Ray Price, one of country music’s most popular and influential
singers and bandleaders who had more than 100 hits and was one of the
last living connections to Hank Williams, died Monday. He was 87.
Price
died Monday, December 16, 2013 in the afternoon at his ranch outside Mount Pleasant, Texas, said
Billy Mack Jr., who was acting as a family spokesman. Billie Perryman,
the wife of family friend and spokesman Tom Perryman, a DJ with KKUS-FM
in Tyler, also confirmed his death.
Price was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2011 and it had
recently spread to his liver, intestines and lungs, according East Texas
Medical Center in Tyler. He stopped aggressive treatments and left the
hospital last Thursday to receive hospice care at home.
At the time, his wife, Janie Price, relayed what she called her
husband’s “final message” to his fans: “I love my fans and have devoted
my life to reaching out to them. I appreciate their support all these
years, and I hope I haven’t let them down. I am at peace. I love Jesus.
I’m going to be just fine. Don’t worry about me. I’ll see you again one
day.”
Perhaps best known for his version of the Kris Kristofferson song “For
the Good Times,” a pop hit in 1970, the velvet-voiced Price was a giant
among traditional country performers in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, as
likely to defy a trend as he was to defend one. He helped invent the
genre’s honky-tonk sound early in his career, then took it in a more
polished direction.
His 1956 version of “Crazy Arms” became a landmark song for both
Price and country music. His first No. 1 country hit, the song rode a
propulsive beat into the pop top 100 as well. Using a drummer and
bassist to create a country shuffle rhythm, he eventually established a
sound that would become a trademark.
“It was strictly country and it went pop,” Price said of the song. “I never have figured that one out yet.”
Price was born near Perryville, Texas, in 1926 and was raised in
Dallas. He joined the Marines for World War II and then studied to be a
veterinarian at North Texas Agricultural College before he decided on
music as a career.
Soft-spoken and urbane, Price told the AP in 1976: “I’m my own worst critic. I don’t like to hear myself sing or see myself on television. I see too many mistakes.”
He was one of the few who saw them.