Monday, February 25, 2019

Country Music Hall of Famer Mac Wiseman Passes Away at 93

K.F. Raizor, author of the website Raizor's Edge and the book We Can't Sing and We Ain't Funny: The World of Homer and Jethro is our guest writer today on That Nashville Sound. She's ever so gracious to provide wonderful tributes to honor those to whom the music we treasure just wouldn't be the same without. Thank you, K.F.

In less than two months the Country Music Hall of Fame has lost its fourth member. Mac Wiseman, the legendary singer, dubbed "Voice With a Heart," died Sunday (2/24). He had been suffering from kidney failure in the last weeks of his life.

Malcom Bell Wiseman was born in 1925 in Virginia. Stricken with polio as a child, he learned to play guitar, and music became his primary interest. His first appearance on record came as the bass player on Molly O'Day's classic "The Tramp on the Street" in 1946.

Wiseman also worked in radio, where he would sing and play records. Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs heard him on the radio and asked him to join their band. From there he later became a member of Bill Monroe's Blue Grass Boys before striking out on his own in 1951.

Although usually considered "bluegrass" Wiseman had a number of songs on the singles chart. His highest charting song was the classic "Jimmy Brown the Newsboy," although he also had a top 40 country hit with the novelty Cy Coben-penned song "Johnny's Cash and Charley's Pride" (with lyrics that were puns of country singers' names: "If I had Johnny's paycheck Charlie'd walk'er home from work no more").

In addition to his decades of work as a recording artist, Wiseman was also very active behind the scenes. In 1958 he became the first treasurer of the Country Music Association, the organization that would later create the Country Music Hall of Fame. He was inducted in 2014. Additionally, he helped charter the International Bluegrass Music Association. His close association with bluegrass throughout his career led him to be part of the third class of inductees into the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame.

People have often asked me what my favorite concert was. It came in 1995, at MerleFest. It was hardly a "concert" in the traditional sense (as anyone who's ever been to MerleFest, or any bluegrass festival, will attest), but it was the memorable thing I've ever witnessed in music. Mac Wiseman was on a stage in a tent near the main grounds, entertaining the Saturday pre-lunch crowd. One of the individuals enjoying Wiseman's wonderful voice was Doc Watson, the founder of the festival. After Wiseman left the stage he sat down on a stool next to Watson, and the two spent the next 45 minutes swapping stories and songs, passing Wiseman's guitar between them. Totally impromptu, totally unscripted, and totally mesmerizing.

The song that's probably most closely tied to Mac Wiseman is "'Tis Sweet to Be Remembered." That sweet voice will always be remembered.

Mac Wiseman was 93.

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