Details, Explanation and Meaning About Wilf Carter

Wilf Carter Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Wilf Carter was born on Dec. 18, 1904 in Port Hilford, Nova Scotia, Canada. His father was a Baptist minister. At the impressionable age of 10 he saw a production of "Uncle Tom's Cabin". There was a performer in the show called "The Yodelling Fool" and Carter was smitten with him. And At age ten he saw a Chataugua of Uncle Tom's Cabin and was inspired by the singing and yodeling of a performer known as ``The Yodelling Fool.'' In 1923 he moved west to Calgary, Alberta. He found work as a cowboy and made extra money singing and playing his guitar at dances and "house parties". It was during this time that he developed his own yodeling style, sometimes calle an "echo yodel" or a "three-in-one".

Carter performed his very first radio broadcast on CFCN, Calgary in 1930. Two years later, he was entertaining tourists as a trail rider for the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railroad company promoted horseback excursions into the Canadian Rockies, and Carter was a big hit. So big that in 1933 he was hired to be an entertainer on the maiden voyage of the S.S. Empress of Britain.

However, on the way to the ship he stopped off in Montreal and recorded two songs he had written: "My Swiss Moonlight Lullaby" and "The Capture of Albert Johnson". By 1934 that record was a best-seller. By 1935 he was in New York City, performing on WABC radio. And that same year someone tagged him with the name "Montana Slim," and it stuck.

In 1937 he left New York City and returned to his beloved Calgary, where he bought a ranch . He continued to appear on both American and Canadian radio shows, as well as doing live concerts.

In 1940 Carter was in car wreck and received a serious back injury. He was unable to tour regularly for much of the decade. He sold his ranch in 1949 and moved to a 180-acre farm in New Jersey. 

In 1952 he moved again, this time to Orlando, Florida. And he opened the Wilf Carter Motor Lodge. That venture only lasted two years before he closed it.

In 1953 Wilf Carter started touring with his own show called, ``The Family Show With The Folks You Know.'' His daughters, Carol and Sheila, worked with him as dancers and back-up singers. At the Canadian National Exhibition bandstand in Toronto, they set an attendance record when they performed for 50,000 people in one week .

In 1964 he entertained at the Calgary Stampede for the very first time. And he became one of the most requested guests on the TV show hosted by Canadian country singer Tommy Hunter.

In 1972 Montana Slim was inducted into the Songwriter's Hall Of Fame in Nashville, TN. One of his favorite songs, of the many he wrote, was "There's a Love Knot in My Lariat." He wrote the song as he was walking in New York City on his way to perform on the radio, and he performed it on the air that same day.

In 1985 Wilf Carter was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame in 1985.

In 1988 he recorded his last album, "Whatever Happened to All Those Years." He went into retirement soon thereafter, mainly because he was losing his hearing. The next year, he wife Bobbi died of cancer.

Wilf Carter died of stomach cancer at age 91 at his home in Scottsdale, Arizonia on Thursday, Dec. 5, 1996

(source: CowboyDirect.com)

This is an Article on Wilf Carter. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Wilf Carter


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything