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The Chuck Wagon Gang is a Country gospel musical group, formed in 1935 by David P. ("Dad") Carter, oldest son Ernest ("Jim") along with daughters Lola ("Rose") and Effie ("Anna"). [1] The group got their first radio break as sponsored singers for Bewley Flour in 1936. [2] The "Gang" signed with Columbia Records and remained with them for 39 ...
Keep On Keepin' On is a 1993 album by the Chuck Wagon Gang. [1][2] The composition of the four-part country and gospel harmony for the album was led by Carter family members Roy Carter and his sisters Ruth Ellen Yates and Betty Goodwin, and for the first time, his daughter Shirley. The album was on music charts for 11 weeks, [3][dubious ...
In a history given by the current Chuck Wagon Gang, their recording of "I'll Fly Away" is described as the "first commercially licensed" release. [12] Their recording appears to have had two releases on Columbia, first as a B-side in 1949, then as an A-side in 1950. 1949 – Columbia 20599 – "Dream Boat"/"I'll Fly Away" [11]
Chuck Wagon Gang, which is all volunteer, averages about 60 events a year and has traveled to 26 states and nine foreign countries. When people come through the line to get a plate of food, Rogers ...
Mull was the grandson of Wallace B. Mull, a circuit riding preacher in the 1800s. His parents and siblings had formed a Gospel music group, The Valdese Sacred Band, and Mull played banjo in the group as a child. He had been legally blind since the age of 11 months, after an accidental fall into a fireplace had damaged his eyesight.
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A signature group of southern gospel, the Chuck Wagon Gang became Columbia's bestsellers with at least 37 million records, [21] many of them through the aegis of the Mull Singing Convention of the Air sponsored on radio (and later television) by southern gospel broadcaster J. Bazzel Mull (1914–2006).