Bill Anderson
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Bill Anderson: As Far As I Can See

Available Until
24
September 2023
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An exploration of the Country Music Hall of Fame member’s life and musical legacy, from childhood through his contributions as one of the most decorated recording artists, songwriters, and entertainers in history.

Bill Anderson's Love of Baseball

Country Music Hall of Fame member Bill Anderson’s love of music is rivaled but not eclipsed by his love of baseball, particularly, the Atlanta Braves. From attracting major league attention as a pitcher for his high school team to assembling star-studded softball games for charity, Anderson’s interest in America’s pastime runs deep. So much so that he’s befriended numerous Braves players, coaches, and staff members throughout the years.

Watch above to hear from Jim Lovell, Senior Director of Team Travel for the Atlanta Braves, and country music superstar, Trisha Yearwood, whose father bonded with Anderson over music as well as their love of the game.

Making of the Exhibit

Known as “Whisperin’ Bill” for his soft-spoken and conversational singing style, Bill Anderson has placed eighty records on the Billboard charts as a recording artist, reaching country’s Top Twenty more than forty times. As a songwriter, he’s placed songs on the country charts in seven consecutive decades.

About Bill Anderson

Bill Anderson
Bill Anderson co-hosted the 1977-1978 season ABC-TV’s game show The Better Sex.

James William Anderson III was born on November 1, 1937, in Columbia, South Carolina. He was fascinated by music from the age of three and as a youngster spent hours listening to country music on the radio. In late 1945, when Anderson was eight, the family moved to Georgia, settling near Atlanta, in Decatur. He learned the guitar and wrote his first song by age 11.

In high school, he formed a band and the group took first place in his school’s talent show on the strength of one of his self-penned songs. But at the time, Anderson was as interested in writing and sports as he was in music. He was a baseball pitcher at Avondale High, while also writing stories about sports for Decatur’s DeKalb New Era newspaper.

Anderson entered the University of Georgia in 1955, where he studied journalism and began working as a disc jockey at local radio stations.

After recording his own composition, “City Lights,” in 1957 for Texas-based TNT Records, the song eventually made its way to Country Music Hall of Fame member Ray Price, who took his own version to the top of Billboard’s country charts in 1958.

Anderson soon graduated college, signed to Decca Records, and began his long string of hit recordings with famed record producer and Country Music Hall of Fame member Owen Bradley in Nashville, Tennessee. Anderson wrote many of his hits himself—“The Tip of My Fingers,” “Walk Out Backwards,” “Po’ Folks,” “Mama Sang a Song,” “Still” and “Bright Lights and Country Music,” among many others.

Anderson also played a major role in launching Country Music Hall of Fame member Connie Smith’s career after hearing her perform at a talent show he was judging. He wrote her debut hit, “Once a Day,” and introduced her to RCA’s Nashville chief and Country Music Hall of Fame member Chet Atkins, who signed her to the label.

 

Television and Duets

At the beginning of 1965, Anderson began hosting the syndicated TV program The Bill Anderson Show, a widely aired country music showcase. When popular singer Jan Howard joined The Bill Anderson Show in 1966, she and Anderson began recording successful duets together, including four Top Five country hits and four Decca albums between 1968 and 1972.

Meanwhile, Anderson’s ease and ready wit on camera led to more television opportunities. He began appearing on Match GameTattletalesPasswordHollywood Squares, and other daytime game shows, and even hosted The Better Sex game show on ABC. He also acted in soap operas, including ABC’s One Life to Live.

A Second Career

After spending years in the limelight as a recording artist and entertainer, Anderson struggled with bouts of writer’s block and feelings of inadequacy in the 1980s. In the 1990s, however, he began co-writing with artists and songwriters, including Country Music Hall of Fame member Vince Gill and Steve Wariner.

His name turned up again on the country charts in 1995 with “Which Bridge to Cross (Which Bridge to Burn),” which was co-written with and recorded by Gill. A songwriting renaissance followed. Anderson rounded out the century with two more hits, “Wish You Were Here” by Mark Wills and the Grammy-nominated “Two Teardrops” by Wariner.

A slew of hits continued into the 2000s, including “Whiskey Lullaby,” a ballad Anderson co-wrote with singer-songwriter Jon Randall Stewart about alcoholism and suicide recorded by Brad Paisley and Alison Krauss. In 2002, Anderson was also honored with Broadcast Music Inc.’s inaugural BMI Icon Award for the genre of country music. “Whiskey Lullaby” went on to sell two million copies and won the 2005 Country Music Association Song of the Year award.

Its success was followed by 2006’s “Give It Away,” a #1 hit for George Strait that Anderson wrote with Jamey Johnson and Buddy Cannon. It won Song of the Year designations from both the CMA and the Academy of Country Music.

Still Going Strong

Anderson remains an active force on Nashville’s Music Row. In recent years, he has completed several solo albums, collaborated with Country Music Hall of Fame members Bobby Bare and Dolly Parton on new album tracks, and has even written songs via Zoom with Brad Paisley during the pandemic. He continues to serve as a performer and beloved ambassador for the Grand Ole Opry.

In addition to his induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2001, he’s been inducted into the National Songwriters Hall of Fame (2018) and several other halls of fame. In 2021, Connie Smith’s 1964 recording of his song “Once a Day,” was added to the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry, alongside works by Hank Williams, Bob Dylan, Irving Berlin, and other songwriting greats.

Live at the Hall

“Bill Anderson: Live at the Hall,” captured on stage at the museum, offers a deep, personal dive into the Country Music Hall of Fame member and Grand Ole Opry mainstay’s singular life and career, complementing and expanding on the rich storytelling in the exhibition.

  • Bill Anderson and Jan Howard

    Bill Anderson and Jan Howard on the set of The Bill Anderson Show, late 1960s

  • Bill Anderson with wardrobe in hand

    Bill Anderson steps off his tour bus, late 1960s

  • Bill Anderson with a guitar on his shoulder

    Bill Anderson, c. 1970

  • Bill Anderson in a purple coat

    Bill Anderson backstage at the Grand Ole Opry, c. 1961

  • Bill Anderson Spinning Discs

    Bill Anderson spinning discs at WGAU, the Athens, Georgia radio station where he worked in 1956

See the exhibit

The exhibition Bill Anderson: As Far as I Can See, Presented by Omni Hotel and Resorts, runs December 3, 2021, through March 19, 2023, at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in downtown Nashville.

Omni Hotel and Resorts

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