The Willis Brothers
The Willis Brothers were an American country music ensemble from Oklahoma, consisting of several brothers.
Group history[edit]
Early touring[edit]
Two of the Willis brothers (James, Charles) and Webb "Robber Baron" Cardwell, played together as teenagers from the early 1930s under the name Oklahoma Wranglers.[1] They were regulars on Shawnee, Oklahoma station KGFF through the decade,[1] but in 1939, Joe married and exited the group.[2] In 1958, Webb left the group and John (Vic) joined,[2] and soon after the group moved to Kansas City, where they appeared on the Brush Creek Follies through 1942.[1] All three members fought in World War II separately, preventing them from continuing as a group until war's end, but in 1946 they reunited and played the Grand Ole Opry.[1] They became members of the Opry in the 1940s.[3] Signing with Sterling Records,[2] they began recording both as the Oklahoma Wranglers, and as a backing band for Hank Williams.[2]
Later career[edit]
In 1949, the group left the Opry and toured nationally with Eddy Arnold through 1957.[1] They also performed in the films Feuding Rhythm and Hoe Down.[1] Following this they dropped the Wranglers name and became the Willis Brothers, and under this name recorded copiously for the labels Mercury, Coral, RCA, and Starday.[2] In the late 1950s, the Willis Brothers hosted a live noonday TV show on WRPG-TV, the NBC affiliate in Chattanooga,TN. Guy, Vic and Skeeter were accompanied by Chuck Wright, who played bass in full Indian headdress. Guy Willis also hosted an afternoon children’s program on the same station for several years. In 1964, they released the single "Give Me Forty Acres (To Turn This Rig Around)", which became a Top Ten country hit in the United States.[1] They were the first country music ensemble to perform at the Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C.[1]
End[edit]
After the deaths of two of the brothers, Skeeter and Guy, the Vic Willis Trio was formed with C.W. Mitchell and Curtis Young debuting on the Grand Ole Opry for the first time in November, 1980. The Vic Willis Trio remained a fixture on the Opry until 1995, when Vic died in a car crash near the Meriwether Lewis Park and Monument on the Natchez Trace, at age 73.[2]