Albuquerque Journal

‘Rhinestone Cowboy’ who bridged country & pop

- BY KRISTIN M. HALL

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Glen Campbell, the grinning, high-pitched entertaine­r whose dozens of hit singles included “Rhinestone Cowboy” and “Wichita Lineman” and whose appeal spanned country, pop, television and movies, died Tuesday, his family said. He was 81.

Campbell’s family said the singer, who spent his formative musical years in Albuquerqu­e, died Tuesday morning in Nashville, and publicist Sandy Brokaw confirmed the news. No cause was given.

Campbell announced in June 2011 that he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and that it was in its early stages.

“Glen is one of the greatest voices there ever was in the business and he was one of the greatest musicians,” Dolly Parton said in a video statement. “He was a wonderful session musician as well. A lot of people don’t realize that. But he could play anything and he could

play it really well.”

Tributes poured in on social media. “Thank you Glen Campbell for sharing your talent with us for so many years May you rest in peace my friend You will never be forgotten,” Charlie Daniels wrote.

One of Campbell’s daughters, Ashley, said she was heartbroke­n. “I owe him everything I am, and everything I ever will be. He will be remembered so well and with so much love,” she wrote on Twitter.

A sharecropp­er’s son, and one of 12 children, he was born near Delight, Ark., and grew up revering country music stars such as Hank Williams.

“I’m not a country singer per se,” Campbell once said. “I’m a country boy who sings.”

He was just 4 when he learned to play guitar. As a teenager, eager to escape a life of farm work and unpaid bills, he moved to Albuquerqu­e in 1954 to join his uncle’s band, Dick Bills and the Sandia Mountain Boys. He also appeared on his uncle’s radio show and on “K Circle B Time,” a local children’s program on KOB television.

In 1958, Campbell formed his own band, the Western Wranglers.

In the late 1960s and well into the ’70s, Campbell seemed to be everywhere, known by his boyish face, wavy hair and friendly tenor. He won five Grammys, sold more than 45 million records, had 12 gold albums and 75 chart hits, including No. 1 songs with “Rhinestone Cowboy” and “Southern Nights.

His performanc­e of the title song from “True Grit,” a 1969 release in which he played a Texas Ranger alongside Oscar winner John Wayne, received an Academy Award nomination. He twice won awards for album of the year from the Academy of Country Music and was voted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2005. Seven years later, he received a Grammy for lifetime achievemen­t.

His last record was “Adios,” which was released in June and features songs that Campbell loved to sing but had never recorded, including tunes made famous by Bob Dylan, Linda Ronstadt and Johnny Cash.

Campbell was among a wave of country crossover stars that included Johnny Cash, Roy Clark and Kenny Rogers, and like many of his contempora­ries, he enjoyed success on television. Campbell had a weekly audience of about 50 million people for the “Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour,” on CBS from 1969 to 1972. He gained new fans decades later when the show, featuring his cheerful greeting “Hi, I’m Glen Campbell,” was rerun on cable channel CMT.

“I did what my dad told me to do — ‘Be nice, son, and don’t cuss. And be nice to people.’ And that’s the way I handled myself, and people were very, very nice to me,” Campbell said in 2011.

He released more than 70 of his own albums, and in the 1990s recorded a series of gospel CDs. A 2011 album, “Ghost on the Canvas,” included contributi­ons from Jacob Dylan, Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick and Billy Corgan of The Smashing Pumpkins.

The documentar­y “Glen Campbell … I’ll Be Me” was released in 2014. The film, about Campbell’s 2011-12 farewell tour, offers a poignant look at his decline from Alzheimer’s while showcasing his virtuoso guitar chops that somehow continued to shine as his mind unraveled.

The song “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” won a Grammy for best country song in 2015 and was nominated for an Oscar for best original song.

Campbell’s musical career dated back to the early years of rock ’n’ roll. He toured with the Champs of “Tequila” fame when the group included two singers who formed the popular ’70s duo Seals & Crofts. He was part of the house band for the ABC TV show “Shindig!” and a member of Phil Spector’s “Wrecking Crew” studio band that played on hits by the Ronettes, the Righteous Brothers and the Crystals.

He played guitar on Frank Sinatra’s “Strangers in the Night,” the Monkees’ “I’m a Believer” and Elvis Presley’s “Viva Las Vegas.”

“We’d get the rock ’n’ roll guys and play all that, then we’d get Sinatra and Dean Martin,” Campbell told The Associated Press in 2011. “That was a kick. I really enjoyed that. I didn’t want to go nowhere. I was making more money than I ever made just doing studio work.”

After moving to Los Angeles, he opened for the Doors and sang and played bass with the Beach Boys as a replacemen­t for Brian Wilson, who in the mid1960s had retired from touring to concentrat­e on studio work. In 1966, Campbell played on the Beach Boys’ classic “Pet Sounds” album.

“I didn’t go to Nashville, because Nashville at that time seemed one-dimensiona­l to me,” Campbell told the AP. “I’m a jazzer. I just love to get the guitar and play the hell out of it if I can.”

By the late ’60s, he was a performer on his own, an appearance on Joey Bishop’s show leading to his TV breakthrou­gh. Tommy Smothers of the Smothers Brothers saw the program and asked Campbell if he’d like to host a summertime series, “The Summer Brothers Smothers Show.” Campbell shied from the Smothers Brothers’ political humor but still accepted the offer. He was out of the country when the first episode aired.

“The whole lid just blew off,” Campbell told the AP. “I had never had anything like that happen to me. I got more phone calls. It was awesome. For the first couple of days, I was like how do they know me? I didn’t realize the power of television.”

His guests included country acts but also the Monkees, Lucille Ball, Cream, Neil Diamond and Ella Fitzgerald.

He was married four times and had eight children. As he would confide in painful detail, Campbell suffered for his fame and made others suffer as well. He drank heavily, used drugs and indulged in a turbulent relationsh­ip with country singer Tanya Tucker in the early 1980s.

He is survived by his wife, Kim; their three children, Cal, Shannon and Ashley; and his children from previous marriages, Debby, Kelli, Travis, Kane and Dillon. He had 10 grandchild­ren.

In late 2003, he was arrested near his home in Phoenix after causing a minor traffic accident. He later pleaded guilty to “extreme” DUI and leaving the scene of an accident and served a 10-day sentence.

Among Campbell’s own hits, “Rhinestone Cowboy” stood out and became his personal anthem. Written and recorded by Larry Weiss in 1974, “Rhinestone Cowboy” received little attention until Campbell heard it on the radio and quickly related to the story of a veteran performer who triumphs over despair and hardship. Campbell’s version was a chart topper in 1975.

“I thought it was my autobiogra­phy set to song,” he wrote 20 years later, in his autobiogra­phy, titled “Rhinestone Cowboy.”

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 ?? ALBUQUERQU­E MUSEUM PHOTO ARCHIVE ?? Glen Campbell, second from right, with Dick Bills and the Sandia Mountain Boys at the Club Chesterfie­ld in Albuquerqu­e in the 1950s.
ALBUQUERQU­E MUSEUM PHOTO ARCHIVE Glen Campbell, second from right, with Dick Bills and the Sandia Mountain Boys at the Club Chesterfie­ld in Albuquerqu­e in the 1950s.

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