Jim Reeves Net Worth

Jim Reeves Net Worth is
$950,000

Jim Reeves Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

James Travis "Jim" Reeves (August 20, 1923 – July 31, 1964) was an American country and popular music singer-songwriter. With records charting from the 1950s to the 1980s, he became well known as a practitioner of the Nashville sound (a mixture of older country-style music with elements of popular music). Known as "Gentleman Jim", his songs continued to chart for years after his death. Reeves died in the crash of a private airplane. He is a member of both the Country Music and Texas Country Music Halls of Fame.

Full NameJim Reeves
Date Of BirthAugust 20, 1923
Died1964-07-31
Place Of Birthnr. Galloway, Panola County, Texas, USA
Height6' (1.83 m)
ProfessionSoundtrack, Actor
NationalityAmerican
SpouseMary Reeves
ParentsMary Beulah Adams Reeves, Thomas Middleton Reeves
AwardsGrammy Hall of Fame
Music GroupsPrivate Domain
NominationsGrammy Award for Best Vocal Performance, Male, NME Award for World Male Singer
MoviesKimberley Jim
Star SignLeo
#Quote
1[on his popularity as a singer] Maybe it's just that I sound as if I enjoy what I'm doing. I don't work too hard at it. I never press. I just go on doing what I enjoy doing, and if other people like it I'm glad. After all, this is the only life we get. We just come through here once and I believe in making it a satisfying experience.
2[in a 1964 interview] When I was five years old I heard my first phonograph recording. I was in the pasture, with a pet pig of mine, and was startled by the sound of music coming from the house. When I got there, there was this little suitcase-looking concern on the porch, with a crank, and music was coming from it. I couldn't understand how all those people could fit inside that little suitcase.
#Fact
1Gravesite is located on US 79 about 3 miles east of the US 59 junction in Carthage, Texas.
2According to Chet Atkins, there was one musical instrument Jim didn't like, and didn't want on any of his recordings: the accordion. It appeared on only one song he ever recorded, "The Merry Christmas Polka" from his 1963 Christmas album. Chet convinced Jim the song wouldn't be a polka without it.
3According to Billboard Magazine, Jim had eleven #1 hits on the Country charts - five while he was alive ("Mexican Joe", "Bimbo", "Four Walls", "Billy Bayou", and "He'll Have To Go"), and six after he died ("I Guess I'm Crazy", "Is It Really Over", "This Is It", "Distant Drums", "Blue Side Of Lonesome", and "I Won't Come In While He's There"). Jim's last #1 song, "I Won't Come In While He's There", hit the top of the Country charts in May, 1967, a little less than three years after his death.
4The last recording he made was in his private studio at his home in Madison, Tennessee, on July 29, 1964, two days before his death. The song was "I'm A Hit Again", which he co-wrote with Ray Baker. The recording is simply Jim singing and playing an acoustical guitar, with no studio amplification or enhancement. The song was not released commercially until 2003, when "Voicemasters" released it on a CD called "I Call Her Heartache".
5Chet Atkins, Jim's principal producer at RCA, said in an interview shortly before his death that he thought the reason Jim recorded so many songs was because he didn't think he would live a normal lifespan. He had some serious health problems of which most fans were unaware: he had an enlarged heart (which caused him to be rejected by the military in 1941) and suffered from high blood pressure. The men in his family had a history of dying at a relatively young age (Jim's father died at the age of 42). Chet said Jim told him he didn't know if he would live much past 50, and he wanted to get as much done as he could in the time he had allotted to him.
6His version of "Adios Amigo" was selected Song Of The Year in Norway in 1964- Jim was given a Gold Record for the song at a concert in Oslo in April, 1964. The Oslo concert was videotaped, and is still repeated on Norwegian television from time to time, usually around the anniversary of his death.
7Jim was only about five miles from the Nashville airport on July 31, 1964 when he ran into a severe thunderstorm. He had made contact with the airport tower operator, who was trying to steer him around the storm. His last transmission to the tower was at 4:58 p.m., when his plane disappeared off the radar screen. The wreckage wasn't found until two days later, August 2.
8In a survey taken by the BBC of the Top 100 songs of the 20th Century in the United Kingdom (which included all types of music- rock, pop, country, etc.) Jim's version of "I Love You Because" was ranked #11.
9Recorded 444 songs in his career- which were released on a multi-volume CD set by the Bear Family in Europe in the late 1990's.
10According to his secretary, Joyce Jackson, Jim smoked Parliament cigarettes up until 1958, when he quit because he was afraid they would ruin his voice.
11Jim was returning from Batesville, Arkansas, when his plane crashed. He had flown there July 30 to check out some real estate that was for sale (the card from the real estate agent was one of the items found in his billfold). His manager and piano player, Dean Manuel (who didn't like to fly), accompanied him because he had relatives who lived near Batesville, whom he and Jim visited with the night before the ill-fated return flight, July 31.
12Many accounts incorrectly give Jim's date of birth as August 20, 1924 (including his plaque at the Country Music Hall of Fame and the liner notes on one of his albums). Both his birth certificate and his gravesite give his date of birth as August 20, 1923.
13His biggest posthumous hit, "Distant Drums" (which was #1 in the UK for 6 weeks in 1966), was actually recorded as a "demo" at Starday Studios in 1961. Producer Chet Atkins didn't think the words to the song (about a young man going off to war) were relevant to the times in 1961. According to Cindy Walker, the song's writer, Jim made the demo as a personal favor to her. In 1966 (with the war in Vietnam heating up) Chet overdubbed his vocal with new background music at RCA's Studio B, and it was released that summer, becoming a huge hit.
14The last song Jim ever recorded at RCA's Studio B was Don Gibson's "Can't Stop Loving You", on July 2, 1964. It came at the end of a very lengthy recording session, and was a "throw-in" - a song that was not originally scheduled to be part of the session. When some time was left over, Jim himself suggested it - he had said publicly he thought it was the best country song ever written. Among other songs he recorded at that last session were "Make The World Go Away", "Missing You", "In The Misty Moonlight", and "Is It Really Over".
15According to Billboard Magazine, Jim had 51 Top 10 hits - 19 after his death. One of his posthumous hits, "Blue Side Of Lonesome", had been released as an album cut in 1962. The original version ran well over 3 minutes, so when Mary Reeves and Chet Atkins "overdubbed" it with new background music for re-release as a single, they deleted an entire verse because they feared it would not get airplay on radio stations. The song became a #1 hit in the fall of 1966.
16Was originally hired by the "Louisiana Hayride " radio showing 1952 as an announcer, not a singer. The "Big Daddy" who ran the Hayride, Horace Logan, didn't like Jim's singing style (which, early in his career, was more of a high-pitched style as opposed to the smooth, mellow style he developed after "Four Walls" in 1957). After "Mexican Joe" became a hit in 1953, Jim took some time off from the Hayride to tour and promote the record. Logan told him, "You'll be back. As a singer, you make a great announcer." In his later years Logan admitted he was wrong about Jim.
17Made the eventually unfortunate decision to learn to fly himself after a commercial airliner he was on encountered turbulent weather on a return flight from South Africa in 1962. He wanted to be "in control" of the situation. He was taught to fly by the same instructor who taught Randy Hughes (Patsy Cline's manager and pilot) to fly, and received his pilot's license in March 1963 shortly after Cline's plane crashed.
18Wore a toupee, which he and his wife Mary Reeves kept a closely guarded secret. She even tried to keep the fact unknown for many years after his death, once suing an overseas magazine for reporting it. His manager in the early 1950s, Charlie Lamb, acknowledged Jim wore a toupee, and said he discussed with Jim whether he should wear it on his first guest appearance on the Opry in 1953. Lamb' said, "He decided to go with the toupee".
19Recorded and played with legendary Nashville session guitarist Hank Garland.
20His fan-base in Norway is so huge his widow, Mary Reeves, has received countless gold, platinum and even diamond (!) records from Norway up till this day. There was even a special album made for Norwegian fans: "Jim Reeves - Norwegian hits" in 1999. In the early 1960s Reeves was the first US artist to sell to gold in Norway, and after his death he dominated the Norwegian charts through the entire 1960s. To top it all, one of the last live recording made of Reeves was from his concert in Njårdhallen, Oslo, Norway, three months before his death.
21With his soft baritone voice, "Gentleman" Jim Reeves was one of the biggest and most consistent hit-makers in country music history. His many hits on RCA Victor, now considered country music classics, include "He'll Have to Go", "Four Walls", "Am I Losing You", "Blue Side of Lonesome", "Welcome to My World", "Bimbo", "Distant Drums" and "Mexican Joe".
22Was a member of the Grand Ole Opry from 1955 until his death.
23A prolific recording artist, many of his posthumously released songs became hits many years after his death, such as 1970's "Angels Don't Lie".
24Elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, 1967.

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Special Correspondents2016performer: "He'll Have to Go"
The Heart of Country: How Nashville Became Music City USA2014TV Movie documentary performer: "Golden Memories and Silver Tears"
Call the Midwife2014TV Series performer - 2 episodes
What Ever Happened to Danny Boy2013Short performer: "A Star From Heaven"
The Ticket2009/IVDocumentary performer: "Welcome to My World"
Vegas2009performer: "Jingle Bells"
Opry Video Classics: Honky-Tonk Heroes2007Video performer: "Four Walls"
Opry Video Classics: Legends2007Video performer: "Four Walls/ Tennessee Waltz/ He'll Have to Go"
Out of Season2004performer: "He'll Have To Go"
Onnenpeli 20012001Short performer: "Welcome To My World"
Big Eden2000performer: "Welcome to My World"
Jam2000TV Series performer: "He'll Have To Go"
Agnes Browne1999performer: "He'll Have to Go"
Heart1999performer: "He'll Have to Go"
Divorcing Jack1998performer: "Butterfly Love", "It's Hard To Love Just One"
The Brave1997performer: "Welcome to My World"
Voll normaaal1994performer: "Adios Amigo"
Let It Ride1989performer: "He'll Have to Go"
Desert Hearts1985performer: "HE'LL HAVE TO GO"
Arena1982TV Series documentary performer - 1 episode
Squeeze Play1979producer: "Batter Up, Squeeze Play", "Move Your Body"
The Man Who Fell to Earth1976performer: "Make the World Go Away"
Disappearing World1971TV Series documentary performer - 1 episode
The Dean Martin Show1970TV Series writer - 1 episode
Ozark Jubilee1959-1960TV Series performer - 2 episodes
Country Style, U.S.A.TV Series short performer - 2 episodes, 1957 - 1958 writer - 2 episodes, 1957 - 1958
The Steve Allen Plymouth Show1957TV Series performer - 1 episode
Ranch PartyTV Series performer - 1 episode, 1957 writer - 1 episode, 1957

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Kimberley Jim1963Jim Madison

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Country Music Caravan1964Himself
Thank Your Lucky Stars1964TV SeriesHimself
The Jimmy Dean Show1964TV SeriesHimself
Western-Songs 'Marke Nashville'1964TV SeriesHimself - Singer
The Dick Clark Show1958-1960TV SeriesHimself
Ozark Jubilee1959-1960TV SeriesHimself - Singer
Country Style, U.S.A.1957-1958TV Series shortHimself - Singer
The Steve Allen Plymouth Show1957TV SeriesHimself
Ranch Party1957TV SeriesHimself - Singer

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Opry Video Classics: Honky-Tonk Heroes2007VideoHimself
Opry Video Classics: Legends2007VideoHimself
Grand Ole Opry's Vintage Classics2005TV MovieHimself
That's Country1977Himself
The Johnny Cash Show1971TV SeriesHimself - Singer

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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