George Jones
The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend: Updated Edition
Collection / Songbook - Sheet Music

Item Number: 19905497
5 out of 5 Customer Rating

Taxes/VAT calculated at checkout.

Publishers
Item Types
Instructionals

SKU: HL.122446

The Life and Times of a Honky Tonk Legend: Updated Edition. Book. Biography / Music Bisac, Biography/Composers & Musicians. Softcover. 338 pages. Published by Backbeat Books (HL.122446).

ISBN 9781480355828. UPC: 884088952617. 6.0x9.0x0.959 inches.

George Jones's nearly 60-year recording and performing career has had a profound influence on modern country music and influenced a younger generation of singers, including Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson, Randy Travis, Tim McGraw, and Trace Adkins. As Merle Haggard said of Jones in Rolling Stone magazine, "His voice was like a Stradivarius violin: one of the greatest instruments ever made." Jones's saga is a larger-than-life tale of rags to riches and back to rags again. He was born into near poverty in a backwater patch of East Texas. His formal education ended early; by his early teens, he was singing on the streets of Beaumont, Texas, for tips. After beginning to record in the mid-1950s Jones became, by sheer dint of his vocal prowess, one of Nashville's most celebrated honky-tonk singers. But from the start, Jones's life, as often reflected in his music, was shaped by misdirection, chaos, turmoil, and emotional strife aggravated by a ferocious appetite for alcohol. Fame and adulation seemed to merely intensify his personal travails. Jones's story has a relatively happy ending. With the help of fourth wife Nancy during the final decade and a half of his life, he got clean and sober, was feted as a much-revered elder statesman for the music, and, by most accounts, found peace of mind at long last.