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Country Music's Lloyd Cowboy Copas

Grand Ole Opry Star's Hits: Alabam, Filipino Baby, Candy Kisses

© William J. Felchner

Lloyd Cowboy Copas (1913-1963), (C) Starday Records
Cowboy Copas was one of the hardest working country music performers of his day, recording such hits as "Flat Top" and "Tennessee Moon." He died in a plane crash in 1963.

Cowboy Copas began his recording career with King Records in 1945, notching up a respectable list of country music hits until fate intervened on March 5, 1963. Returning to Nashville from a benefit performance in Kansas, Copas, Patsy Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins and Randy Hughes were all killed when their single-engine plane went down near Camden, Tennessee.

Cowboy Copas Born in Ohio

Lloyd Estel Copas was born on July 15, 1913, in Jefferson Township, Ohio. He was the son of Marion Eldon and Lola Ramsey Copas.

Copas Begins Music Career

Dropping out of school at age 14, Lloyd Copas began his music career as a fiddle player in several bands near his Ohio home. He later made the acquaintance of a Native American musician named Natchez, with the two entering fiddling contests in the Ohio River Valley area, competing for cash prizes.

Copas on Radio

Cowboy Copas began appearing on radio in the 1930s. Many of his early radio appearances were non-paying gigs, solely designed to promote his name and music.

Copas could be heard on Cincinnati radio stations WLW and WKRC. In 1940, he accepted a job offer to appear as a regular on WNOX in Knoxville, Tennessee, where he performed with the Gold Star Rangers.

Vocalist for Pee Wee King

In 1943, Cowboy Copas became a vocalist for Pee Wee King and His Golden West Cowboys, replacing the great Eddy Arnold. While in King's employ, Copas got his first taste of WSM's Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, a venue he would play often.

In the ensuing years Copas and company traveled the country, performing at barn dance shows, rodeos, circuses and county fairs. Two of his biggest gigs came at Soldier's Field in Chicago and the Los Angeles Coliseum.

Signed by King Records

Cowboy Copas was signed by Cincinnati-based King Records in 1945. His debut single, "Filipino Baby" (King 505), was a big success, rising to the number four position on the country music charts in August 1945.

Cowboy Copas went on to record a slew of singles for King from 1945 to 1956. His biggest hits included "Breeze" (1946), "Signed, Sealed and Delivered" (1947), "Tennessee Moon" (1948), "Candy Kisses" (1949) and "'Tis Sweet to Be Remembered" (1951).

Copas also cut several singles with daughter Kathy in 1951-52.

Dot Records

From 1957-58 Cowboy Copas recorded for Dot Records. The output was minimal, with only three singles released.

Starday Records

Unable to score a hit, Cowboy Copas -- decked out in his big white Stetson and other cowboy regalia -- hit the trail, performing at volunteer firemen's picnics, honky tonks and small-town bars.

In 1959, Don Pierce of Starday signed Copas to a recording contract. His third single for Pierce, the foot-stomping "Alabam" (Starday 501), hit number one in 1960.

Cowboy Copas, Patsy Cline Fatal Flight to Nashville

A benefit concert for the family of deceased country disc jockey Jack Call had brought Copas and other performers to Kansas City, Kansas. On March 5, 1963, Copas, Patsy Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins and son-in-law pilot-musician Randy Hughes boarded a single-engine Piper Comanche for the return flight to Nashville.

They never made it. The plane crashed 90 miles west of Nashville, killing all on board.

Cowboy Copas was survived by his wife Edna, daughter Kathy and sons Gary and Mike. The crash was especially devastating for Kathy Copas Hughes, who had lost both her husband Randy and her father.

One month after his death, Cowboy Copas' last single, "Goodbye Kisses," hit the Top 15 on the country music charts.


The copyright of the article Country Music's Lloyd Cowboy Copas in Country Music is owned by William J. Felchner. Permission to republish Country Music's Lloyd Cowboy Copas in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.



Comments
Aug 31, 2008 7:55 PM
Guest :
Best article I read yet on the largely forgotten Cowboy Copas.
1 Comment:


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