Background
Randy Barlow was born on March 29, 1943 in Detroit, Michigan to Hugh and Dessie Moore. Barlow began playing guitar at 6 years of age after receiving a toy guitar as a Christmas gift from his father.
Randy Barlow was born on March 29, 1943 in Detroit, Michigan to Hugh and Dessie Moore. Barlow began playing guitar at 6 years of age after receiving a toy guitar as a Christmas gift from his father.
After high school, Barlow attended Western Kentucky University, where he and fellow students formed a band called East.A. Poe and the Ravens.
Between 1976 and 1983, he released four albums, including three for Republic Records. In the same time span, he charted twenty singles on the Billboard United States. country charts, including a string of four songs in a row which all reached Number. 10. Later, the family relocated to the western Detroit suburb of Garden City, and Barlow"s father Hugh went to work at General Motors" Willow Run Transmission plant, an experience Barlow would later immortalize in a charting single.
In high school, Barlow played guitar in a local rock and roll band called The Royal Lancers.
lieutenant was during this period that he developed his musical style, and changed his last name to Barlow. 1964- 1975 Early In 1964, Barlow was offered a job as an emcee and road manager for Dick Clark"s Caravan of Stars tour.
One of his duties on this tour was driver and road manager for first-wave British invasion band Herman"s Hermits. This experience gave Barlow his first taste of the touring life of a professional musician, and left him with a resolve to make a career for himself in music
In 1966, Barlow moved to California to seriously pursue a career as a recording artist.
He spent the next few years playing clubs in southern California, and released his first single, "Color Blind," on the Mercury label, which did not chart. 1976-1983 Recording In 1974 Barlow released a single on the Capitol label, "Throw Away the Pages," with made into the Top 100 for country, followed by three more Top 100 songs in 1976. Barlow"s big break came in later in 1976, with a move to Nashville and the opportunity to record his second single, the Burt Bacharach/Hal David tune "24 Hours from Tulsa," which charted in the top 20 in 1977.
This was followed by four top 10 country singles from 1977 to 1979: "Slow and Easy," "Number Sleep Tonight," "Fall in Love with Maine Tonight," and "Sweet Melinda," with Barlow garnering songwriting credits on the last 3 songs.
The year 1979 brought a nomination for Best New Male Artist from the Academy of Country Music, and a television appearance on "Hee Haw" alongside Gene Autry and the Statler Brothers, during which Barlow sang "Sweet Melinda." Barlow toured nationally while releasing eight more singles and four albums in the period from 1976-1983, on the Republic label and later the Paid label. In 1981 his single, "Willow Run" reached #46 in the country music top 100.
1984-Present Later and Traditional Country Music Hall of Fame induction
Randy Barlow remains based in Nashville, where he continues to write songs and perform. In 2015, Barlow was inducted into the Traditional Country Music Hall of Fame.