Born: 1914, Brooklyn, Nova Scotia
Debut: 1936
Died: 1999
Genre: Country
Achievements: Canadian Music Hall of Fame, American Country Hall of Fame, 70 Hit Singles on Billboard Country Charts, Sales of 80 million albums.
Notable Songs: “I’m Movin’ On”, “The Golden Rocket”, “I’ve Been Everywhere”, “I Don’t Hurt Anymore”, “Hello Love”.
While Wilf Carter founded Canadian country music, another arose to become its godfather. The internet’s All Music Guide refers to Hank Snow as “Canada’s greatest contribution to country music”. It’s no wonder; during his 30 year career, he scored more than 70 hit singles on the United States’ Billboard Country Charts and sold over 80 million albums. Hank Snow and Wilf Carter (ten years his senior) shared two things in common besides being Canada’s foremost country stars of the time: they were both from the same Province and they both ran away from home.
Snow was born in Brooklyn, Nova Scotia in 1914. When he was eight, his parents divorced, and he moved in with his grandmother, before rejoining his mother four years later when she remarried. Snow’s stepfather, however, was abusive, and he ran away from home. For the next four years, he served as a cabin boy on a fishing boat. He began singing for the fishermen. When he was 16, he returned home and, having ordered his first guitar from Eaton’s catalogue for $5.95, hoped to launch a singing career. His first show was a performance in a church basement in the town of Bridgewater. Encouraged by the response, he travelled to Nova Scotia’s biggest city—Halifax—where he began gigs in local bars and clubs. In 1936, he married and landed a regular paid program on the network Canadian Farm Hour. This exposure led to his receiving an invitation to audition for RCA Victor in Montreal. He signed with them at the end of the year. He recorded his first two original songs: “Lonesome Blue Yodel” and “Prisoned Cowboy”.
During this time, he was nicknamed “The Yodelling Ranger”. He had a regular show on CBC Montreal in the early 40s that made him a national star. He switched to CKCW in New Brunswick in 1944, changing his stage name to Hank the Singing Ranger, since his voice had deepened and he no longer yodelled.
Now a big star in Canada, he began the task of cracking the U.S. market. RCA refused to release any records in the U.S. until he first gathered an American fan base. He played in several shows but failed to gain fans. RCA rewarded him for his diligent attempts by releasing his first record in the U.S. in 1949—”Marriage Vow”. It charted but lasted only a week. In early 1950 Snow met honky tonk legend Earnest Tubb who gave him a slot at the Grand Ole Opry. But his performance was not well-received. About to abandon hope and return to Canada, Hank Snow’s big breakthrough arrived in the summer of 1950.
Hank Snow released the song “I’m Movin’ On” and it began its strapping ascent up the Canadian and American charts. Not only did it reach Number 1 but it remained there for a remarkable 21 weeks! This remains an all-time record. The song was the first of seven Number One hits by the Nova Scotian. In the next five years, he was to score a whopping 24 Top Ten hits. In 1954, Snow almost broke his own record when his “I Don’t Hurt Anymore” stayed at Number One for 20 straight weeks. By this time he had become an international star with a particularly strong following in the United Kingdom.
It is possible that if it wasn’t for Hank Snow, there would never have been a king. By “king” we are talking about Elvis Presley. By 1954, Snow had become a regular at the Grand Ole Opry. Its directors had refused to allow the amateur Elvis Presley on the show. Hank Snow took them aside and talked them into allowing Elvis on stage by using the king as his opening act. He then introduced Elvis to Tom Parker. In 1955, Snow and Parker formed the management team Hank Snow Attractions and signed Presley, launching the king’s career.
(An interesting side note on this is that Snow wanted Elvis to do country songs and Parker rock and roll. This dispute may have been the primary cause of a falling out between Snow and Parker, ultimately resulting in Snow dropping out and Parker taking sole control of Elvis’ career.)
Snow continued to churn out hits in the 60s but in the latter half of the decade things began to slow down as he wasn’t able to make the transition to the newer country-pop sounds. In 1974, however, he scored big with his monster hit “Hello Love”, his last chart-topper, making him, at 59 years, the oldest person in the history of music to reach Number One. (26 years later, Kenny Rogers, broke this record).
In 1979 Hank Snow was inducted into the American Country Music Hall of Fame and the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. Having been an abused child, he established the Hank Snow International Foundation For the Prevention of Child Abuse. Elvis Presley, The Rolling Stones, Ray Charles, Johnny Cash, Ashley MacIsaac, and Emmylou Harris, among others, have covered Hank Snow songs.
Hank Snow passed away in 1999, twelve days prior to the new millennium. He was 85 years old.




