Biography
The Maddox Brothers (Cliff, Cal, Fred, Don, and "friendly Henry, the working girl's friend") and their sister Rose called themselves "America's Most Colorful Hillbilly Band." They weren't kidding. It wasn't just a matter of hillbilly couture -- though with their matching Turk suits and spangles the family had style in spades. But "colorful" described their sound as well. On the air in Modesto, California by 1937, the group made their first records for the 4-Star label in 1946. From 1951 until 1956, they recorded for Columbia. At that point, the family act broke up, though Rose maintained a successful solo career for many years after. But throughout the 1940s and '50s, the Maddox Brothers and Sister Rose tore up the honky tonks from the Pacific Northwest to the Gulf Coast with slap-bass boogie and an iconoclastic attitude toward the stiffer mores of conventional country. In other words, they rocked the house.

It all started in 1933, when the Maddox family -- Charlie and Lula, and five of their seven children -- hitchhiked and rode the rails from Boaz, Alabama to California, where they worked in the migrant labor camps in the San Joaquin Valley. Fred quickly tired of picking fruit and wrangled a radio spot on KTRB Modesto for his intensely musical family (which featured 11-year-old Rose on decidedly raw lead vocals). In addition to playing on KTRB, the group performed at local barns and festivals, and in 1939 they were named the best band at the California State Fair. Early the following year, they began playing at KFBK in Sacramento, and their show was syndicated up and down the West Coast.

Though the future was bright for the group, their career was interrupted by the advent of World War II in the early '40s. Fred, Cal, and Don were all drafted into the military (Cliff was too ill and Henry was too young to serve), leaving the remaining members to play with different bands during the course of the war. Rose sang with Arky Stark and Dave Stogner. Meanwhile, Cliff headed his own band, the Rhythm Ramblers. Following the war, the Maddox Brothers and Rose re-formed, settling at KGDM in Stockton, California. Over the next decade, their fan base steadily grew as their blend of music and comedy played well not only on the radio but in concert, too. During the '40s and early '50s, they cut a number of records for 4-Star.

In 1951, the Maddoxes switched labels and signed with Columbia Records. Over the next six years, they recorded over 40 singles for the label. During the '50s, the group appeared on both the Louisiana Hayride and the Grand Ole Opry, often performing with an augmented lineup that featured steel guitarist Bud Duncan and either Roy Nichols, Jimmy Winkle, or Gene Breeden on lead guitar. At the end of their stint with Columbia, Rose pursued a solo career, leading to the band's breakup in the summer of 1956. Rose began a solo career with the assistance of Cal, while the remaining members operated as a new band. Despite the breakup, the Maddox Brothers and Rose recorded a final session for Columbia in the summer of 1957.

Following their disbandment, Rose had a successful solo career on Capitol, while the band comprised of the remaining members quickly fell apart. Fred opened a nightclub, the Fred Maddox Playhouse, which was quite successful during the late '50s and early '60s. Henry went on to accompany Rose on her recordings for Capitol. Over the course of the '70s and '80s, all of the members of the Maddox Brothers -- with the notable exception of Rose, who continued to perform into the late '80s -- quietly retired from music. The last surviving member of the group, Don Maddox, died on September 12, 2021. ~ Dan Cooper, Rovi




 
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Maddox Brothers & Rose - Vintage video clip
The Maddox Brothers & Rose
Maddox Brothers & Rose - George`s Playhouse Boogie (1949)
MADDOX BROTHERS & ROSE - Milk Cow Blues - 1947
The Maddox Brothers & Rose 18 Dark as the Dungeon
The Maddox Brothers & Rose 13 Philadelphia Lawyer
Maddox Brothers And Rose - Honky Tonkin (1949)
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