Jerry Clower
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Howard Gerald Clower
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Liberty, Mississippi USA
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Sep 28 1926 – Aug 24 1998 age 71
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Jerry
Clower was born in Amite County, Mississippi. He grew up fatherless
during the Depression in rural Mississippi, and could have easily given
up on life. However, he dreamed of a career in agriculture, and his
ambition was to be a 4-H club agent. So, after high school and a stint
in the Navy, he went to Southwest Mississippi Junior College and
Mississippi State on football scholarships. After college he started on
his agricultural career with a job as assistant county agent in Oxford,
and after two years he was hired by a fertilizer company in Yazoo City
as a public relations person.
In talking to farmers, he found he was more successful when he told
stories than when he talked about fertilizer. A friend taped one of his
talks and sent it MCA Records, and MCA released "Jerry Clower From Yazoo
City, Mississippi Talkin'" in 1970. He stayed with the same record
company for an amazing 28 years.
Clower's accomplishments were many and varied. He became a member of
the Grand Ole Opry in 1973 and regularly performed there. His hectic
schedule usually included 200 performances a year across America. He was
co-host of the "Country Crossroads'' cable TV show on the ACTS channel
and, earlier, for six years was co-host of the "Nashville on the
Road'' syndicated TV program with singer Jim Ed Brown.
Clower wrote four best-selling books: Ain't God Good, Let the Hammer Down, Life Everlaughter and Stories From Home.
Three of his albums - "Greatest Hits," "Mouth Of The Mississippi" and
"From Yazoo City, Mississippi, Talkin'" - have been certified gold for
sales of more than 500,000. He sold seven million albums during his life
time and had a new album - his 26th - scheduled for release two months
after his untimely death.
A documentary film about him, "Ain't God Good," won an award from the
New York International Film Festival in the category of Ethics and
Religion. Mississippi College bestowed an honorary doctorate on him.
This 275 lb. giant of a man became internationally known as a humorist
who relied more on his delivery than the punchline for laughs. He often
said that the key to his longevity was that, "I ain't never made an
album you can't play in church." Many of his stories actually took
place, but he had a gift for embellishment. "I don't tell funny stories,
I tell stories funny,'' he said.
Indeed, it was the good-hearted feeling underlying Clower's humor that
endeared him to audiences of all ages. He introduced the world to the
foibles of the Ledbetter clan, including Marcel and Uncle Versey
Ledbetter and the other colorful characters in his story bag. His
stories - told funny - were about things he knew: his friends, relatives
and even himself. They were set in the rich southern culture that Jerry
himself lived. Church revivals, county fairs, coon hunting, and cotton
farming.
A lifelong resident of Mississippi, Jerry (he pronounced his name
"JAY'ree") and Homerline, his wife of 51 years, lived for the last
decade of his life in the small town of Liberty, Mississippi. He thus
lived just a mile from where he grew up, where he was saved, where he
was baptized, where he was married and where he was buried.
On August 4, 1998, Clower canceled his first show in 32 years, when
he complained of exhaustion before a performance at the Georgia Mountain
Fair in Hiawassee, Ga. At the age of 71, he underwent heart bypass
surgery in a Mississippi hospital on Thursday, August 20, 1998. He had
six bypasses performed during a four-hour operation. Doctors initially
said his prognosis was good and he might be able to return to his
Liberty, Miss., home in a few days.
That was not to be. Clower died of cardiorespiratory arrest at Baptist
Medical Center in Jackson, Miss., five days after he underwent six heart
bypasses.
The world stage has lost a wonderful storyteller. And the human race
has lost a generous, people-loving and God-fearing person. It is our
loss and heaven's gain.
Perhaps Jerry Clower himself said it best: "I am convinced that there
is only one place where there is no laughter and that's hell. I have
made arrangements to miss hell. Praise God. I won't ever have to be
anywhere that there ain't no laughter."
01 Ain't God Good
02 Ain't God Good (Concluded)
Country Storytellin' Humor
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Thanks Bob H!
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His other albums on this blog are "tagged" at the bottom of this post
WANTED | |||||||||
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