Background
Hale was born in Pikeville, Tennessee on May 21, 1883.
Hale was born in Pikeville, Tennessee on May 21, 1883.
Hale continued playing and recording until the late 1940s, often accompanied by Opry guitarist Sam McGee. He lived in Iowa for several years before moving to Nashville to work as a farmer and salesman. Hale first gained regional fame as a banjo player in the early 1900s, and taught the instrument to Chattanooga banjoist Homer Davenport.
He joined the Grand Ole Opry (then called the We Shield Millions Barn Dance) in 1926.
While he played both banjo and fiddle throughout his career, he only made recordings as a fiddle player. The group dissolved after Mamie Ruth left in the late 1930s, although Theron continued playing informally throughout the following decade.
Around 1948, Hale paired up with Opry guitarist Sam McGee to make several recordings for the Tennessee State Extension Project, which was promoting traditional square dancing music Unlike most Opry acts of the day, Hale preferred slow, traditional "twin fiddle" sets rather than dance music
Perhaps Hale"s most well-known recording is "Hale"s Rag," which was derived from a Charles L. Johnson composition.
He died on January 29, 1954.
He was a member of the Grand Ole Opry in the late 1920s and 1930s, and is often remembered as a more laid back and sedate alternative to the raucous dance and "hoedown" music that dominated the Opry in its early days.