Tom T. Hall Biography

Closeup image of Tom T. Hall
CREDIT: Buddy Squires, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Known in country music circles as “the Storyteller,” Tom T. Hall has turned his gift for narrative into award-winning songs, novels, and short stories. A singer and instrumentalist, he has penned twelve No. 1 country hits and 26 more that reached the Top 10. Hall is perhaps best known for his own crossover hit, “I Love,” which reached No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100, and the super-smash “Harper Valley PTA,” which singer Jeannie C. Riley took to No. 1 on the pop and country charts just a week apart, sold more than six million copies, and won both CMA and GRAMMY awards.

The son of a preacher, Tom calls himself a “born songwriter.” He received his first guitar from his father when he was eight and wrote his first song, “Haven’t I Been Good to You,” at nine. After the death of his mother two years later and his father’s debilitating hunting accident four years after that, Hall was forced to quit school and find work. By day he worked in a garment factory while, at night, he performed in his own bluegrass band, the Kentucky Travelers. After a stint in the Army, during which he resumed the writing of songs, Hall returned to Appalachia and a life of music. In 1964, he was working as a disc jockey at a West Virginia radio station.

A fellow came by promoting records out of Nashville. And I’ve got a guitar sitting behind my desk, and he said, “You write songs?” And I said, “Yeah.” So he said, “Sing me a song.” So I got the guitar and sang it and he said, “You know, I’d like to take some of these to Nashville for you.” So he did.

Hall’s composition, “DJ for a Day,” was picked up by NewKeys Music and recorded by Jimmy C. Newman. After the song hit No. 1 on the country chart, followed up by his Top 10 song, “Mad,” Hall moved to Nashville. Throughout the coming decades, Hall would pen such classics as “(Margie’s at) the Lincoln Park Inn,” “That’s How I Got to Memphis,” and “Little Bitty.”

Hall began his career as a recording artist in 1967 and had a series of hits, including the country No. 1s “A Week in a Country Jail,” “The Year That Clayton Delaney Died,” “Old Dogs, Children, and Watermelon Wine,” “I Love,” “Country Is,” “I Care,” and “Faster Horses.” All these songs were self-penned and bear Hall’s trademarks: a keen sensitivity to the problems of plain folks, a gift for tale-spinning, acute attention to detail, and an economical writing style, influenced by writer Ernest Hemingway. With a genius for capturing the nuances and speech patterns of folks living in small southern towns, Hall is credited by historian Bill C. Malone as having “restored the old tradition of storytelling” to country music.

In later decades, Hall and his wife and collaborator, Miss Dixie, focused on bluegrass music, advancing the careers of fledgling and established musicians and creating bluegrass music themselves. Operating from their farm outside Nashville, they ran music publishing companies and a state-of-the-art studio. Together, they won the Bluegrass Songwriter of the Year awards for a dozen years between 2002 and 2015. Hall was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008, and in 2012 was presented with the BMI Icon award for songwriters who have had a “unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers.”

Born: May 25, 1936, Olive Hill, Kentucky

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