The Scotsman

Mel Tillis

Country singer-songwriter with trademark stutter

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Mel Tillis, country singer. Born: 8 August, 1932 in Tampa, Florida. Died: 19 November 2017, in Ocala, Florida, aged 85

Mel Tillis, whose career as a country singer and the writer of enduring hit songs like Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town earned him a place in the Country Music Hall of Fame – but who was equally well known for the stutter he employed to humorous effect on stage – has died at the age of 85.

Tillis found a way to turn his speech impediment into an asset by using his ready smile and innate comedic timing to get his audiences to laugh along with him. He stuttered his way to regular appearance­s on television talk shows and to clowning bit parts in Hollywood movies. He even went so far as to make the nickname Stutterin’ Boy, conferred upon him by singer Webb Pierce, the title of his autobiogra­phy, and to have it painted on the side of his tour bus.

Tillis stuttered only when he spoke, not when he sang. His resonant baritone was suited to both traditiona­l country and pop-leaning material and was the vehicle for more than 70 Top 40 country hits.

His stutter might not have figured so prominentl­y in his career had he focused on songwritin­g, or had country entertaine­r Minnie Pearl, for whom he played rhythm guitar in the 1950s, not asked him to perform some of his songs in her show. “I was so bashful and scared,” he said in 2002 of his hesitancy about speaking in public, “and she said, ‘If they laugh they’ll be laughing with you, not against you.’”

Tillis had six No. 1 country singles, including Coca-cola Cowboy, which appeared on the soundtrack to the 1978 Clint Eastwood movie Every Which Way but Loose.

He is survived by his longtime partner, Kathy Demonaco; his first wife and the mother of five of his children, Doris Tillis; a sister, Linda Crosby; a brother, Richard Tillis; six children: Pam Tillis, Connie Tillis, Cindy Shorey, Mel Tillis Jr (known as Sonny), Carrie April Tillis and Hannah Puryear; six grandchild­ren; and a great-grandson. © New York Times 2017. Distribute­d by NYT Syndicatio­n Service

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