Don Maddox, the last survivor of the legendary honky-tonk/rockabilly pioneering band
The Maddox Brothers & Rose, has died at age 98.
From 1937 to 1956, The Maddox Brothers & Rose became known as “the most colorful
hillbilly band in the land.” Their stage act was packed with wildly raucous,
unpredictable antics and they were among the first country acts to embrace sequined,
spangled “Nudie” outfits.
The Maddox sound was a bold, loud fusion of electric guitars and barroom rhythm
that helped define the evolution of honky-tonk music in the 1940s. The brothers’
slap-back bass “country boogie” undertow and Rose’s exuberant vocals prefigured
the rise of rockabilly music in the 1950s.
The band also popularized the songwriting of Woody Guthrie. The ensemble’s
version of his “Philadelphia Lawyer” in 1949 became both his and the group’s
biggest country hit. Other notable Maddox recordings featuring Don
include “Sally Let Your Bangs Hang Down,” “Mean and Wicked Boogie,”
“Whoa Sailor,” “Water Baby Blues,” “Alimony” and “Hangover Blues.”
The Maddox saga is one of the most cinematic in country-music history.
Sharecropper mama Lula Maddox and husband Charlie left dirt-farm Alabama
poverty with their kids in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression.
Don, then aged 10, and his siblings learned to ride the rails to California,
where they made newspaper headlines as residents inside lengths of large drainage
culvert pipes.
They became crop pickers in the San Fernando Valley and began entertaining
in the labor camps. The Maddox band was comprised of Cliff (1912-1949),
Cal (1915-1968), Fred (1919-1992), Don (1922-2021), Rose (1925-1998) and
Henry (1928-1974), who replaced Cliff when the latter died. Lula became the
manager and domineering stage mother.
She and her outgoing son Fred talked KTRB in Modesto, California into hosting
a radio show for the family act in 1937, leading to performances for tips in
honky-tonk dives and hillbilly nightclubs. In 1939, The Maddox Brothers & Rose won a
talent contest that rewarded them with a regionally syndicated radio show in California,
Arizona, Oregon and Washington. Their popularity soared.
After Don and his brothers served in the armed forces during WWII, the band retooled
its act to become more entertaining. The siblings adopted eye-popping costumes,
resplendent with satin sleeves, long fringe, embroidered designs, spangled trim,
elaborately tooled boots and flowing kerchiefs. The Maddoxes gaudy, flower-encrusted
cowboy/Mexican outfits defined the country-music look for generations to come.
Their onstage behavior was equally showy, as the brothers incorporated shrieking
comedy routines, blaring honky-tonk vocal wailing, hepped-up hillbilly versions
of R&B tunes, zany ad-libbing sound effects and cackling laughter into their
flashy performances. “Don Juan,” as he was dubbed, was the band’s fiddler and chief
comedian, as well as a vocalist. The five spangled crazies traveled in a fleet of
matching, gleaming black Cadillacs.
After the band’s breakup, Rose Maddox went solo, scoring a dozen top-20 hits in
the 1950's and 1960's and giving the little-known Buck Owens a boost as her duet partner.
Following a successful career as a cattle rancher in Ashland, Oregon, Don reemerged
as a performer, too. He began appearing at music festivals in the 1990s as a representative
founder of rock n roll.
Don Maddox opened for Big & Rich at the Britt Festival in Oregon in 2005. He performed
at the Muddy Roots Festival in Cookeville, Tennessee in 2011 and 2012. He appeared
on Marty Stuart’s Nashville TV show, earned a standing ovation at his guest appearance
on the Grand Ole Opry and recorded three solo fiddle albums.
Maddox was featured in the “Bakersfield” exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame in
2012-14. He headlined in Las Vegas at the first annual Rockabilly Rockout convention
in 2014. In 2019, he was featured in the Ken Burns PBS documentary Country Music.
Don Maddox passed away on Sept. 12. He is survived by his wife Barbara, who he
affectionately referred to as his “child bride.”
The family has donated Maddox’s fiddle along with other memorabilia to Stuart
for a planned “Congress of Country Music” facility to be built in Philadelphia,
Mississippi.
Maddox will be remembered at a graveside service at 11 a.m. Monday, Sept. 27, at
Scenic Hills Memorial Park, 2585 E. Hills Dr. in Ashland, Oregan. Maddox’s wife
said the service, which will include military honors, is open to all.
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