Hillbilly-Music.com—The People. The Music. The History.
Rice Brothers Gang
Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame (1998)
KTBS Shreveport, LA
KWKH Shreveport, LA
WAGA Atlanta, GA
WGST Atlanta, GA
WSB Atlanta, GA

About the Group

About The Group

The Rice Brothers
Hillbillies With Uptown Ambitions
By Wayne W. Daniel
Used with permission

"We didn't go in for what we called dyed-in-the-wool hillbilly. We was hillbillies, but we didn't play hillbilly." That's the way, after the passage of some 40 years, Paul Rice remembered the music of The Rice Brothers, an act built around himself and his brother Hoke. Despite their efforts to overcome what Paul called the "corny" image of some of their contemporaries such as The Blue Sky Boys, The Rice Brothers' music was firmly rooted in the hillbilly string band tradition of the Southeast.

Hoke Rice was born January 8, 1909, some 50 miles northeast of Atlanta, Georgia, in Hall County. Four years later, on July 23, 1913, while the family was still living in the same Chestnut Mountain community near Gainesville, Paul was born. Their father, a preacher and cobbler, repaired soles during the week and saved souls on Sundays. From their mother, who played five-string banjo, fiddle and piano, the Rice brothers inherited their musical talent.

Around 1920, when Hoke was 11 years old and Paul was about seven, their parents separated. Mrs. Rice later married a textile mill mechanic and part-time musician named Rufus M. "Bud" Silvey. He subsequently encouraged and helped shape the musical development of his two stepsons. In pursuit of his textile trade, Silvey and his family lived in several small towns in Georgia. Silvey's musical enterprises, which later included Hoke and Paul encompassed a wider circuit and took them to small towns in several Southeastern states.

In his late teens, Hoke took guitar lessons from a classical and pop-oriented guitarist, thus laying the foundation for the jazz and pop stylings that characterized the music of his professional career. By 1929, after having served his musical apprenticeship with his stepfather, he was making a name for himself in the Atlanta area as a solo performer. Into the early 1930's he was a sought-after guitarist by record company executives who brought their portable equipment to the city to record local artists. He recorded with both blues and hillbilly performers and fronted his own band as a vocalist on several records. In addition, he could be heard regularly on Atlanta radio stations.

Paul Rice, like his brother Hoke, also broke away from his stepfather in an attempt to establish an independent career. In the 1920's he worked on WSB and recorded with Fiddling John Carson and with Gid Tanner. In Gainesville, Georgia, while working in a textile milt, he organized his own band to play at dances for mill employees.

Around 1934 Hoke and Paul pooled their talents to form a brother act that took them to radio station jobs in Cincinnati; Roanoke, Virginia; Baltimore; Washington, D.C.; and Shreveport, Louisiana. According to Paul, their work experience during the Depression decade also included a 13-week stint at the Village Barn in New York City and a six-month tour of duty with the 1936 Texas Centennial. These jobs were followed by the brothers' return to Atlanta in 1937 for a relatively long sojourn of two years in their old stomping grounds. During this time they were heard regularly on radio stations WSB and WAGA and briefly on WGST toward the end of their stay.

Calling themselves The Rice Brothers Gang, the act, during this second stint in Atlanta, expanded to a five-person band that included a saxophone player. The presence of a horn affirmed the Rices' commitment to a sound that they considered to be a cut above the typical hillbilly string band of the era. "We always did the old pops," Paul explained.

Sometime in 1939, Hoke and Paul returned to Shreveport, Louisiana, where they became regular performers on KWKH. They performed on the popular KWKH Saturday Night Roundup, staged in the larger towns around Shreveport, such as Monroe, Louisiana; BI Dorado, Kansas; and Lufkin, Texas. For a while Hoke and Paul also appeared daily over KTBS on a mid-morning program sponsored by Southern Maid Donuts. For this show they were billed as The Southern Maid Donut Boys. While in Shreveport they became associated with country singer, recording artist and politician Jimmie Davis, two-time governor of Louisiana. Paul may have wished later that they hadn't. As the acknowledged composer of "You Are My Sunshine," Paul sold the song to Davis for whom it became a hit record and tremendous money-maker. According to a story in die Shreveport Times of September 16, 1956, Paul sold the song to' Davis and his partner Charles Mitchell for $35, money he needed to pay his wife's hospital bills. The Rice Brothers' bass player, Reggie Ward, told writer Louise Hewitt that "they asked me to sign as a witness the typed document transferring all rights to Davis and Mitchell."

Paul Rice recalled that, inspired by a fan letter, he wrote "You Are My Sunshine" in 1937, while in Atlanta. "Where I got the idea for it," he said, "a girl over in South Carolina wrote me this long letter, about 17 pages. And she was talking about I was her sunshine, and I got the idea for the song and put a tune to it."

On September 13, 1939, The Rice Brothers Gang recorded "You Are My Sunshine" in New York City for Decca. Between 1938 and 1941, Hoke and Paul recorded more than 50 additional songs for the same label. Their recorded repertoire, instrumentation and interpretation reflect a desire to shed the hillbilly stereotype in favor of a more sophisticated sound. They recorded with clarinet, saxophone, steel guitar, amplified straight guitar, acoustic guitar, bass and harmonica. Among the songs they put on disc were such pop favorites as "Marie," "On the Sunny Side of the Street," "Mood Indigo," "In a Shanty in Old Shanty Town" and "Yes, We Have No Bananas".

As was the case with so many other Americans, the Rice brothers' lives were profoundly affected by the events of World War II. The war ended their career as a musical act when they both entered military service. After returning from his war duties, Hoke took a job with an appliance firm in Shreveport, a city in which he made his home until his death on May 26, 1974.

Following his discharge from service, Paul worked as a musician in Chicago. In the late 40's he returned to Atlanta where he became a member of The TV Wranglers, an act which, for seven years, was seen daily on an Atlanta television station. Paul retired from the music business in 1960. He died at his home in an Atlanta suburb on January 22, 1988.

Addendeum: Rural Radio magazine in 1938 indicated that the Rice Brothers were doing a 'square dance' show on Saturday nights from 9:30pm to 10:00pm over radio station WSB in Atlanta.

Timeline and Trivia Notes

Group Members

  • Hoke Rice, born some 50 miles northeast of Atlanta, Georgia in Hall County
  • Paul Rice, born while family still living in the same Chestnut Mountain community near Gainesville

Credits & Sources

  • From the article, "The Rice Brothers"; By Wayne W. Daniel; Journal of the American Academy for the Preservation of Old-Time Country Music; October 1996; Silver Eagle Publishers. Hillbilly-Music.com wishes to thank Mr. Daniel, author of "Pickin' On Peachtree", a look at the early country music history in Georgia, for his permission to use this and other articles he has authored.
  • Rural Radio Magazine; Vol 1 No. 11; December 1938.
  • Hillbilly Hit Parade of 1940; Southern Music Publishing Co., Inc. New York, NY
  • Photos from Hillbilly-Music.com collection.

Sound Sample—(YouTube Video Format)


You Are My Sunshine

Recordings (78rpm/45rpm)

 
Decca
Rec. No. Side Song Title
  46055 A I Love My Saviour
  46055 B On The Jericho Road
  46065 A I Love My Savior
  46065 B On The Jericho Road
  46069 A On The Sunny Side Of The Street
  46069 B Sugar Blues
  5552 A King Cotton Stomp (Everybody Loves My Baby)
  5552 B Sweet Someone
  5553 A On The Jericho Road
  5553 B I Love My Saviour
  5556 A Sugar Blues
  5556 B Marie
  5569 A Be Careful With Those Eyes
  5569 B Mood Indigo
  5590 A My Idea Of Heaven
  5590 B On The Sunny Side Of The Street
  5598 A You Tell Her 'Cause I Stutter
  5598 B Hold Me
  5622 A When I'm Walking With My Sweetness
  5622 B China Boy
  5636 A Cheatin On Your Baby
  5636 B Aint That Too Bad
  5650 A You Got That Thing
  5650 B Do Something
  5738 A Wont You Come Back To Me
  5738 B Alabama Jubilee Shuffle
  5751 A They Cut Down The Old Pine Tree
  5751 B Down Yonder
  5763 A Lovelight In The Starlight
  5763 B You Are My Sunshine
  5777 A I Wish You Were Jealous Of Me
  5777 B Japanese Sandman
  5792 A At The Close Of A Long Day
  5792 B I Cried For You
  5804 A Is It True What They Say About Dixie?
  5804 B Oh Susanah
  5805 A Nagasaki
  5805 B You Gotta See Daddy Every Day
  5815 A Shanty In Old Shanty Town
  5815 B It Made You Happy
  5823 A Sally Do You Love Me
  5823 B Sweetheart Wait For Me
  5837 A Below The Rio Grande
  5837 B No Matter What Happens, My Darling
  5852 A Yes We Have No Banana
  5852 B When It's Blossom Time In Old Kentucky
  5859 A You'll Only Have One Mother
  5859 B Hurry Johnny Hurry
  5870 A Mary Lou
  5870 B My Sweetheart Darling
  5893 A I Wont Have Any Troubles
  5893 B Girl Of My Dreams
  5959 A My Carolina Sunshine Girl
  5959 B You Dont Love Me Anymore
  5971 A Do You?
  5971 B Railroad Boomer
  6004 A Little Girl, I'm So Blue Without You
  6004 B Riding Down The Canyon
  6019 A Dry Your Eyes Little Girl
  6019 B Linda May Polka
  6088 A Please Dont Stay Away
  6088 B I'll Always Love You