SMOKEY
SMITH
Smokey
Smith landed his first radio job as a singer and
guitar picker for Ted West and his Range Riders
in 1938 at WREN in Lawrence, KS. He went on to
California in 1940 where he had live and deejay
shows on KYOR in San Diego.
Smokey
and his band, The Gold Coast Boys, cut transcribed
shows in San Diego for XERB in Rosa Rita Beach,
Mexico and other Mexican stations including XEG
in Monterrey. He recorded for a time for Crystal
Records. In 1949, he went to work at KRNT in Des
Moines, IA where he continued doing live and deejay
shows plus making personal appearances with his
band all over Iowa and throughout the Midwest.
Smokey
began booking country and Grand Ole Opry shows
at the KRNT Theater in Des Moines. Seating 4,172,
the once-a-month bookings ran from September through
May. (The theater wasn't air conditioned, so it
was impossible to do shows in the summertime.)
Smokey then branched out by booking additional
dates in civic auditoriums in such cities as Rochester,
Minneapolis and Duluth, MN, Madison, WI, Cedar
Rapids, Waterloo, Davenport, Sioux City and Burlington,
IA, Fort Wayne, IN and Denver, CO. Smokey booked
Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings and Charley Pride
on some of their first concert dates. For more
than a year, he booked the country shows at the
Erie Crown Theater in the McCormick Place in Chicago
for WJJD. He had Buck Owens booked in there when
the McCormick Place burned to the ground two weeks
prior to the date. Smokey was able to switch venues
to the Civic Opera House where it sold out.
Smokey
had the first commercial live country TV show in
Iowa on KRNT-TV in 1953. He also worked as a country
deejay at KWDM in Des Moines, KNIA in Knoxville,
IA and KWKY, Des Moines. He served as a board member
for the Country Music Disc Jockey Association,
which later became the Country Music Association.
Smokey
Smith was inducted into the Country Music DJ Hall
of Fame in 1982.