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NASHVILLE, Tennessee (Reuters) - Eddy Arnold, country
music's "Tennessee Plowboy," whose rendition of "Make the World
Go Away" was an international hit in the 1960s, died on
Thursday at age 89 in Nashville after a lengthy illness.
His death was announced by his biographer, Don Cusi.
Rising from a poverty-stricken childhood in Henderson,
Tennessee, Arnold connected with the Pee Wee King Band as a
singer and went on to a career in which he was named to the
Country Music Hall of Fame and received the County Music
Association's first entertainer of the year award.
He won many other awards as he moved from pure country into
pop-oriented arrangements that attracted a wider audience. In
addition to "Make the World Go Away" he scored 16 other
consecutive hits in the 1960s. His concerts sold out in New
York's Carnegie Hall and he performed in Hollywood's Coconut
Grove and top clubs in Las Vegas.
Before his retirement from active singing, he released a
new RCA album, "After All These Years," in 2005.
Arnold starred on the Grand Ole Opry in 1943, signed with
RCA the following year but did not have a hit until 1946 with
"That's How Much I Love You."
Coming under the management of Col. Tom Parker, Elvis
Presley's manager, Arnold quickly scored a string of hits and
graduated from radio to television.
Many in the country music industry disapproved of his
merging country and pop, but with his smooth baritone he
quickly gained the reputation of being country's version of
Bing Crosby.
He sold more than 85 million records and had 147 songs hit
the charts.
Among others, his hit singles include "Cattle Call," "Just
Call Me Lonesome," "After Loving You," "I Want to Go With You"
and "Tennessee Stud."
Arnold's wife, Sally, died earlier this year.
Reuters/Nielsen
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