As a teenager, Dave regularly appeared on radio, as well as singing, yodelling, and performing rope tricks at rodeos - something he would continue to do for the rest of his life. In 1936, he broadcast live from the Goodyear Blimp for WQAM in Miami, but his career really took off (quite literally) with his song Amelia Earhart's Last Flight, which it is claimed was the first song ever sung on television in the US, broadcast from the 1939 New York World's Fair.
In a career that lasted more than 50 years, he appeared in
several westerns movies as a singing cowboy, playing Steve Barrett in Swing
in the Saddle (1944), which also featured the Nat King Cole trio and Slim
Summerville, and was either featured or starred in more than half-a-dozen shorts,
including Hidden Valley Days and Echo Ranch (both 1948). He
worked for several radio stations, including WOR in New York City, WSAI (Ohio)
and XERF, on the Texas/Mexico border. In later years, he became a well-known
painter of Texas landscapes and Western Americana themes and was often known to
paint the backs of his old guitars. Dave’s compositions (outside of the death
disc genre) include Hitler Lives (If We Hurt Our fellow Man), the Wink
Martindale, communist-themed pastiche Red Deck of Cards, and the 1980
novelty The Night Ronald Reagan Rode With Santa Claus.
Red River Dave joined the subjects of so many of his songs
on 15 January 2002, aged 87. His passing merited an obituary in The Guardian.
Here are a couple of killers from Dave’s prodigious output, his
1969 single about the Tate-LaBianca tragedy California Hippie Murders! and, from 1962, the surprisingly graphic The Ballad of Marilyn Monroe.
Enjoy!
Download Hippie HERE
Download Monroe HERE
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