Background
His father was a blacksmith, and he had two younger brothers and two younger sisters. Clarence was in the midst of a hotbed of ragtime as he grew up.
His father was a blacksmith, and he had two younger brothers and two younger sisters. Clarence was in the midst of a hotbed of ragtime as he grew up.
Born in Adams County, Ohio to Samuel C. and Margeret (Maggie) Woods, Clarence was raised in both eastern Kansas and Carthage in southwest Missouri. Note that some sources list him as H. Clarence Woods, but multiple United States Census and local Census records clearly list him as Clarence H. Woods, and his World War I Draft card shows him simply as Clarence Woods. The 1895 Kansas Census shows the family in Girard, Kansas.
Both had their first compositions published by Dumars Music in Carthage as well, with Woods contributing Meteor March slightly in advance of Scott"s On the Pike.
In his late teens, Woods started traveling outside of Missouri into Oklahoma and Texas, playing for stage plays, Vaudeville olios, silent films, and other accompanist positions. In early 1917 he was listed at a Carthage residence of 301 North. Main, and playing for movies at the Sho-To-First Rate (at Lloyd's) Theater.
By 1920 Woods and the family had moved north to Nevada, Missouri, now playing for movies at the Star Theater plus other area engagements. Wood"s ragtime output was small, but significant.
Even though he had been on the road for some time he was still based in Carthage, his rags and blues heavily reflected the influence of the Jasper County area, with his Sleepy Hollow Rag named for a community on the Spring River near Carthage.
Woods was more known as a performer than composer, although he co-wrote a few lesser songs and some early blues. Two of his novelty pieces appeared only on piano rolls, but both Black Satin and the recently discovered Fever Heat show signs of a clear understanding of that genre, in which he did not follow up. The 1930 Census shows Marie and Clarence Junior. back in Carthage, but she is now divorced from the traveling pianist.
He was remarried now to Gladys Woods, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, still listed as a theater pianist.
In Clarence"s later years, he led an orchestra, became a radio entertainer, and started composing more. His last pieces, largely unknown and unpublished, were written in his capacity of composer/arranger, mostly for the presentational needs of Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus from the early 1940s to the 1950s, where he also performed on the organ and calliope.
Known Compositions:
Meteor March (1903)
Slippery Elm Rag (1912)
The Graveyard Blues (1916)
The Worried Blues (1916)
Sleepy Hollow Rag (1918)
Who"s Been Playin" Papa "Round Here While I"ve Been Gone? (1919)
Fever Heat (1919?)
Black Satin (1920)
Oklahoma, I Love You (1938).