Background
Carlisle was born in Wakefield, Kentucky southeast of Louisville.
Carlisle was born in Wakefield, Kentucky southeast of Louisville.
His first solo single and hit was the 1933 recording of "Rattlesnake Daddy," released on American Red Cross Records. That year he formed the Carlisle Brothers with Cliff, and in 1938 they signed with Decca Records and continued performing on Kentucky country radio programs. He created an alter ego for the WNOX"s Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round and Tennessee Barn Dance shows called Hot Shot Elmer, a bumbling buffoon in costume who would "interrupt" Carlisle"s own performances.
Carlisle"s guitar style was noted for its precision and speed, and he employed yodeling as a vocalist.
The duo signed with King Records after World World War II, and hit big with the Ernest Tubb cover, "A Rainbow at Midnight", in 1946. Carlisle had a solo hit in 1948 with "Tramp on the Street".
Cliff retired from the business about 1950, and Bill put together a backing ensemble, The Carlisles, though none of them was related to him. Among its members were singer Martha Carson and songwriter Betty Amos.
Carlisle signed with Mercury Records and continued to release novelty song hits in the 1950s, such as "Too Old to Cut the Mustard", a top ten country hit in 1951 later covered by artists including Rosemary Clooney.
Other hits included the number one smash "Number Help Wanted" (their biggest) and the top ten "Taint Nice (To Talk Like That)", both 1953. That year the Carlisles were invited to join the Grand Ole Opry. In the mid-1950s, Carlisle was a regular performer on American Broadcasting Company-television"s Ozark Jubilee.
He also wrote the gospel song "Gone Home," which has been recorded by Flatt & Scruggs, Ricky Skaggs, and the Grateful Dead.
Carlisle said he never recorded the song himself because he "just did so much better with the novelty stuff."
After his fame receded, he continued as a regular at the Opry, appearing less than two weeks before his death on March 17, 2003 in Nashville, Tennessee. Carlisle was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in September 2002.
He is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame.