done in that Johnny Cash style. The final song Lee and Sanford recorded for Dot was ‘Travelin' man', a song with a sloppy out-of-tune vocal chorus. In early 1958 they signed with Jamie Records, the label for which Lee produced also Al Casey's friend Duane Eddy's ‘Rebel rouser' and ‘Forty miles of bad road'. In May Lee and Sanford went back to Floyd Ramsey's audio recorders in Phoenix to record ‘Still as the night' and ‘Sing ‘em some blues' with Duane playing his twangy lead guitar. It did not become a commercial success however.

In the spring of 1959 ‘Bad luck' and ‘My jealousy' were issued and again they were no successful. At the next session in May of that year two of Lee's compositions were recorded namely 'New kind of fool', which was a new attempt to cash in on the ‘Fool' formula, and ‘Run boy run'. Especially ‘Run boy run' could have been successful but the time it was brought out was not chosen well as did Lee's composition ‘Son of a gun' recorded in October 1959.

The last session for Jamie took place on March 17, 1960 and was interesting for the growling distorted guitar sound Al Casey developed. As Al explains "Lee knew a guy who worked at a radio station and he built a little box for that. This happened before all the fuzz tones. We were trying to get a good, nice clean sound. Lee wanted the distorted sound."

The Jamie recordings were all commercial failures. A few however reached the lower part of the Billboard charts but did not get the attention they earned.

When Sanford left Jamie he made two records for respectively the Trey and Project label both owned by Lee in 1961 and 1962. The latter is a much sought after item by the collectors of Sanford's records. These were not a commercial success.

Lee and Sanford tried again at Warner Brothers Records in 1964 and 1965 and released two singles.

In 1965 he nearly had a hit recording of Lee's composition 'Houston'. This country-folk flavored number, which Lee himself included on his ‘Friday's child' album in 1964, caused some bitterness to Sanford after Dean Martin covered it that year and released it on Reprise. Lee produced it for Dean and the DJ's quitted playing Sanford's version. However it was a number one hit in Texas. As Sanford declares he and Lee are still friends though he is still clearly stung by lost opportunity. In 1966 Sanford signed with the Floyd Ramsey owned Ramco Records and released 5 singles between 1966 and 1968. The first recording was a remake of 'The fool' called 'The fool 66' with the former Ramco artist Waylon Jennings playing the leading guitar role.

As Sanford says: "I knew Waylon before he ever cut a record. Ramco wanted to try something else and I could not get the sound there. Floyd Ramsey's son produced those sides and they were just looking for another fluke like 'The fool'. They cut twelve sides and that fluke never materialized". Lee and Sanford stayed in touch and Sanford made some records for Lee's LHI (Lee Hazlewood Industries) label. Sanford was not pleased with the sessions he did for the label. "Lee would call me from Los Angeles and find out the keys I would do so and so in. He'd send me the music and stuff and I'd call him and tell him the key and they'd already have the tracks cut and then what they would do is add something later on and that's one reason they felt they didn't work. They just weren't live".

In 1969 however he insisted on recording an album for the LHI label titled 'Return of the fool' that reflected what he wanted instead of material Lee sent him. As he says: "I decided I'm gonna do some things I'd want to do. We just listened to tapes in his office. I had the very first cut of ‘Hickory Holler's tramp' just like with 'Houston' but we just couldn't get it out in time and I just knew that it was a hit". Unfortunately, singer O.C. Smith had the hit in 1968, what caused another bitter pill.

He has not stopped recording then. In 1982 he got back in Lee's own Criterion studio in Los Angeles with Lee and Al Casey and recorded amongst others some of Lee's compositions like 'A taste of you' and 'Feathers'. They were never released and Sanford sent them to Lee's former partner Lester Sill, who was at Screen Gems Music at the time, but nothing happened. Finally he sent two tracks to Nashville and released them on his own Desert Sun label though without any major success.

It caused a bitter disappointment to Sanford both emotionally as financially. In 1993 Bear Family Records in Germany released the 1982 recordings on a CD.

Chapitre III

Lee had his own idea of a guitar sound and wanted to achieve a strong, low, full and swinging tone corresponding with the low piano tones played by Eddie Duchin several years ago. The guitar should be the voice of the otherwise instrumental pieces and he started experimenting echoes on country sounds with session guitarist Al Casey.

But Al Casey wanted to play like his great idol Chet Atkins and was in no way ready to accommodate Lee's ideas. They split up but not before Al introduced his rhythm guitarist's name of Duane Eddy into the conversation. Lee arranged a studio session and since Duane wasn't so set in his ways as Casey, Lee had precisely the right man he wanted.

Duane Eddy was born on 26th of April 1938 in Corning (New York State) and moved with his family to Coolidge (Arizona). He was given his first guitar at the age of five and with much encouragement from his father Lloyd, who was a musician himself, he learned to pick all the country songs he heard on the local radio.

By the age of thirteen he was playing guitar in local bands and at seventeen he teamed up with his fellow school pal Jimmy Delbridge and appeared at local dances in and around Coolidge, Arizona. The pair made their radio debut on radio KCKY in Coolidge with a regular Saturday evening spot featuring mainly country songs. In 1956 the pair made their progression to television appearing on KTVK in Phoenix, Arizona on their own show called 'The Hit Parade'.

Such was their success that many fans demanded a record release, so Jimmy and Duane together with Buddy Long & The Western Melody Boys went along to Audio Recorders in Phoenix and cut a song written by Lee titled ‘Soda fountain girl', which was issued on Preston (212) in the Phoenix area only in 1956.

After speculating with several groups Duane finally ended up with Al Casey. Casey's band toured the so-called nightclub circuit playing throughout the small clubs in California. Duane played rhythm guitar in this band and the repertoire consisted mainly of country and western, some rhythm and blues and populair hits of the time. Amongst the pop hits naturally were rock and roll songs but Duane's great preference at that time was for C & W pieces. It was inconceivable at that time he would become a great rock and roll guitarist.

Duane's next 'recording' was ‘Ramrod' backed with ‘Caravan'. The record was only issued on the Ford (500) label in Arizona in 1957. In this way he moved away from the pure country sounds. Although all credits were given to Duane it was in fact Al Casey who played on these sides and certainly not Duane.

He could finally identify himself with the ideas of Lee in developing the technique of playing a deep twangy sound on the bottom strings of the instrument. They recognized the commer cial potential. So the first single titled ‘Moovin' 'n' groovin'‘ as produced. Lee however could not sell it to the big record companies. They did not believe in instrumental hits and gave all their interest on rock and roll singers. It was the heyday of Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Buddy Holly, Eddie Cochran and Jerry Lee Lewis. Besides, there were sundry singers of dreamy ballads like Dion & The Belmonts, Frankie Avalon and Johnny Tillotson. On the country scene Chet Atkins was king of the guitar and other guitarists were given no chance.

Therefore Lee had to try his luck with the smaller companies and finally he leased it to Jamie Records, a Philadelphia company which occupied itself mainly with rhythm and blues repertoire. The Jamie company had already had local hits but the big business was to come with Duane, as artist and Lee, as resident producer. 'Moovin' 'n' groovin'' was released in 1958 with as the B-side 'Up and down', which was already produced by Duane and Lee. Within a short time the record was a local hit followed by a national hit and climbed into the official Billboard charts.

The 'twangy' guitar sound had excited attention but Lee and Duane discussed a follow-up which became a joint composition: 'Rebel rouser'. This became the first real hit single for Duane and was a top ten hit in the US in the summer of 1958. Some months later it even got the attention in Europe.

Lee and Duane then decided to form a backing group to make tours and TV appearances. Since Duane had got on well, both socially and professionally with the old members of the Al Casey band, it was a natural progression to take over the hardly altered band. They agreed to call themselves 'The Rebels' in dedication to 'Rebel rouser' and so the label credits them Duane Eddy, his 'twangy' guitar & The Rebels. Al Casey (piano), his wife Corky (rhythm guitar), Buddy Wheeler (bass guitar), the late Steve Douglas (sax) and Mike Bermani (drums) became members of Duane's band for recording sessions. The touring Rebels consisted however of Steve Douglas (sax), Ike Clanton (rhythm guitar) and Mike Bermani (drums). But these line-ups changed over the years.

After Duane played 'Ramrod' on the Dick Clark TV show as an encore the Jamie Record company received lots of enquiries about the track and so the Al Casey composition with as B-side 'The walker' were selected as the follow-up single to the superhit 'Rebel rouser'. To cash in immediately on the success of 'Rebel rouser' Lee took Al Casey's original 'Ramrod' version (Ford label) and re-arranged it. He made a longer version and added the saxophone and the backing group The Sharps (later to become The Rivingtons of 'Pa pa oom wah wah' hit fame). For the flip side Lee took the backing track for 'She gotta shake' by Al Casey but it is not clear if and to what extent Duane was involved.

The 'Frantic' Johnny Rogers issue came about because as part of the deal when Jamie signed Duane was that all of the material that Lee had produced in previous months was handed over to Jamie Records.

The people at Jamie were tied up with George Goldner, who was a very powerful person on the East Coast at that time, and when he saw what Jamie did with 'Ramrod' he realized he had the basic Ford track and rushed that out to beat Lee and Jamie's version on to the market.

The B-side of the 'Frantic' Johnny Rogers single is an The Sharps vocal called 'Sassy' which was re-released on Lee's own Gregmark label as by the S & H Scamps in the year 1960. The characters S and H stand for (Lester) Sill and (Lee) Hazlewood. 'Ramrod' really became a hit for Duane even though it didn't achieve the high chart placing as 'Rebel rouser'.

Successes that followed were ‘Cannonball' (1958), ‘The lonely one' (1959), ‘Yep!' (1959), 'Forty miles of bad road' (1959), ‘The quiet three' (1959), 'First love, first tears' (1959), ‘Some kind-a earthquake' (1959), ‘Bonnie came back' (1960), ‘Shazam' (1960), ‘Because they're young' (1960), ‘Kommotion' (1960), ‘Peter Gunn' (1960), ‘Pepe' (1961), ‘Theme from Dixie' (1961), ‘Ring of fire' (1961), ‘Driving home' (1961) and ‘My blue heaven' (1961) on Jamie and ‘Deep in the heart of Texas' (1962), ‘Ballad of Paladin' (1962), ‘(Dance with the) Guitar man' (1962), ‘Boss guitar' (1963), ‘Lonely boy, lonely guitar' (1963) and 'Your baby's gone surfin'' (1963) on RCA Victor. Nearly all the Jamie and RCA Victor recordings were (co-)produced by Lee. He also produced the Reprise and Colpix albums for Duane.

In 1977 Duane was back in the charts with the classic 'You are my sunshine' backed with 'From eight to seven' on Elektra records. It was the last record Lee produced for Duane Eddy and featured on the A-side vocals by Duane's wife Deed Abbate together with Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson.

Lee influenced Phil Spector who became famous with the so-called Spector ‘wall of sound' and worked also with Jack Nitzsche. He founded the Gregmark recording company with Lester Sill. Other labels Lee founded were Trey, East West and LHI (Lee Hazlewood Industries) but they became unsuccessful.

From 1961 till 1964 he produced records with the Paris Sisters, a singing trio from San Francisco, Dean Martin who decided to record twoof Lee's compositions, the worldwide hit success 'Houston' and the minor hit 'Shades' and drummer Hal Blaine who recorded some of his compositions for his singles and 1963 album 'Deuces, 'T's', roadsters and drums'. From 1964 till 1966 Lee produced at the request of producer Jimmy Bowen of Reprise Records hits for another trio with the names of Dino (son of Dean Martin), Desi (son of Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball) and Billy (Hinsche). They charted with singles like 'I'm a fool' and 'Not the lovin' kind'. Lee produced four albums for Dino, Desi & Billy: 'I'm a fool' (1965), 'Our times are coming' (1966), 'Memories are made of this' (1966) and 'Souvenir' (1966).

Because of the British rock groups invasion in the sixties Lee decided to retire from the music business at the age of 35. He considered the work The Beatles and other British groups performed as a step ten years back in time. Later on his opinion changed and he considered e.g. The Beatles and The Rolling Stones ten years ahead of our times.

As a new challenge and maybe to fight back against the British rock invasion Lee started to help Nancy Sinatra on her singing career in 1965. Nancy (Sandra) Sinatra was born on the 8th of June 1940 in Jersey City, N.J. and began to start making records on father Frank's Reprise label in 1961. In the US she was quite unsuccessful with songs like 'Cuff links and a tie clip' and 'Like I do' but in many countries these songs were highly appreciated reaching high chart positions. Jimmy Bowen and Mo Ostin of Reprise Records asked Lee to work with Nancy to help salvage her career and after being convinced in a meeting with Nancy and Frank Sinatra Lee signed.

Lee lowered her singing voice a key and a half to make her voice sound more impressive and produced a string of hits for her on Reprise records that started off with the minor hit single 'So long, babe' in 1965. Soon they hitted the charts firmly with the sensational 'These boots are made for walkin'' (1966) which reached a number 1 position in the US and many other countries.

The following hits include amongst others 'Sugar town' (no. 5 in the US Billboard in 1966), 'How does that grab you, darlin'?', 'Jackson', a duet with Lee that reached a no. 14 position in the US in 1967 and 'Did you ever?' on RCA Victor which was a success in the UK in 1971 (no.2 position). Nine albums of Nancy Sinatra produced by Lee for Reprise records were in the charts in the years 1966 till 1969 such as 'These boots are made for walkin'' (1966), 'How does that grab you?' (1966), 'Nancy in London' (1966), which includes the 'Summer wine' duet with Lee, 'Sugar' (1966), 'Country my way' (1967), which includes the duets 'Jackson' and 'Oh, lonesome me' with Lee, 'Movin' with Nancy' (the soundtrack of a TV programme with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Lee), 'Nancy' and 'Greatest hits'.

The LP 'Nancy and Lee' contains only duet songs and reached a no. 13 position in the US in 1968. Lee and Jimmy Bowen were also involved in the production of 'Something stupid', a duet recording of Frank and Nancy Sinatra released as a single on Reprise records.

On his LHI label Lee issued a historical and legendary album that was produced by Suzi Jane Hokom in the early part of 1967 and nowadays is a collector's item. It became the first ever country-rock recording made by The International Submarine Band consisting of Gram Parsons (guitar and vocal), John Nuese (guitar), Bob Buchanan (guitar and vocals) and John Corneal (drums). Also playing on the album were session men Glen Campbell, Chris Ethridge, Earl Ball (piano) and J.D. Maness (pedal steel guitar).

The album titled 'Safe at home' was not released until April 1968 by which time the International Submarine Band had broken up and were not around to promote it. Gram Parsons was very disappointed and started another project under the name of the OD's before he was introduced to Roger McGuinn of The Byrds in the same month the 'Safe at home' album was released. Gram took lead vocals on many of the tracks of the Byrds album 'Sweetheart of the Rodeo' but Lee Hazlewood, who had still Gram Parsons under contract, insisted that they be taken off. So the vocals were done by the Byrds members Chris Hillman or Roger McGuinn.

chapitre IV

Lee composed the music score for the 20th Century Fox movie 'Tony Rome' in 1967. In this movie picture Frank Sinatra played a cameo role. He also scored the music for the unsuccessful Warner/Seven Arts movie picture 'The cool ones' (1967). Singer and session guitarist Glen Campbell was one of the actors. This film includes the well-known song ‘This town' which had many interpreters such as Frank Sinatra, Nancy Sinatra, Duane Eddy and Lee himself.

In the rock and roll movie ‘Because they're young' (1960) Duane Eddy had a role and played with The Rebels the title song and ‘Shazam!', which was co-written by Duane and Lee.

Lee was an actor himself in three movies. In the film ‘The moonshine war' (1970) he got a role together with well-known stars like Patrick McGoohan and Alan Alda (See photo on right side).

The soundtrack album was released on the small Swedish Viking label and contains eight vocal tracks by Joe Cannon and two instrumental tracks. Six compositions are by Lee Hazlewood. This album is a hard to obtain item now.

His last film role came in 1975 in another TAX movie 'A house safe for tigers' (Må vårt hus förskonas från tigrar) written by Torbjörn Axelman. The soundtrack was released on CBS in 1975 and today a hard to get item too. From 1968 till the end of the 70's Lee did many appearances on Swedish TV amongst them: 'Love and other crimes' (1968), an appearance in 'Timmen' (1968), 'Cowboy in Sweden' (1970), 'Requiem for an almost lady' (1971), 'The N.S.V.I.P.'s' (1973), 'Nancy & Lee in Las Vegas' (1973).

Chapitre V

None of the early hits have been written for Lee himself. That does not mean that Lee is not a singer. Besides his work with record producing, talent discovery and songwriting he's a singer too. His first recording ‘Five more miles to Folsom' dates from the middle of the fifties and was ssued for the first time in 1995 on the German Bear Family 3CD box ‘Phoenix Panorama - The Viv labels'. From 1958 dates 'Pretty Jane'. This Jamie recording is backed with 'Want me'. The labels credit the songs to Mark Robinson but in reality this is Lee. From these nice rockabilly styled songs has been made a re-issue on the TeeGee and Bison Bop labels.

The backing band consists of Duane Eddy (lead guitar) and other members of The Rebels. In 1960 Lee again recorded two songs for the Jamie label, namely 'The girl on death row' from the motion picture 'Why must I die?', which was originally written for Sanford Clark but was never issued and 'Words mean nothing'. Again Duane Eddy and The Rebels do the instrumental backings.

Two nowadays scarce recordings have been cut by him in 1961 on the Smash label called 'Della' and 'Don't cry (no more)'.

His first album, 'Trouble is a lonesome town' which is on the Mercury label, dates from 1963. In the liner notes Jack Tracy describes the album "as significant a chunk of Americana as has been written in many years". It includes 'Son of a gun' and 'Run boy run' which are two of Lee's compositions for and originally recorded by Sanford Clark. The town Lee describes as 'Trouble' might resemble his birth-place Mannford, Oklahoma. The songs with the sensitive accompaniment of Bill Riley on harmonica and Billy Strange on guitar are related to the spoken narrative introductions.

The album from which there are versions with a book cover had been issued in Europe on the London label. A re-issue with a tasteful book cover on Lee's own LHI (Lee Hazlewood Industries) label was out in 1969.

Lee also appears on the Mercury and Capitol recordings by the Los Angeles based group The Shacklefords, named after his first wife's family name of Shackleford. Besides some single records they cut two albums.

In 1963 they recorded 'Until you've heard The Shacklefords you ain't heard nothin' yet' with instrumental backing by James Burton, Al Casey, Billy Strange and Hal Blaine amongst others.

In 1964 Lee signed to Reprise and made another album in the style of 'Trouble' titled 'The N.S.V.I.P.'s'. The guitar playing behind Lee was now done by Al Casey. This album was re-issued in Western Germany in 1969. However the information on the cover shows some incorrect information.

In 1965 the album 'Friday's child' was issued, which includes the Dean Martin chart success 'Houston', the Sanford Clark hit 'The fool' and 'I'm blue' which was penned by Mirriam Johnson, Duane's wife who later on started a singing career as Jessi Colter and married Waylon Jennings.

A nine tracks budget re-issue of this album was made for Harmony records in 1968.

In 1966 Lee again changed record company and signed to MGM. In the same year two albums were issued: 'The very special world of Lee Hazlewood' and 'Lee Hazlewoodism, its cause and cure'. They contain some songs that were originally written for Nancy Sinatra ('These boots are made for walkin'', 'So long, babe' and 'In our time') and Dino, Desi and Billy ('Not the lovin' kind'). The songs on these two albums were conducted by Billy Strange and feature Suzi Jane Hokom on three tracks.

In 1967 Lee presented the bizarre and exotic '98% American Mom & Apple Pie 1929 Crash Band' album issued on his own LHI label. The album is filled with eleven instrumental versions of his own compositions like 'Summer wine', 'These boots are made for walkin'' and 'Houston'. This much sought after item is a unique concept because of the unusual instruments (e.g. Al Casey played kazoo) and the way Lee arranged these chart toppers.

The last album Lee made for MGM in 1968 is titled 'Something special' containing a mixture of songs that were written for artists like Dean Martin ('Shades') and Nancy Sinatra ('This town') and own songs from which some have an autobiographical character ('Mannford, Oklahoma', which describes his town of birth and 'Fort Worth' (Texas) near Dallas where Lee attended Southern Methodist University). The orchestra was again conducted by Billy Strange and can be considered magnificent and therefore it is hard to believe that the album was shelved in the US by MGM and was only issued in Germany. It is one of that really hard to find albums. The cover lacks info on the session personnel but without doubt Don Randi can be heard on keyboards.

In this period a number of compilation albums such as 'This is Lee Hazlewood' and 'These boots are made for walkin'' were issued by MGM.

In 1968 Lee then switched again to Reprise Records which was the company he produced records for and did some successful duets with Nancy Sinatra in 1967 and 1968 as a follow-up to her personal hits. Songs like 'Summer wine', 'Lady bird', ‘Some velvet morning' and ‘Sand' reached high chart placing nearly all over the world. From these hit songs the famous ‘Nancy & Lee' compilation album was made that reached a high position in the US album charts in 1968. This now can be considered as a standard album. The songs were again conducted by Billy Strange.

In the years 1967/1968 Lee recorded also some songs that only were released on 7 inch vinyl such as 'Summer wine' for MGM Records that featured Suzi Jane Hokom, the Bobbie Gentry cover 'Ode to Billie Joe' and the powerful 'Rainbow woman' backed with the beautiful and moody 'I am, you are', the latter being a tribute to his daughter Debbie. Both songs are issued on Reprise Records and produced by Suzi Jane Hokom. The next outing on wax by Lee was the superb album 'Love and other crimes' which was done in association by Jack Robinson in Paris in 1968. His wife Naomi, two children Mark and Debbie and the following session musicians accompanied him on this trip: Don Randi (piano), James Burton (electric guitar), Chuck Berghofer (bass), Hal Blaine (drums) and Donnie Owens (rhythm guitar). All songs are done in a bluesy way and the album contains own compositions and cover versions such like ‘Morning dew' and ‘The house song', the latter of Peter, Paul & Mary fame. The album's front cover shows a poor quality photo of Lee that contrasts strongly with the superb song quality.

In 1968 Lee did his first TV special for Swedish TV titled 'Love and other crimes' with the help of Donnie Owens (guitar) and Swedish singer Siw Malmkvist (duets). The year 1969 brought us two fine albums on his own LHI label: 'The cowboy and the lady' and 'Forty', which was made at the opportunity of reaching the age of forty.

'The cowboy and the lady' contains duets with singer/actress Ann-Margret (real name Ann-Margaret Olsson) and also solo pieces by Lee and Ann-Margret. The album has a great and therefore unusual book cover, which shows Lee and Ann-Margret in three successive scenes. None of the recorded songs were composed by Lee himself. Some of them were also issued on single like 'Dark end of the street', 'Victims of the night', 'Greyhound bus depot' and 'No regrets'. 'Forty' is another solo album which shows the versatility of Lee but most of the songs were done in a subdued mood like 'Paris bells', 'Mary', 'September song' and the real gem 'What's more I don't need her'. The recordings were done in London and produced by Shel Talmy. Lee included two Randy Newman compositions on the album which are in a strong contrast to the mood of it and the reasons to include them are not quite clear to me. The book cover shows Lee lying in a garden swing but the quality of the picture is worse as if it was taken by an amateur photographer and in great contrast with the outstanding tracks of the album.

In the beginning of the 70's Lee became a sort of a bohemian and decided to leave the US. He changed homes between Sweden, Paris and London. In 1970 Lee made his first album in Sweden titled 'Cowboy in Sweden', which was also issued in the US and was made at the occasion of a TV special Lee made for Swedish television in collaboration with Swedish film maker Torbjörn Axelman, Lee's children Debbie and Mark Hazlewood, Suzi Jane Hokom, Swedish singer Nina Lizell, Lena Edling from Sweden, the George Baker Selection (a Dutch group), Steve Rowland & The Family Dogg and Rumplestiltskin (both UK groups).

Although the title gives you the idea of a concept album, the reality is a hoth-potch of songs of which six are originals by Lee (& Nina Lizell), three of them were taken from Lee's former albums 'Love and other crimes' and 'Forty' and one song was done by Suzi Jane Hokom presumably to promote her in Sweden. The song 'Vem kan segla' was issued before by Nina Lizell duetting with an unknown Swedish singer (1967).

Back in the States in 1971 Lee made his first - but nowadays hard to find - album 'Requiem for an almost lady' for the Swedish Viking label. The album was also issued in the U.K. (Reprise) and Germany (RCA Victor). It has some autobiographical elements and contains some very fine songs. Part of the production was done by Suzanne Jennings. The album sleeve shows the beautiful painting 'Lady bird' by Dutch painter ARDY (Ardy Strüwer). Lee was accompanied by Jerry Cole, Donnie Owens and Joe Cannon. The album was first issued in the US by Smells Like Records in 1999.

Thanks to the success Lee and Nancy Sinatra had with the song 'Did you ever?' they made a second album - but now for RCA Victor - in 1972 in the Hollywood based studio of Frank Sinatra. The album is issued by RCA Victor and titled 'Nancy & Lee again' and includes of course 'Did you ever?' that even became the title of the German and Swedish issues.

In 1973 Lee made the 'N.S.V.I.P's' TV special in which he sang and acted with Swedish singer Lill Lindfors. Most of the lyrics are by Harry Chapin. Swedish television sent it to Montreux (Switzerland) on behalf of the 'Golden Rose of Montreux' prize and won. As Lee declares he first offered the same programme to a big US television company but they showed no interest.

Also in 1973 but in the US he cut the album 'Poet, fool or bum' for the Capitol label. This brilliant album was made by Amos Productions and consists partly of cover versions. This album has different covers for either the US and UK issue and shows Lee without a mustache, which could have been called one of his trademarks. One could think he looked like Leonard Cohen whose song 'Come spend the morning' he included on the album. The album even received a one-word verdict 'Bum' in UK's New Musical Express. The production was in the hands of Jimmy Bowen.

The first time Lee could be heard on a live album was in 1974 when his appearance with Ann-Kristin Hedmark at the Berns night club in Stockholm was recorded on the CBS album 'The Stockholm kid live at Berns'. Originally it was planned to do this live album with Ann-Kristin Hedmark but these plans were cancelled. Besides a medley of the duet songs he did with Nancy Sinatra he sings ‘Sugar town', ‘A better place to be' from the TV special ‘The N.S.V.I.P.'s' and two cover songs ‘Hello in there' and ‘Fire and rain' which was a James Taylor success.

In 1975 Lee produced another Swedish album ‘20th Century Lee' which consists of cover versions of at that time popular songs done by Bob Dylan, Dr. Hook and others. It even contains a English/Spanish ('An old lullaby') and a Swedish song written by Evert Taube (‘Brevet från Lillan'). Again the Sanford Clark hit ‘The fool' is included on this album in the arrangements as on the ‘Friday's child' LP (1964).

Some of the session musicians like bassist Rutger Gunnarsson, guitarist Janne Schaffer and music director Sven-Olof Walldoff worked also with the Swedish group ABBA that became famous in the second half of the seventies. This rare to get 1976 German RCA Victor album shows the versatility of Lee but will never let forget the great albums he made before. From this album RCA took two songs ('Indian summer' and 'Whole lotta shakin' goin' on') for his first and only 12" maxi single.

In 1977 Lee made his last vinyl album. The album titled 'Back on the street again' was cut in Western Germany and contains some new material like ‘Dolly Parton's guitar', ‘Back on the street again', ‘Save a place for me', on which he duets with Shari Garbo, but also the Kris Kristofferson penned ‘Smokey put the sweat on me'. The backing musicians were German sessionists completed with Dutch steel guitarist Frans Doolaard. The production was again in hands of the Swedish Suzanne Jennings-Persson. This EMI album was only issued in Western Germany, Holland, Sweden and South-Africa. From New Zealand only a demo version is known so far.

The latest outings on wax in the States were the 1979 and 1980 MCA singles with the songs ‘Dolly Parton's guitar', ‘A taste of you', ‘Willie Jones' and ‘Hollywood (just ain't no place)'. Again hard to find items. Lee's first compact disc (CD) titled ‘Son of a gun' dates from around 1984 and consists of Swedish and German cuts of the seventies. This difficult to find item was issued by the German Repertoire label. From 1991 on the 60's and 70's duets with Nancy Sinatra have been issued on CD several times but no legal re-issues on CD of the original albums by Lee were located.

In 1993 Tindersticks, the famous British pop group that was strongly infuenced by Lee a.o., issued the 45 rpm 7" single 'A marriage made in heaven'/'A marriage made in heaven' (instrumental) based on Lee's composition of 'Sand' and can be considered as a tribute to Lee (inspired by and dedicated to Lee Hazelwood (sic), a father to us all) whose portrait has been placed on the single's front cover.

Also in 1993 - after an interval of 13 years - Lee's voice could be heard again on the Finnish album 'Gypsies and Indians' together withFinnish female singer Anna Hanski. Lee's voice however can not be compared with that of the 60's or 70's. It has not the subtility and strength of those years. A Finnish TV promotional video has been made of the song 'Gypsies and Indians'. Lee looks rather old but we know he is 64 of age then. The album was issued on the Selecta label.

During the Nancy Sinatra come-back tour in 1995 Lee and Nancy toured through the USA, Canada and Sweden cashing in on their old success songs. The years 1999 and 2000 were important years for both Lee and his fans for the following six CD albums saw the light through the efforts of Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley for his independent label Smells Like Records: 'Cowboy in Sweden' (April 1999), a new 'standards' CD album of songs that were already recorded in the 80's titled 'Farmisht, flatulence, origami, ARF !!! and me...' with the Al Casey Combo (April 1999), 'Trouble is a lonesome town' (September 1999), 'Requiem for an almost lady' (September 1999), '13' (January 2000), 'The cowboy and the lady' (May 2000). Unfortunately plans for a CD with a re-issue of LHI label singles were cancelled.

Surprisingly Lee gave in 1999 his first solo performances since 1974. These outstanding concerts were given in London (28 June, Royal Festival Hall) and Stockholm (9 July, Fanclub Festival). Lee was backed by the Lasse Samuelson group from Sweden, his life-time friend Al Casey and Brad Bauder (USA).

In 2002 a new attempt to issue Lee's song material is done by Wyndham Wallace, head of City Slang Records (UK). A new album on both vinyl and CD format with previously unreleased songs recorded by Lee in the last 25 years accompanied by guitarist and life-time friend Al Casey titled 'For every solution there's a problem' was issued in June. At the same time a tribute album on both vinyl and CD format with 16 Lee Hazlewood songs by artists like Calexico, Tindersticks, Lambchop, Johnny Dowd, a.o. was issued.

Surprisingly Gazell Records in Sweden has issued in September 2002 a similar album as 'For every solution...' titled 'Bootleg dreams and counterfeit demos' accompanied by Al Casey.

To coincide with these issues Lee made an outstanding concert tour along thirteen mayor cities in nine European countries in September 2002. He was accompanied on stage by members of the bands High Llamas and Stereolab. Most of the live tracks can be heard on the CD album 'The lycanthrope tour/Europe 2002' issued by Gazell Records (Sweden).

During the 2002 concert tour Lee unfolded his plans to record both a third duet album with Nancy Sinatra and his final solo album to be titled 'Cake or Death'. In February 2003 the takes for the duet album with Nancy Sinatra were done in Nasville with the help of well-known arranger Billy Strange. In May 2004 the album - simply titled 'Nancy & Lee 3' - was released by Warner Music in Australia only. Duane Eddy has co-written one song for the album and plays his 'twangy' guitar on the track that generally is considered as the most outstanding track of this album.

In 2005 the doctors diagnosed renal cancer and Lee was undergoing heavy surgery to remove one of his kidneys. Nevertheless he has recorded the duet song 'Jackson' with gifted Norwegian singer Elisabeth Andreassen in 2005 and the song 'Lee Hazlewood & das erste Lied des Tages' with German punkrock singer Bela B. in 2006 and made recordings with old friends for his final (?) solo albumissued in 2006 titled 'Cake or Death'.

On August 4, 2007 came the sad news that Lee has died and lost a three-year struggle with cancer.

Administration | Design & Conception : Jean-Marie LAGADEC Janvier 2008 write to me