His biggest hit was "In the Jailhouse Now," which charted for 37 weeks in 1955, 21 of them at number one. Pierce also charted number one for several weeks' each with his recordings of "Slowly" (1954), "Love, Love, Love" (1955), "I Don't Care" (1955), "There Stands the Glass" (1953), "More and More" (1954), "I Ain't Never" (1959), and his first number one "Wondering," which stayed at the top spot for four of its 27 weeks' charting in 1952.
For many, Pierce, with his flamboyant Nudie suits and twin silver dollar-lined convertibles, became the most recognizable face of country music of the era and its excesses. Pierce was a one-time member of the Grand Ole Opry and was posthumously inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Born in West Monroe, Louisiana in 1921, as a boy Pierce was infatuated with Gene Autry films and his mother's hillbilly records, particularly those of Jimmie Rodgers and Western swing and Cajun groups. He began to play guitar before he was a teenager and at 15 was given his own weekly 15-minute show, Songs by Webb Pierce, on KMLB-AM in Monroe.
He enlisted in the US Army, and in 1942 he married Betty Jane Lewis. After he was discharged, the couple moved to Shreveport, Louisiana, where Pierce worked in the men's department of a Sears Roebuck store. In 1947, the couple appeared on KTBS-AM's morning show as "Webb Pierce with Betty Jane, the Singing Sweetheart". Pierce also performed at local engagements, developing his unique style that was once described to be "a wailing whiskey-voiced tenor that wrang out every drop of emotion."
In 1949, California-based 4 Star Records signed the Webbs under separate contracts, with his wife signed for duets with her husband under the name Betty Jane and Her Boyfriends. However, success only came for Pierce, and in the summer of 1950, the couple divorced.
He moved to KWKH-AM and joined Louisiana Hayride during its first year and devised a plan to achieve instant "stardom." Before the show, he bought tickets for several young girls in line and asked them to sit in the first row, and after each of his songs to scream and beg for more. It worked; their enthusiasm spread throughout the audience.
Pierce assembled and performed with a band of local Shreveport musicians, including pianist Floyd Cramer, guitarist-vocalist Faron Young, bassist Tillman Franks and vocalists Teddy and Doyle Wilburn. He also founded a record label, Pacemaker; and Ark-La-Tex Music, a publishing company, with Horace Logan, the director of the Hayride. On Pacemaker, Pierce made several records between 1950 and 1951 designed to attract radio play around Louisiana.
In 1951, Pierce got out of his 4 Star contract and was quickly signed by Decca Records. His second single, "Wondering", became his breakthrough hit, climbing to No. 1 early in 1952. Pierce moved to Nashville, Tennessee where he met and married his second wife, Audrey Greisham. In June 1952, he had his second No. 1 single with "That Heart Belongs to Me".
In September 1953, the Grand Ole Opry needed to fill the vacancy left by the firing of Hank Williams, and Pierce was invited to join the cast. After Williams' death, he became the most popular singer in country music; for the next four years, every single he released hit the top ten, with ten reaching No. 1, including "There Stands the Glass" (1953), "Slowly" (1954), "More and More" (1954), and "In the Jailhouse Now" (1955). His singles spent 113 weeks at No. 1 during the 1950s, when he charted 48 singles. Thirty-nine reached the top ten, 26 reached the top four and 13 hit No. 1.
Other hits included "Back Street Affair", "Why Baby Why", "Oh, So Many Years", and "Finally"; the latter two being duets with Kitty Wells. His 1954 recording of "Slowly" was one of the first country songs to include a pedal steel guitar.[2] He made regular appearances on ABC-TV's Ozark Jubilee including as a guest host once a month during 1956. In 1958, he recorded a rockabilly record, "The New Raunchy"/"I'll Get by Somehow" for Decca under the name Shady Wall. (Shady Wall (1922โ1985) was a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives and a banker from West Monroe. It is not known if Pierce knew the political Wall or merely made up the name for the record and was unaware of the actual Shady Wall.)
On February 19, 1957, Pierce resigned from the Opry after he refused to pay commissions on bookings and for associated talent.
Pierce continued charting until 1982 with a total of 96 hits; and he toured extensively and appeared in the movies Buffalo Guns, Music City USA, Second Fiddle To A Steel Guitar, and Road To Nashville.
As his music faded from the spotlight, Pierce became known for his excessive lifestyle. He had North Hollywood tailor Nudie Cohen, who had made flamboyant suits for Pierce, line two convertibles with silver dollars. He built a $30,000 guitar-shaped swimming pool at his Nashville home which became a popular paid tourist attractionโnearly 3,000 people visited it each weekโcausing his neighbors, led by singer Ray Stevens, to file suit and prevail against Pierce to end the tours.
He remained with Decca and its successor, MCA, well into the 1970s, but by 1977 he was recording for Plantation Records. Even though he had occasional minor hits, charting in a 1982 duet with Willie Nelson, a remake of "In the Jailhouse Now," he spent his final years tending to his businesses, and his legend became clouded due to his reputation as a hard drinker. Webb and daughter Debbie recorded the ballad "On My Way Out" as The Pierces, and she was a member of the Country group "Chantilly" in the early 1980s.
Pierce waged a long battle with pancreatic cancer, which he lost on February 24, 1991, and was buried in the Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Nashville.
Pierce has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1600 Vine Street. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in October 2001 and into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008.
Caught In The Webbโa Tribute to the Legendary Webb Pierce was released on Audium Records in 2001. Produced and arranged by singer-songwriter Gail Davies, this album features Willie Nelson, Crystal Gayle, George Jones, Emmylou Harris, The Del McCoury Band, Charlie Pride, Allison Moorer, Dwight Yoakam, Pam Tillis, The Jordanaires and other great artists. Proceeds go to benefit The Minnie Pearl Cancer Foundation. Ms. Davies herself first charted in 1978 with "No Love Have I," a No. 26 Billboard Country hit that Pierce had recorded (and taken to No. 4) in 1959.
Footage of Pierce singing "There Stands the Glass" was featured in the 2005 documentary No Direction Home by Martin Scorsese about early influences on Bob Dylan. Pierce's hit single "More and More" was played in the title credits of 2006 horror film, The Hills Have Eyes.
Back Street Affair
Webb Pierce Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
And with all your young heart you learned to care
It brought you shame and disgrace the world has tumbled in your face
Because they call our love a back street affair
They say you wrecked my home, I'm a husband that's gone wrong
They don't know the sorrow that we've had to bear
For the one that I'm tied to was the first to be untrue
We have each other now that's all that matters anyhow
While the judgment of gossip's never fair
We'll just be brave and strong then someday they'll see they're wrong
So let them call our love a back street affair
We'll be free to love someday when all the talk has died away
And the happiness we've hoped for then we'll share
I'll climb a mountain high and the world will hear me cry
That our love is not a back street affair
The lyrics of Webb Pierce's song "Back Street Affair" tell a story of a forbidden love. The singer expresses regret for having fallen in love with someone who was already with another person, bringing "shame and disgrace" upon the woman he loves. The world judges them harshly, calling their love a "back street affair," as if it were something dirty or secretive. However, the singer proclaims that they will remain strong and brave despite the criticism, believing that someday people will see that their love is real and not something to be ashamed of.
Line by Line Meaning
You didn't know I wasn't free when you fell in love with me
You were unaware that I was already in a committed relationship when you fell in love with me.
And with all your young heart you learned to care
You loved me with all your youth and passion.
It brought you shame and disgrace the world has tumbled in your face
Our relationship has been met with judgement and criticism, causing you to feel ashamed and humiliated.
Because they call our love a back street affair
Our love is seen as derogatory and unacceptable by society.
They say you wrecked my home, I'm a husband that's gone wrong
Others blame you for the failure of my marriage, as if I had no role to play in the situation.
They don't know the sorrow that we've had to bear
Others cannot comprehend the emotional pain that we have experienced.
For the one that I'm tied to was the first to be untrue
The partner I was committed to was the first to cheat, yet I am the one being judged for being unfaithful.
And yet they call our love a back street affair
Despite the circumstances that led to us being together, society still views us as morally questionable.
We have each other now that's all that matters anyhow
Despite the judgement of others, our love for each other is real and that is what truly matters.
While the judgment of gossip's never fair
Gossip and criticism are never accurate, fair or just.
We'll just be brave and strong then someday they'll see they're wrong
We will be strong in the face of adversity, and one day others will realize that they were wrong about us.
So let them call our love a back street affair
Let others criticize and judge us, it won't change how we feel or the sincerity of our love.
We'll be free to love someday when all the talk has died away
Eventually, people will stop gossiping about us and we will be free to love each other openly.
And the happiness we've hoped for then we'll share
Once we are free to love openly, we will be able to fully experience and share our happiness together.
I'll climb a mountain high and the world will hear me cry
I will shout from the highest mountain to make the world hear that our love is not shameful or immoral.
That our love is not a back street affair
Our love is not something to be ashamed of, it is pure and genuine despite the circumstances that brought us together.
Lyrics ยฉ Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: BILLY WALLACE
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@lydiajacobs371
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@robertanderson7823
Hello Lydia how are you doing ๐๐๐๐
@NI000NoIdentity
Here is what you're asking for: "Music Absolute Perfection Endless Johnny Horton" which is 12 straight hours of the Country Musics best music ever recorded including this song. Just play all and sit back or dance to all your faves. Enjoy!
@carolrodriguez9537
I AGREE WITH LYDIA JACOBS 100% THIS IS WHAT THE REAL COUNTRY MUSIC SOUNDS WHICH NOBODY PLAYS OR SING WHAT REAL COUNTRY MEANS
CONGRATS THANK YOU FOR BRINGING THIS KINDS OF SONGS BACK I MISS VERY BAD THIS KING GOOD BEAUTIFUL WONDERFUL SONGS #1 IN THE MUSIC INDUSTRIES.LENGENDARY.IN HISTORY.
@davidhickenbottom6574
We do it's right here, I'm thankful for all of this content.
@georgschmidt5281
One of my favorite songs as a teenager in the 50s.
@judithzunk1043
This is what you call real country music
@Thompson_Smith
Hello Judith
How are you doing today??
@bobchapman6887
What a great performer, wish they still played this music on radio today, definitely better than todayโs so called country!
@michaelcolgrave4184
You are so right Bob, the crapp they dish up to us today and try to pass off as country music is just that, crapp, I feel so fortunate to have a great collection of this genuine country music to remind me of what we once had , it's also great to have sites like this , keep it coming