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Thomas Grady Martin was born on January 17, 1929 in Chapel Hill, Marshall County, Tennessee,
USA. He grew up on a farm with his oldest sister, Lois, his older brothers, June and Bill, and
his parents, Claude and Bessey.
His mother was being able to read music very well and she influenced his music training
significantly and showed him the basics that set the pace for him to become a phenomenal
musician.
Grady didn't receive much education. In fact, he left school when he was only fifteen years old
to go play on a radio show in Nashville.
Martin recorded many more Decca recordings as lead for the Nashville pop band the Slew Foot Five. Grady Martin played on sessions for Elvis Presley's recording (1962-65), Red Foley, Bobby Helms, Webb Pierce and Marty Robbins ("El Paso"). He also played on Buddy Holly's Nashville sessions, including "Love Me" and "Modern Don Juan", and the distinctive introduction to Johnny Horton's "Battle Of New Orleans". One of the most famous sessions was an accidental malfunction in mid-take when Grady played the distorted "fuzz" guitar solo on Robbins's 1960 hit "Don't Worry."
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"Grady Martin could play three or four notes, and they'd mean 100 times more than any other person that would play 100 notes," said Bob Moore, a lifelong friend of Martin's who played bass with him on thousands of recording sessions. "He'd just make so much out of everything he played - the best taste you've ever heard. I think he's the single greatest guitar player we've had here in Nashville." "Grady was the best leader I ever worked for," says multi-instrumentalist Charlie McCoy. "He was like an interior decorator who could walk in, look at a bare room and visualize the final result." "Grady's an old friend, and I'm probably his biggest fan," Nelson told at the tribute concert. "Grady has a touch on the guitar that you really don't hear from any other guitar player. It's a very distinctive tone. Players like Chet Atkins and Django Reinhardt have their own tones and sounds, and Grady Martin has his. It's a sweet tone; the notes are huge. I've tried to rip him off and I never could," Nelson joked, acknowledging that the subtleties of Martin's playing are hard to reproduce.
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