COUNTRY MUSIC SINGER/SONGWRITER ED BRUCE DIES AT AGE OF 81
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. - Ed Bruce, singer/songwriter,
died Friday, January 8, 2021, in Clarksville, Tennessee, of natural causes at
age 81.
In 1957, at the age of 17, he went to see Jack Clement, a recording engineer
for Sun Records. Bruce caught the attention of Sun owner Sam Phillips, for whom
he wrote and recorded "Rock Boppin' Baby" (as "Edwin
Bruce"). In 1962, he wrote "Save Your Kisses" for pop star Tommy
Roe and in 1963 he reached No. 109 on the Billboard "Bubbling Under"
chart with his own recording of "See the Big Man Cry" (Wand 140), both
published by Bill Justis at Tuneville Music. Charlie Louvin recorded "See
the Big Man Cry" (Capitol 5369) in 1965; Louvin's version reached No. 7 on
the Billboard "Country Singles" chart. During his career, many songs
that Bruce wrote and recorded were more successful when re-recorded by others.
In the early 1960s, Bruce recorded for RCA and some smaller labels like
Wand/Scepter, singing rockabilly music, as well as more pop-oriented material
such as "See the Big Man Cry." In 1966, he returned to RCA and
recorded "Puzzles", "The Price I Pay to Stay" and
"Lonesome Is Me". He still did not achieve great charting action. He
made money doing voice-overs for television and radio commercials. He scored
his first charted single with "Walker's Woods" in 1967, and also
charted with his version of The Monkees' "Last Train to Clarksville."
Both of these singles were minor hits. In 1969, Bruce signed with Monument
Records, where he continued to have minor successes with "Everybody Wants
To Get To Heaven" and "Song For Jenny".
Meanwhile, he continued to write songs like "The Man That Turned My Mama
On," which was a major hit for Tanya Tucker in 1974 and
"Restless" for Crystal Gayle the same year. He signed with United
Artists Records in 1973 and released several singles, but only one single in
1974 became a minor hit. He finally made the upper regions of the charts when
he made the Top 20 on the country charts with his version of "Mamas
Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys", a song he co-wrote
in 1976.
Two more Top 40 hits followed for Bruce in 1976, and in 1977, he signed with
Epic Records where he would score minor hits. In 1978, "Mamas Don't Let
Your Babies Grow up to Be Cowboys" was recorded by Willie Nelson and
Waylon Jennings. It became a major hit and continued the upward swing in
Bruce's career. In 1979, Tanya Tucker took Bruce's 1977 song "Texas (When
I Die)" into the country Top 5.
In 1980, Bruce signed with MCA Records, where he would score his biggest
successes. His early hits with MCA included "Diane", "The Last
Cowboy Song", "When You Fall In Love (Everything's A Waltz)",
"Evil Angel", and "Love's Found You And Me". His biggest
hit, "You're the Best Break This Old Heart Ever Had" went to number
one on the country chart in 1982. This also was Bruce's first Top 10 as a
singer after 15 years. He had other hit songs that made the Top 10 like
"Ever, Never Lovin' You", "My First Taste of Texas", and
"After All".
In 1984, he returned to RCA Records and scored a No. 3 hit with
"You Turn Me On Like A Radio" in 1985. His last Top 10 single was
"Nights" in 1986 and his last Top 40 single (and last chart single to
date) was "Quietly Crazy" in 1987.
During this time, Bruce began to act and do commercials. One of his biggest
acting roles was as the second lead on the television revival of 1957's Maverick, called Bret
Maverick. Starring James Garner as a legendary western gambler, the series ran
on NBC-TV during the 1981-82 season but was unexpectedly canceled despite
respectable ratings. Bruce played the surly town lawman who found himself
reluctantly co-owning a saloon with Maverick, with whom he seemed to maintain a
surreally adversarial relationship more or less throughout the entire season.
Bruce also sang and wrote the theme song to the show, while Garner himself sang
the same song over the end titles at the show's close, albeit while being
relentlessly interrupted by network announcements about upcoming programming.
After the 1986 album entitled Night
Things and a 1988 self-titled follow-up, Bruce made a
conscious decision to cut back on his music to focus on his acting career,
appearing in several made-for-TV films. He hosted two shows in the late
1980s, Truckin' USA and American Sports Cavalcade.
Bruce has also appeared in several theatrical releases, including Fire Down Below with
Steven Seagal.
Bruce was honored with the Arkansas Country Music Award for "Lifetime
Achievement" on June 3, 2018 at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
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