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Boots Randolph Biography |
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The Nashville Sound was Nashville's way of broadening the appeal of Country music by using instruments and arrangements familiar to listeners of pop music. Boots Randolph's saxophone playing, which combined elements of rhythm and blues, gospel and jazz, was a big part of the early Nashville Sound records. By the late fifties Boots Randolph was playing on many Nashville records and, in 1963, he had his moment as a recording star with his pop hit "Yakety Sax." Boots Randolph, Floyd Cramer and Chet Atkins joined forces and toured together for many years. In the late seventies Boots Randolph became a fixture in a club on Nashville's Printers Alley and, in later years, co-owned a club on Music Valley Drive near the newer Grand Ole Opry House.
Boots Randolph Discography |
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