Montreal Gazette

Opry member known for mix of Cajun, country

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NASHVILLE — Grand Ole Opry member Jimmy C. Newman, known for mixing Cajun and country music, has died.

Opry publicist Jessie Schmidt said Newman died in Nashville on Saturday after a brief illness. He was 86.

The Tennessean reports Newman’s first Top 10 country hit, Cry, Cry, Darling, came 60 years ago, in the summer of 1954. That same year he joined Shreveport-based radio show The Louisiana Hayride, where he performed alongside Johnny Horton, Elvis Presley and others.

He joined the Opry in 1956, after notching five straight Top 10 records, including Seasons of My Heart. In 1957, Newman earned his highest-charting record with A Fallen Star, which reached No. 2 on the Billboard country chart and No. 23 on the pop chart.

Newman also offered a boost to a teenage Dolly Parton by allowing her to take part of his Friday Night Opry stage time in 1959 so she could make her debut on the show.

Born Aug. 27, 1927 in the Louisiana town of Mamou, Newman added the “C” to his stage name in the early 1960s, saying it stood for “Cajun.” The French Acadian-sounding Alligator Man hit the Top 40 in 1962, and Newman recognized that a Cajun-country blend would set him apart and honour his roots. He took pride in being considered the first Cajun artist to join the Opry.

Career honours include induction into the Cajun Music Hall of Fame and the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame.

Opry member Marty Stuart told the newspaper, “His role became the Cajun fellow at the Opry, and that’s great. But if you go back to his 1950s recordings of Cry, Cry, Darling and Seasons of My Heart, you’ll witness a country music architect at work. He was a brilliant singer, a brilliant designer of country music.”

His final Opry performanc­e with his band, Cajun Country, came on Friday, June 6.

 ?? TERRY WYATT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Jimmy C. Newman, third from left, shown with Jim Ed Brown, Bobby Bare and Bill Anderson, perform in Nashville last November.
TERRY WYATT/ GETTY IMAGES Jimmy C. Newman, third from left, shown with Jim Ed Brown, Bobby Bare and Bill Anderson, perform in Nashville last November.

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