User:JDLindy/Cedric Rainwater

Cedric Rainwater new article content ...


Howard Staton “Cedric Rainwater” Watts was born February 19, 1913, in Monticello, Florida and died: January 21, 1970, in Nashville, Tennessand of a heart attack at the age of 56. He was a bassist/comedian, highly regarded by his peers as a great string bass player and was especially known for his 4 beats to the measure “4/4 walking style” popular in bluegrass music. Rainwater was a talented comedian, sang comic songs, and sometimes sang bass or baritone. He wrote several recorded songs with his bands and in addition was one of the most-recorded studio musicians in tl he 1950s. Rosenberg (62, 69).

Rainwater’s career spanned the years 1932 to 1970. He began his career as a guitarist/singer in the early days of the depression. Over time he augmented his performance skills by teaching himself to tap dance and developed comedy routines. He signed on with Paul Howard and the Cotton Pickers as a guitarist in 1942. There he developed an interest in the base fiddle and several years later joined the Grand Ole Opry as a bassist/comedian.

Cedric played in many well-known bands and was a key member of two seminal bluegrass bands: (1.) The germinal ensemble of Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys with Lester Flatt, Earl Skrugs and Charlie Wise and (2.) An original founding member of the the Foggy Mountain Boys along with Lester Flatt and Earl Skrugs. He also played and performed with with many other well-known entertainers and bands. Among them were Hank Williams and The Drifting Cowboys, Hank Williams Junior, Ferlin Husky, Hank Snow, Lefty Frizel, and Patsy Cline.

Rainwater joined Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys at the Grand Ole Opry in 1944 as a bassist/comedian replacing Cousin Wilbur. He was with the band for the next five years coming and going on several occasions; he was often given the opportunity to showcase his comic songs and routines on the Opry. He performed comedy with “Stringbean” a banjo player in the band during the 1945 season and participated in the seminal recording sessions of 1946 and 1947. Howard reinforced the bands rhythm on slow and medium tempo numbers. (Rosenberg 69, 76). In the September 1946 recording session, he played bass on Traffic Ahead,’ ‘Blue Yodel No. 4,’ ‘Will You Be Loving Another Man,’ and ‘How Will I Explain About You.’ In addition he sang baritone harmony to ‘Summertime is Past and Gone.’ In October, 1947, he played bass on four songs: “Little Cabin Home on the Hill,” “Sweetheart, You Done Me Wrong,” “When You Are Lonely,” and “Along About Daybreak.” He also sang bass on five gospel quartet selections. Howard and his wife, Alice, wrote one of the gospels “Remember the Cross.” (Reid, IBMA Museum, Owensboro, KY)

In 1948 he left the Blue Grass Boys along with Lester Flatt and Earl Skruggs to form a new band; Lester Flatt, Earl Skrugs and The Foggy Mountain Boys. He remaining with the group for two years; from 1948 to 1950. (Rosenberg 79). At first the band performed a lot of songs Lester Flatt had recorded and sung with Bill Monroe; Cedric sang the tenor part on these. (Goldsmith, 63). He participated with Flatt & Scruggs on their first four recording sessions for Mercury. Among the standouts were “My Cabin in Caroline,” “Foggy Mountain Breakdown,” “Baby Blue Eyes,” as well as a gospel composition he co-wrote with his wife, “I’ll Be Going to Heaven Sometime”.

Rainwater later joined Hank Williams and the Drifting Cowboys (1950-1952); one of the most popular groups of the day. He toured, played the Opry, and did radio work with the band. Howard lost his position with William’s untimely passing on January 1, 1953. For a brief period of time, Watts found work with Hank Snow’s Rainbow Ranch Boys. The Drifting Cowboys reunited to help up-and-coming country star Ray Price on one of his early Columbia sessions. For the balance of the decade, and into the early 1960s, Howard often worked as a bass player and featured soloist in his comic persona “Cedric Rainwater” for a variety of entertainers such as Marty Robbins, Carl Smith, Ernest Tubb, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Ferlin Husky, Patsy Cline, Cowboy Copas, Lefty Frizzell, and Johnnie & Jack. He also did session work in Nashville.

  • Rainwater helped record some some songs of interest to bluegrass fans:
  • Bill Monroe with Carter Stanley – in 1951,
  • six songs by Jimmy Martin and the Osborne Brothers for RCA, mid 1950s,
  • several of Jimmy Martin’s first solo recordings for Decca, mid 1950s,
  • and a Flatt & Scruggs session in 1957.== References ==

Rosenberg, Neil, V.; “Bluegrass a History”; University of Illinois Press, 1985 Goldsmith, Thomas; “The Bluegrass Reader”; University of Illinois Press, 2004

edit

Reid, Gary International Bluegrass Museum, Owensboro, KY http://www.bluegrass-museum.org/general/zbioHowardWatts.php