Later on, health problems and further shift in labels largely sidelined Gosdin's career, although he continued to draw new fans to his great, old-sounding music. His glory days came through a surprisingly successful stint on Columbia, where Gosdin hammered his way into the Top Ten with one great tune after another. His solo career started off in the '70s, with a few modestly successful traditional-sounding albums in the early '80s, during the last gasp of independent labels hitting the Country charts, Gosdin snuck into the Top 40 on a series of singles on the Compleat label. But to devoted country fans, Vern Gosdin is known, simply, as "The Voice," one of the finest barroom ballad singers this side of George Jones. To Byrds fans, they are perhaps best known for being half of Chris Hillman's pre-rock bluegrass band, The Hillmen, and for later working on Gene Clark's first solo album, back in the Summer Of Love. He and his brother Rex moved from Alabama out to California in the early 1960s, just in time to catch the first wave of the LA folk/rock scene. Vern Gosdin (1934-2009) was a consummate hard country honkytonk singer with a hitmaking career that was a long time coming. Vern Gosdin discography (Joe Sixpack's Guide To Hick Music)
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