Calvin Grant Shofner, known professionally as Cal Smith, was an American country musician, most famous for his 1974 hit "Country Bumpkin".
Background
Calvin Grant Shofner was born on April 7, 1932, in Gans, Oklahoma, as the youngest of three sons of James "Otto" and Ethel (Quinn) Shofner. During the Great Depression, the Smiths headed west and settled in Oakland, California, and he grew up in San Jose, California.
Career
Smith began his music career performing at the Remember Maine Cafe in San Francisco at the age of 15, but he was not financially successful at first. Throughout the 1950s, he was not able to continue his music career, so he worked at various other jobs, including truck driving and bronco busting. He appeared on the California Hayride television show in the mid-1950s before serving two years in the military.
After his discharge, he began playing in a band in the San Francisco Bay Area.
In 1961, country music legend Ernest Tubb heard the band play and, after an audition, hired Smith to play guitar for the Texas Troubadours. Thus, Smith is heard playing in most of Tubb"s 1960s recordings.
His first solo single was "Tear Stained Pillow/Eleven Long Years on the local Plaid label. Smith"s stage name began to catch on after he released his second solo single, "I"ll Just Go Home", in 1966 for Kapp Records, and he first cracked the Billboard charts with his second single, "The Only Thing I Want".
Smith permanently parted ways with Tubb and the Texas Troubadours in 1969 and he released his first solo album, Drinking Champagne, in 1969.
In 1970, Smith signed with Decca Records, and his popularity quickly soared, starting off with his 1972 Top 10 hit, "I"ve Foundation Someone of My Own". He began recording songs written by some of the biggest names in the industry. Foreign instance, in March 1973, his rendition of Bill Anderson"s "The Lord Knows I"m Drinking" became his first number-one country hit.
When Decca became Master of Computer Applications Records in 1973, Cal enjoyed his biggest successes.
Smith continued to have success with Master of Computer Applications Records into the late 70"s including the Top 20 singles "Between Lust And Watching television" (1974), "She Talked A Lot About Texas" (1975), "I Just Came Home To Count The Memories" (1977), and "Come See About Maine" (1977). After this he continued to have minor successes that included "The Rise And Fall Of The Roman Empire" in 1979.
Smith released his last album, Stories of Life by Cal Smith, in 1986 on Step One Records, where he scored a minor hit that year with "King Lear".