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Carl Butler and Pearl

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American country music duo
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(August 2021)

Carl Butler and Pearl
OriginKnoxville, Tennessee
GenresCountry
Years active1961–1980
LabelsColumbia
Past membersCarl Butler
Pearl Butler

Carl Butler and Pearl were an Americancountry music husband-and-wife duo. Between 1962 and 1969, the duo released several singles and charted thirteen times on the U.S. country charts, reaching No. 1 in 1962 with their first single, "Don't Let Me Cross Over".

Biography

[edit]

Carl Roberts Butler was born inKnoxville,Tennessee, United States, on June 2, 1927.[1] He grew up influenced byRoy Acuff and the old time music around his home. He began singing at local dances at the age of 12 and, after service inWorld War II, sang with several bluegrass bands and then as a solo act on numerous radio shows, including the "Mid Day Merry Go Round" on WNOX in Knoxville, Tennessee.[1] During this period he metPearl Dee Jones, aNashville native born September 20, 1927, whom he married in 1952.[1]

In 1961, Carl Butler recorded "Honky Tonkitis",[1] which made it to number 25 on the country chart. The following year, the Butlers were invited to join theGrand Ole Opry, and the exposure provided by the show helped them push "Don't Let Me Cross Over" to number one.[1] Their first single as a duo spent almost three months at the top of the country music chart,[1] and they remained one of country music's most popular duos for the next two decades. Later chart records included "I Wouldn't Change You If I Could", "Too Late To Try Again", "Loving Arms" and "I'm Hanging Up The Phone".[1]

Carl Butler was also a songwriter, penning classics including "If Teardrops Were Pennies", a No. 8 hit forCarl Smith in 1951 and a top 10 single forPorter Wagoner andDolly Parton in 1973, and "Crying My Heart Out Over You" which becameRicky Skaggs' first number one hit in 1981.[1] The Butlers were also among the earliest supporters ofDolly Parton, with whom they had worked in Knoxville in the 1950s, and they helped to get her established in Nashville in the early 1960s. (Parton, in turn, paid tribute to the Butlers when she included "Don't Let Me Cross Over" onTreasures, a 1996 album of covers of some of her favorite songs.)

The Butlers continued to record throughout the 1970s but essentially retired to their ranch, "Crossover Acres", nearFranklin, Tennessee, in the early 1980s. They made occasional guest appearances on the Opry until Pearl Butler died at the age of 60 on March 1, 1988.[1] Carl made an unsuccessful attempt at a comeback after her death. He died of a heart attack on September 4, 1992.[1]

Discography

[edit]

Albums

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YearAlbumChart PositionsLabel
US CountryUS
1963Don't Let Me Cross Over104Columbia
1964Loving Arms10
1965Old and the New
1966The Great Carl Butler SingsHarmony
1967Avenue of PrayerColumbia
1968Our Country World
1969Honky Tonkin'41
1970Greatest Hits
1971For the First TimeHarmony
1972Watch and Pray
Temptation Keeps Twisting Her ArmsChart
1980Country We LovePedaca
Honky TonkitisCMH

Singles

[edit]
YearSingleChart PositionsAlbum
US CountryUS
1961"Honky Tonkitis"(Carl Butler)25Don't Let Me Cross Over
1962"Don't Let Me Cross Over"188
1963"Loving Arms"14Loving Arms
1964"Too Late to Try Again"9Old and the New
"My Tears Don't Show"36Our Country World
"I'm Hanging Up the Phone"14
"Forbidden Street"23single only
1965"We'd Destroy Each Other"38Old and the New
"Just Thought I'd Let You Know"22Loving Arms
"Beers and Tears"singles only
"Our Ship of Love"42
1966"Wrong Generation"
"Little Pedro"31Our Country World
"Dreaming of a Little Cabin"Loving Arms
1967"For a Minute There"single only
1968"If I'd Only Met You First"Our Country World
"Punish Me Tomorrow"A28Honky Tonkin'
1969"I Never Got Over You"46
"We'll Sweep Out the Ashes in the Morning"63singles only
"If Teardrops Were Pennies"
1970"Used to Own This Train"
"Bottoms Up"
1971"Temptation Keeps Twisting Her Arms"Temptation Keeps Twisting Her Arms
1972"She Didn't Come Home"
1973"Heartaches for Lunch"
1980"Motel Song"Honky Tonkitis
  • A"Punish Me Tomorrow" peaked at No. 25 on theRPM Country Tracks chart in Canada.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijColin Larkin, ed. (1993).The Guinness Who's Who of Country Music (First ed.).Guinness Publishing. p. 58/60.ISBN 0-85112-726-6.
Current members
Former members

†Honorary former member; was scheduled to be invited, but died before the invitation was extended

Pending members
International
Artists
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