
The King Of Truckers - Dave Dudley - verstorben
Am 22.12.2003 ist der King of Truckers - Dave Dudley - verstorben. Von CMT erhielten wir einen kleinen Rückblick auf das Leben von dem Sänger und Songwriter aus den USA. Dieser Text liegt bisher nur in Englisch vor, allerdings arbeiten wir zur Zeit an einer Übersetzung, die wir dann natürlich an dieser Stelle veröffentlichen werden.

Dave Dudley, best known for the truck-driving anthem "Six Days on the Road,"
is dead at the age of 75. Dudley died Monday (Dec. 22) of an apparent heart
attack suffered at his home in Danbury, Wis.
Born David Darwin Pedruska on May 3, 1928,
in Spencer, Wis., Dudley was raised in Stevens Point, Wis., and played on
semi-pro baseball teams until an arm injury forced an end to his athletic career
in 1950. Moving toward a career in country music, he became a radio disc jockey,
working at stations in Wisconsin, Iowa, Idaho and Minnesota and formed the Dave
Dudley Trio in 1953. Dudley was sidelined for several months in 1960 after being
struck by a car while loading equipment following a performance in Minneapolis.
Dudley first hit the Billboard country singles chart in 1961 with "Maybe I Do"
on Vee Records. Charting again a year later with "Under Cover of the Night" on
the Jubilee label, he spent two weeks at No. 2 on the country charts with his
1963 recording of "Six Days on the Road" on the independent Golden Wing label.
Written by Earl Greene and Earl Montgomery, the song was passed along to Dudley
by Jimmy C. Newman. Although Dudley was initially reluctant to record the
up-tempo song, "Six Days on the Road" helped him land a recording contract with
Mercury Records.