“My hero then was Sonny Curtis ... I admired him so much, I wanted
to change my name to
Sonny. I even tried to stand like him.”--Waylon
Jennings, Waylon: An Autobiography
“Nobody played Stratocaster like Buddy [Holly] or Sonny Curtis. They
had just enough West
Texas dirt underneath their fingernails. There was something about
the way they played that
made it special.”
--Nanci Griffith
From his West Texas beginnings as the lead guitarist in Buddy Holly’s
pre-Crickets band to a prolific
songwriting career, Sonny Curtis is a rare talent who transcended musical
genres long before the term
“crossover” was coined. He has penned over 500 songs, recorded by legendary
artists across the music
spectrum, including Holly, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Hank Williams,
Jr., Bing Crosby, The
Everly Brothers, Nanci Griffith, Roy Orbison, The Stray Cats, and The
Clash.
Along the way, Sonny had a little help from his friends and fellow musicians
Buddy Holly, Waylon
Jennings, and future Crickets J. I. Allison, Joe B. Mauldin, and Glen
D. Hardin. While he was still in
high school, word of Sonny’s talent got out to a local promoter in
Lubbock who frequently used him to
fill out a bill that included the young Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins,
Johnny Cash, and other contemporary
stars of the day. The gigs didn’t pay, but Sonny didn’t mind.
When Elvis exploded onto the music scene in 1955, and
Sonny followed suit
and started rocking. In
1956, he accompanied Buddy Holly and bassist Don Guess to Nashville, where
he played lead guitar
on several songs they recorded for Decca records as “The Three Tunes.”
During his stint with the Tunes,
Sonny made history as the first rock ‘n roller to record with a Fender
Stratocaster, which he played on
such records as “Blue Days, Black Nights,” and his own composition,
“Rock Around With Ollie Vee.”
Soon after, he left the band to take a steadier job playing guitar
for Slim Whitman, and then went on to
tour the South as a member of the Philip Morris Country Music Show.
Until this point, Sonny’s songwriting efforts had been limited to making
up tunes to pass the time while
driving his father’s tractor. That all changed in 1956, when he wrote
“Someday,” a chart success for
country star Webb Pierce. Sonny had a hit song to his credit, and he
was still a teenager.
One hot Texas afternoon in the summer of 1958, as Sonny sat on his couch
watching the sun bake the
dusty ground, he wrote his most recognized and recorded tune in under
an hour. The rock anthem “I
Fought the Law,” originally recorded on the 1959 album, “In Style With
the Crickets,” made stars out
of The Bobby Fuller Four when they re-recorded it in 1965. One of the
first declarations of rock and
roll rebellion, “I Fought the Law” has since been covered by everyone
from the Dead Kennedys to the
Clash to garage punk bands the world over. He also wrote the
1956 Webb Pierce hit "Someday."
At the age of 21, Sonny rejoined the Crickets just prior to Holly’s
tragic death in a plane crash. He
then took a job playing lead guitar for the Everly Brothers right before
receiving his draft notice from
the Army. Although he was stationed in France for eighteen months,
he still managed to write one of
his classic songs during this period. “Walk Right Back,” recorded by
the Everly Brothers, topped the
charts in the U.S. and England.
After his discharge from the Army, Sonny moved to Los Angeles, where,
in 1965, he decided to
devote his full attention to songwriting and developing his own career
as an artist. For the first time, he
immersed himself in studying music instead of just playing it, taking
classical guitar lessons and enrolling
in a local music college.
Throughout the 1970’s, Sonny applied his songwriting skills to television
and radio commercials. Along
with friend and songwriting companion Don Piestrup, Sonny wrote numerous
nationally-known jingles
for clients including McDonald’s, Buick, Western Airlines, Mattel Toys,
Honda, Olympia Beer, and
Bell Telephone. During this time, he also wrote and sang the theme
song for the Mary Tyler Moore
Show, “Love Is All Around.” Because of its positive message for working
women in the early days of
feminism, the song is not only one of television’s best-loved themes
– it’s a cultural touchstone.
Sonny moved to Nashville in 1976, where he toured steadily with Waylon
Jennings’ road show as a
member of the Crickets for five years. As a recording artist for Elektra
in the early eighties, he scored
numerous songs in the Top 100 country charts, including “Good Ole Girls,”
written by Dan Wilson,
which made it into the top ten. With co-writer Ron Hellard, Sonny achieved
one of his biggest country
successes with “I’m No Stranger to the Rain,” a number one record for
the late Keith Whitley. The
Country Music Association voted the song 1989 Single of the Year.
Sonny is a member of BMI’s “Million Airs Club” in recognition for “I
Fought the Law,” “More Than
I Can Say” (co-written with J.I. Allison), “Walk Right Back,” “The
Straight Life,” and “I’m No
Stranger to the Rain,” each of which has logged over a million airplays
– over 50,000 radio hours
apiece.
In addition to his achievements in the pop and country arenas, Sonny’s
songs have been recorded by
renowned instrumentalists Chet Atkins, Al Hirt, Floyd Cramer, and Lawrence
Welk. His wide-ranging
contributions to songwriting earned him a place in the Nashville Songwriters
Association International
(NSAI) Hall of Fame in 1991.
VISIT SONNYCURTIS.COM