The Oak Ridge Boys

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:BLP sources Template:Infobox musical artist

The Oak Ridge Boys are an American vocal quartet. The group consists of Duane Allen (lead), William Lee Golden (baritone), Richard Sterban (bass), and Ben James, who replaced Joe Bonsall as tenor in December of 2023. Allen, Bonsall, Golden, and Sterban comprised the group's longest-lasting lineup, from 1973 until 2023, except for the period between 1987 and 1995 when Golden was replaced by Steve Sanders.

The act was founded in 1943 as Wally Fowler and the Georgia Clodhoppers, but were soon known as The Oak Ridge Quartet. They became popular in Southern gospel in the 1950s and their name was changed to Oak Ridge Boys in the 1960s. They transitioned from traditional southern gospel to contemporary gospel before going into popular music in the mid-1970s.<ref name="2015_hall">Carter, Walter: "Oak Ridge Boys: Inducted 2015,", 2015, (adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum's Encyclopedia of Country Music, Oxford University Press) Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, retrieved September 6, 2020</ref><ref name="hof">"Jim Ed Brown And The Browns, Grady Martin, Oak Ridge Boys Inducted Into Country Music Hall Of Fame", October 26, 2015, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, retrieved September 6, 2020</ref>

The Oak Ridge Boys finally broke through in the late 1970s, including their appearance on "Slip Slidin' Away" with Paul Simon, and reached their commercial peak in 1981 with their cover of "Elvira", a Top 5 hit on the Billboard Hot 100.

History

The Oak Ridge Quartet

The core group that eventually led to the Oak Ridge Boys was a country group called Wally Fowler and the Georgia Clodhoppers, formed in 1943 in Knoxville, Tennessee. They were requested to perform for staff members and their families restricted during World War II at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in nearby Oak Ridge, Tennessee. They were asked to sing there so often that eventually they changed their name to the Oak Ridge Quartet, and because their most popular songs were gospel, Fowler decided to focus solely on Southern gospel music. At the time, the quartet was made up of Wally Fowler, Lon "Deacon" Freeman, Curly Kinsey, and Johnny New. This group began recording in 1947.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Wally Fowler and the Oak Ridge Quartet were members of the Grand Ole Opry in the 1940s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 1949, the other three men split from Fowler to form a new group, Curley Kinsey and the Tennessee Ridge Runners, so Fowler hired an existing group, the Calvary Quartet, to reform the Oak Ridge Quartet. Walt Cornell sang baritone for the Oak Ridge Quartet in the early 1950s. In 1957, Fowler sold the rights to the "Oak Ridge Quartet" name to group member Smitty Gatlin in exchange for forgiveness of a debt. As a result of more personnel changes, the group lost its tenor, so they lowered their arrangements and had Gatlin sing tenor, while the pianist, Tommy Fairchild, sang lead. They recorded an album for Cadence Records, then in 1958, they hired Willie Wynn to sing the tenor part, and Fairchild moved back exclusively to the piano. At this point, the group consisted of Fairchild, Wynn, Gatlin, baritone Ron Page, and bass Herman Harper. They recorded an album on the Checker Records label, one on Starday, and three on Skylite. In 1961, Gatlin changed the group's name to "the Oak Ridge Boys" because their producer, Bud Praeger, thought "Oak Ridge Quartet" was too old-fashioned.

1962–1973

When Page left in 1962, Gary McSpadden, who had filled in for Jake Hess in the Statesmen Quartet, took over as baritone with the understanding that when Hess was ready to start a group, he would recruit McSpadden. They recorded another album on Skylite, and then two albums on Warner Bros. Records. When Hess followed through, McSpadden quit to join the Imperials. Jim Hamill<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (who later became a mainstay in the Kingsmen Quartet) was hired as his replacement. They made one album for Festival Records, one for Stateswood (Skylite's budget label), and two for Skylite. Hamill did not get along with the other Oaks, and William Lee Golden, a relative newcomer to the music industry, felt Hamill was hurting the act and suggested himself as a replacement. After Hamill's exit in 1964, Golden joined as baritone.

The group recorded an album for Starday and another on Skylite before Gatlin left in 1966. On Golden's recommendation, Duane Allen, former baritone of the Prophets, was hired as their new lead singer. With Willie Wynn and Herman Harper still on board, the group made another album for Skylite and one for United Artists before making a dozen albums between 1966 and 1973 for Heart Warming. They also had an album on Vista (Heart Warming's budget label) consisting of unreleased songs from previous sessions. When Harper departed in 1968 to join the Don Light Talent Agency (before starting his own company, the Harper Agency), Noel Fox, formerly of the Tennesseans and the Harvesters, took over the bass part. In 1971, the Oak Ridge Boys earned their first Grammy Award for a Jerry Reed song, "Talk About the Good Times"; Reed played guitar on the track.

Late in 1972, Richard Sterban, a member of the Stamps Quartet, joined the Oak Ridge Boys after the exit of Noel Fox. As a result, the quartet appearing on Hee Haw that year consisted of Allen, Wynn, Golden, and Sterban, and they took part in a single with Johnny Cash and the Carter Family, "Praise the Lord and Pass the Soup", that put the Oak Ridge Boys on the country charts for the first time. After completing their first Columbia album, Wynn departed and was succeeded by Joe Bonsall in October of 1973. (Bonsall replaced Wynn's vocals on half of the album.) The lineup remained constant for the next 14 years.

1974–1986

In 1975, the Oak Ridge Boys, after a brief flirtation with pop music, signed with country music promoter Jim Halsey, who as their new manager, encouraged them not only to leave gospel music behind by becoming a country act—the most fundamental change in their history—but also to present themselves as a singing quartet rather than as an eight-man band.<ref name="2015_hall" /><ref name="hof" /><ref name="trio_rocks">Everly-Douze, Susan: "'Livin' on Tulsa Time': Trio Rocks Country Music Cradle", biography, Oklahoma Today, retrieved from Oklahoma State University archives, September 5, 2020</ref><ref name="kpts">Grawe, Jim (producer/narrator): Kansas Country, documentary film (preview online), aired September 5, 2020 (and previously), KPTS-TV, viewed September 5, 2020</ref>

The group's move to Columbia resulted in three albums and several singles. In 1976, they toured Russia in support of Roy Clark. They were not a label priority, and their musical direction (pop, gospel, country) was unclear. While promoting the single "Heaven Bound", the Oak Ridge Boys made appearances on The Mike Douglas Show and The Merv Griffin Show. In an attempt to widen their appeal, they backed up Jimmy Buffett on "My Head Hurts, My Feet Stink, and I Don't Love Jesus". Despite being tapped by Paul Simon to sing backup on "Slip Slidin' Away", the group asked to be released from their contract after "Family Reunion", written by David Allan Coe, was not a hit. Columbia complied, and the band immediately made an album that was a mix of gospel, pop, and country on their own label, for sale at their concerts.

In 1977, the Oak Ridge Boys hit it big in country with their first ABC Records album, Y'all Come Back Saloon. The cover photo was the last to depict them as an eight-man group, although the band did not play on the album as on prior releases. Room Service broadened their reach into pop music while yielding three more country hits, including "I'll Be True to You", which was carried over from the previous album and became their first of seventeen number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts. The Oak Ridge Boys Have Arrived provided three more hits, two of which crossed over, in 1979. After MCA Records bought out ABC, Together came out in 1980, followed by a compilation in the autumn, Greatest Hits, with ten hits from their first four ABC/MCA albums.

Their next project, Fancy Free, released early in 1981, contained the Dallas Frazier song "Elvira". This remains their most widely known record, and Fancy Free their best-selling album. "Elvira" was recorded by other artists, including Frazier himself in the late 1960s and Kenny Rogers and the First Edition in 1970, but the Oak Ridge Boys were the first to make it a major hit. Their version sold platinum, hit number one on the country chart, and number five on the pop chart. In 1984, they became the first country act to be honored with the RIAA’s multi-platinum award, recognizing double-platinum sales for their album Fancy Free.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The doo-wop-style title track from Bobbie Sue, their eighth album, was another crossover hit, reaching number one on the country chart and number 12 on the pop chart. That album also spawned the group's first U.S.-released music video, for their minor hit "So Fine". (A video was made for "Easy", from the Y'all Come Back Saloon album, but was never released in the U.S.) The group also recorded one of their biggest sellers, The Oak Ridge Boys Christmas, featuring their smash hit "Thank God for Kids" in 1982. An all-pop outing, their ninth album, American Made, released in January of 1983, and the hits continued. The title track was used as a TV advertisement for Miller Beer, although the Oaks did not sing in the advertisement.

Their new MCA contract was among the biggest of its era in the music industry, with three new albums over the next four years. The late-1983 Deliver provided two hit singles, one of which was their last major hit. "I Guess It Never Hurts to Hurt Sometimes", was written by Randy VanWarmer, best known for his soft rock classic "Just When I Needed You Most". They paused for a compilation, Greatest Hits 2, in 1984. Unlike their first, Volume Two included two new songs, "Everyday" and "Make My Life With You", both of which became number-one hits.

In 1985, they released their 11th album, Step on Out, the title cut of which was written by ex-Byrd Chris Hillman. Although it was a hit, Step On Out was their first ABC/MCA album to indicate declining sales, despite the success of the lead single, "Little Things". After "Little Things," only a few of their hit songs in the coming years matched the quality of their earlier work; the others, regardless of chart position, made little to no impact. In 1986, the group put out a top-10 album, Seasons, which brought with it two minor hit singles (one of them written by Kix Brooks, and the more successful of the two by Orleans members Larry Hoppen and John Hall), as well as a second holiday album, which did not match the popularity of their first.

1987–1999

Template:More citations needed section After several years of conflict within the group generally, exacerbated by Golden's solo album in 1986 (which coincided with Bonsall's solo hit with Sawyer Brown), Allen, Sterban, and Bonsall chose to stay together, but went forward without their senior member. Shortly after releasing their first album with label boss Jimmy Bowen as producer, Golden was out of the act. Where the Fast Lane Ends included guest appearances by Patti LaBelle and Joe Walsh, both of whom were brought into the project by Golden. His place was taken by the band's guitarist, Steve Sanders, who was featured on most of their later hits.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The Oaks released three more albums at MCA and another greatest-hits project. In hopes of elevating their career, they moved to RCA Nashville for their next two albums, plus another compilation, Best of the Oak Ridge Boys, which included their minor hit cover of "(You're My) Soul and Inspiration" from the My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys soundtrack. As was the norm for older acts in the early 1990s, the Oaks fell out of favor with country radio, and the hits stopped by the end of 1991. They switched labels again and signed with Liberty Records, later Capitol Nashville, for which they made their third Christmas album, their final project with Sanders.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

When Sanders quit the group late in 1995, he was replaced for the rest of the tour first by Dee Allen, and later by Paul Martin (Duane Allen's son, and son-in-law, respectively); Martin had also replaced J.P. Pennington as lead singer of Exile a few years earlier. At midnight on New Year's Day 1996 in Chicago, Golden returned to the act. After being dropped by Capitol, they made a two-disc set, Revival (their first gospel album since 1976) with Leon Russell producing, for TV and mail-order distribution, in 1997. Sanders took his own life in 1998.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Over the next few years, the group toured, hosted their own Las Vegas variety series for TNN, collaborated on an album with polka instrumentalist Jimmy Sturr, and made a one-off album for Platinum Records titled Voices.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

2000–2020

Template:More citations needed section After almost a decade of dealing with labels that had little interest in promoting the Oak Ridge Boys and sluggish (or worse) sales, they were inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2000, and their fortunes improved when they signed with Spring Hill Records that same year. Over the next six years with producer Michael Sykes, they were nominated for four Grammy awards. The quartet released two gospel albums, two Christmas albums, and three frontline albums, concluding with Front Row Seats in 2006, an unsuccessful attempt to marry a message album to mainstream country with modern, aggressive arrangements and song selection, including the single "It's Hard to Be Cool in a Mini-Van".

In 2007, they visited their namesake, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. They were the featured performers at the Secret City Festival, received a tour of the Y-12 National Security Complex's historic Calutrons, and a street was named Oak Ridge Boys Way in their honor. They appeared on Shooter Jennings' The Wolf, which led to their own album, The Boys Are Back, in 2009. Named for the title song written by Jennings, it debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Country chart and number 77 on the Top 200. The album was produced by Dave Cobb, who came to the project through Jennings. Reviews were mixed, but most praised their cover of The White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army".

In 2011, they became members of the Grand Ole Opry,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> making them the only group to be inducted twice, albeit in two different incarnations (the Fowler group was inducted in 1945).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 2011 also brought It's Only Natural, which debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Country albums chart, remaining in the country top 40 for almost two months. It contained five new songs, six re-recordings of hits from the Sanders era, a new version of Golden's 1990 solo single, "Louisiana Red Dirt Highway", and a 30th-anniversary updating of "Elvira".

In 2015, they were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame by Kenny Rogers, with whom the Oaks often toured during their peak years.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (Though featured on most of their later hits, Sanders was not inducted.) That same year, they revisited "Elvira" in a collaboration with Home Free. The resulting video was a hit, reaching 90,000 views within 24 hours.<ref>Archived at GhostarchiveTemplate:Cbignore and the Wayback MachineTemplate:Cbignore: Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref>

In 2017, the Oak Ridge Boys joined Third Day at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to record a cover of Paul Simon's "Loves Me Like a Rock" for the Third Day album, Revival. This was the second time for the Oaks to record the song, having first covered it on their Columbia debut in 1974. In 2018, they sang "Amazing Grace" at the funeral of the 41st President of the United States, George H. W. Bush, as he had requested.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

2021–present: 50th anniversary tour, James succeeds Bonsall

On September 19, 2023, due to the rapid decline in Joe Bonsall's health, the Oak Ridge Boys hurriedly announced that all remaining dates on the tour marking their golden anniversary under the then-current lineup would be billed as a farewell tour.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Bonsall was dying of what was subsequently revealed to be amyotropic lateral sclerosis, to which he succumbed on July 9, 2024, aged 76.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> His last appearance was on December 17, 2023, at a concert in DeKalb, Illinois. Although Bonsall did not publicly announce his retirement until January, he left the group at the end of their annual Christmas tour and was replaced by Ben James, previously of Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, before the year was out. James debuted as Oaks' tenor on December 30 at a concert in Biloxi.<ref name="Nicholson">Template:Cite magazine</ref> It was initially expected that Bonsall would be included in some way on the group's next album;<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> ultimately he took no part in the project.

In October 2024, the group released Mama's Boys, the first to include James as a member. The album is dedicated to Bonsall and features a guest appearance from Willie Nelson.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The addition of James to the lineup led the group to cancel its retirement plans and continue performing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Richard Sterban was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in March 2025 and withdrew from touring in May for treatment. Dailey & Vincent bass Aaron McCune filled in when Sterban's health took him off the road in 2022, and is making TV appearances with the group while original Ernie Haase & Signature Sound bass Tim Duncan is on tour in place of Sterban.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Discography

Template:Main

Personnel

Current members

with

  • Aaron McCune - bass (touring substitute 2022-present)
  • Tim Duncan - bass (touring substitute 2025-present)

Former members

Template:Div col

  • Curly Kinsey – bass (1943–47)
  • Lon "Deacon" Freeman – baritone, guitar (1943–49)
  • Wally Fowler – lead (1943–52)
  • Johnny New – tenor (1943–49, 1952)
  • Monroe (Curley) Blaylock – bass (1947–49)
  • Bob Weber – bass (1949–56)
  • Pat Patterson – baritone (1949–52), lead (1952–53)
  • Joe Allred – tenor (1949–52)
  • Bob Prather – baritone (1952)
  • Carlos Cook – lead (1952–53); baritone (1953-54)
  • Calvin Newton – lead (1953–56)
  • Cat Freeman – tenor (1954–56)
  • Les Roberson – baritone (1955–56)
  • Ron Page – bass (1956)
  • Bill Smith – bass (1957)
  • Ronnie Page – baritone (1957–62)
  • Smitty Gatlin – lead (1957–58, 1959–66); tenor (1958–59)
  • Hobert Evans – tenor (1957–58)
  • Wallace Edwards – tenor fill-in (1958)
  • Bobby Clark – tenor (1958)
  • Tommy Fairchild – lead (1958–59); piano (1959–60, 1961–72)
  • Herman Harper – bass (1957–68)
  • Willie Wynn – tenor (1958–73)
  • Gary McSpadden – baritone (1962–63)
  • Jim Hamill – baritone (1963–64)
  • Noel Fox – bass (1969–72)
  • Joe Bonsall – tenor (1973–2023)
  • Steve Sanders – baritone (1987–95); rhythm guitar (1982–1987)
  • Dee Allen – baritone fill-in (1995)
  • Paul Martin – baritone fill-in (1995); bass guitar (1997-2002)
  • Rudy Gatlin - tenor fill-in (2022)
  • Jimmy Fortune - tenor fill-in (2022)
  • Woody Wright - lead fill-in (2024)

Template:Div col end

Timeline

<timeline> ImageSize = width:900 height:auto barincrement:20 PlotArea = left:65 bottom:80 top:0 right:0 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1943 till:07/04/2025 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:3 ScaleMajor = increment:9 start:1943 ScaleMinor = increment:1 start:1943

Colors =

id:Lead           value:red           legend:Lead
id:Tenor          value:yellow        legend:Tenor
id:Baritone       value:green         legend:Baritone
id:Bass           value:blue          legend:Bass
id:lines          value:black         legend:Studio_albums

BarData =

  bar:Fowler       text:"Fowler"
  bar:Cook         text:"Cook"
  bar:Newton       text:"Newton"
  bar:Gatlin       text:"Gatlin"
  bar:Fairchild    text:"Fairchild"
  bar:Allen        text:"Allen"
  bar:New          text:"New"
  bar:Allred       text:"Allred"
  bar:CFreeman     text:"C. Freeman"
  bar:Evans        text:"Evans"
  bar:Edwards      text:"Edwards"
  bar:Clark        text:"Clark"
  bar:Wynn         text:"Wynn"
  bar:Bonsall      text:"Bonsall"
  bar:James        text:"James"
  bar:LFreeman     text:"L. Freeman"
  bar:Patterson    text:"Patterson"
  bar:Prather      text:"Prather"
  bar:Roberson     text:"Roberson"
  bar:Ronnie       text:"Page"
  bar:McSpadden    text:"McSpadden"
  bar:Hamill       text:"Hamill"
  bar:Golden       text:"Golden"
  bar:Sanders      text:"Sanders"
  bar:Kinsey       text:"Kinsey"
  bar:Blaylock     text:"Blaylock"
  bar:Weber        text:"Weber"
  bar:Ron          text:"Page"
  bar:Smith        text:"Smith"
  bar:Harper       text:"Harper"
  bar:Fox          text:"Fox"
  bar:Sterban      text:"Sterban"
  bar:McCune       text:"McCune"

PlotData=

 width:11 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4)
 bar:Kinsey      from:01/01/1943 till:06/01/1947 color:Bass
 bar:LFreeman    from:01/01/1943 till:06/01/1949 color:Baritone
 bar:Fowler      from:01/01/1943 till:06/01/1952 color:Lead
 bar:New         from:01/01/1943 till:06/01/1949 color:Tenor
 bar:New         from:01/01/1952 till:01/01/1953 color:Tenor
 bar:Blaylock    from:06/01/1947 till:06/01/1949 color:Bass
 bar:Weber       from:06/01/1949 till:06/01/1956 color:Bass
 bar:Patterson   from:06/01/1949 till:06/01/1952 color:Baritone
 bar:Patterson   from:06/01/1952 till:06/01/1953 color:Lead
 bar:Allred      from:06/01/1949 till:04/01/1952 color:Tenor
 bar:Allred      from:08/01/1952 till:06/01/1952 color:Tenor
 bar:Prather     from:06/01/1952 till:01/01/1953 color:Baritone
 bar:Cook        from:06/06/1952 till:06/01/1953 color:Lead
 bar:Cook        from:06/01/1953 till:06/01/1954 color:Baritone
 bar:Newton      from:06/01/1953 till:06/01/1956 color:Lead
 bar:CFreeman    from:06/01/1954 till:06/01/1956 color:Tenor
 bar:Roberson    from:06/01/1955 till:06/01/1956 color:Baritone
 bar:Ron         from:06/01/1956 till:01/01/1957 color:Bass
 bar:Smith       from:01/01/1957 till:12/31/1957 color:Bass
 bar:Ronnie      from:01/01/1957 till:12/31/1962 color:Baritone
 bar:Gatlin      from:06/01/1957 till:06/01/1958 color:Lead
 bar:Gatlin      from:06/02/1958 till:05/31/1959 color:Tenor
 bar:Gatlin      from:06/01/1959 till:06/01/1966 color:Lead
 bar:Evans       from:01/01/1956 till:03/01/1957 color:Tenor
 bar:Edwards     from:03/01/1957 till:06/01/1957 color:Tenor
 bar:Clark       from:06/01/1957 till:01/01/1958 color:Tenor
 bar:Harper      from:01/01/1957 till:01/01/1969 color:Bass
 bar:Fairchild   from:01/01/1958 till:01/01/1960 color:Lead
 bar:Wynn        from:06/01/1958 till:12/31/1973 color:Tenor
 bar:McSpadden   from:01/01/1962 till:12/31/1963 color:Baritone
 bar:Hamill      from:01/01/1963 till:12/31/1964 color:Baritone
 bar:Fox         from:01/01/1969 till:12/31/1972 color:Bass
 bar:Golden      from:01/01/1965 till:06/30/1987 color:Baritone
 bar:Sanders     from:07/01/1987 till:11/30/1995 color:Baritone
 bar:Golden      from:01/01/1996 till:end        color:Baritone
 bar:Allen       from:01/01/1966 till:end        color:Lead
 bar:Sterban     from:07/01/1972 till:end        color:Bass
 bar:McCune      from:02/01/2023 till:end        color:Bass width:3
 bar:Bonsall     from:01/01/1973 till:12/30/2023 color:Tenor
 bar:James       from:12/30/2023 till:end        color:Tenor

LineData =

width:1
at:06/01/1958 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1959 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1959 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1960 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1960 color:black layer:back
at:06/06/1961 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1962 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1962 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1963 color:black layer:back
at:03/01/1964 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1964 color:black layer:back
at:09/01/1964 color:black layer:back
at:12/01/1964 color:black layer:back
at:03/01/1965 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1965 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1966 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1966 color:black layer:back
at:12/01/1966 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1967 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1967 color:black layer:back
at:12/01/1967 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1968 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1969 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1970 color:black layer:back
at:03/01/1971 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1971 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1972 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1972 color:black layer:back
at:12/01/1972 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1973 color:black layer:back
at:08/01/1973 color:black layer:back
at:12/01/1973 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1974 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1975 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1976 color:black layer:back
at:04/01/1977 color:black layer:back
at:09/02/1977 color:black layer:back
at:05/25/1978 color:black layer:back
at:03/30/1979 color:black layer:back
at:03/30/1980 color:black layer:back
at:03/26/1981 color:black layer:back
at:02/10/1982 color:black layer:back
at:01/20/1983 color:black layer:back
at:10/20/1983 color:black layer:back
at:03/06/1985 color:black layer:back
at:03/25/1986 color:black layer:back
at:02/10/1987 color:black layer:back
at:09/30/1987 color:black layer:back
at:08/10/1988 color:black layer:back
at:08/30/1989 color:black layer:back
at:04/09/1991 color:black layer:back
at:06/23/1992 color:black layer:back
at:06/01/1997 color:black layer:back
at:07/27/1999 color:black layer:back
at:05/22/2001 color:black layer:back
at:05/20/2003 color:black layer:back
at:07/27/2004 color:black layer:back
at:05/24/2005 color:black layer:back
at:09/26/2006 color:black layer:back
at:04/21/2009 color:black layer:back
at:05/19/2009 color:black layer:back
at:09/19/2011 color:black layer:back
at:05/22/2012 color:black layer:back
at:05/26/2015 color:black layer:back
at:03/16/2018 color:black layer:back
at:06/11/2021 color:black layer:back
at:10/25/2024 color:black layer:back

</timeline>

Band

Template:Div col

Current members

  • Rex Wiseman – fiddle, pedal steel guitar, mandolin, guitar (2003–present)
  • Scotty Simpson – bass guitar (2013–present)
  • Austin Curcuruto – drums, percussion (2017–present)
  • Darin Favorite – lead guitar (2021–present)
  • Andrew Ishee – piano (2024–present)

Former members

  • Boyce Hawkins – piano (1949)
  • Bobby Whitfield – piano (1950–52, 1954–1956)
  • Glen Allred – guitar, vocals (1951–52)
  • Powell Hassell – piano (1957–58)
  • Gary Trusler – piano (1960)
  • James Goss – piano (1960)
  • Mark Ellerbee – drums (1969–79)
  • Don Breland – bass guitar (1969–87)
  • John Rich – guitar, steel guitar (1972–75)
  • Tony Brown – piano and keyboards (1972–75)
  • Garland Craft – piano (1975–80)
  • B James Lowry - lead guitar (1976), (1987-1990)
  • Skip Mitchell – guitar (1976–87)
  • Marty Glisson – piano (1976)
  • Michael Saleem – drums (1979)
  • Fred Satterfield – drums (1980–98)
  • Pete Cummings – lead guitar (1980–1982)
  • Ron Fairchild – piano (1980–2001, 2002–09, 2013–2024; as substitute 2009–2012)
  • Dewey Dorough – saxophone, harmonica (1982–1998)<ref>Archived at GhostarchiveTemplate:Cbignore and the Wayback MachineTemplate:Cbignore: Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref>
  • Paul Uhrig – bass guitar (1987–1988, 1995-1997)
  • Dave Watson - bass guitar (1988-1994)
  • Kent Wells - lead guitar (1991)
  • Don Carr – lead guitar (1991–2014)
  • Chris Golden – acoustic guitar, mandolin (1996-1998); drums (1998–2014); also baritone fill-in (2004)
  • Jeff Douglas – guitar, dobro (1995–2021)
  • Jimmy Fulbright – piano (2001); bass guitar (2003–12)
  • Kyle Tullis - bass guitar (2002-2003)
  • Ryan Pierce - steel guitar, fiddle (2003)
  • Chris Nole – piano (2009–12)
  • David Northup – drums, percussion (2014–2017)
  • Roger Eaton – lead guitar (2014–2021)
  • James Watkins – lead guitar (2021)

Template:Div col end

Awards and honors

Grammy Awards<ref>Widner, Ellis & Carter, Walter. *Our Story*. Contemporary Books, 1987, p. 197.</ref>

American Music Awards<ref>Widner, Ellis & Carter, Walter. *Our Story*. Contemporary Books, 1987, p. 197.</ref>

  • 1982: Best Country Group
  • 1985: Best Country Video – "Everyday"

Academy of Country Music Awards<ref>Widner, Ellis & Carter, Walter. *Our Story*. Contemporary Books, 1987, p. 197.</ref>

  • 1978: Top Vocal Group
  • 1979: Top Vocal Group
  • 1979: Best Album – Y'all Come Back Saloon
  • 1982: Single of the Year – "Elvira"

Country Music Association Awards<ref>Widner, Ellis & Carter, Walter. *Our Story*. Contemporary Books, 1987, p. 197.</ref>

  • 1978: Instrumental Group of the Year (Oak Ridge Boys Band)
  • 1978: Vocal Group of the Year
  • 1981: Single of the Year – "Elvira"
  • 1986: Instrumental Group of the Year (Oak Ridge Boys Band)

Other honors

References

Template:Reflist

Template:The Oak Ridge Boys Template:Grand Ole Opry members Template:2010s Country Music Hall of Fame Template:American Music Award for Favorite Country Band/Duo/Group Template:CMA Group of the Year Template:Authority control