NASHVILLE , Tenn. - Eddy Arnold, whose mellow baritone on songs like “Make the World Go Away” made him one of the most successful country singers in history, died Thursday morning, days short of his 90th birthday.
Arnold died at a care facility near Nashville, said Don Cusic, a professor at Belmont University and author of the biography “Eddy Arnold: I’ll Hold You in My Heart.” His wife of 66 years, Sally, had died in March, and in the same month, Arnold fell outside his home, injuring his hip.
Arnold’s vocals on songs like the 1965 “Make the World Go Away,” one of his many No. 1 country hits and a top 10 hit on the pop charts, made him one of the most successful country singers in history.
Folksy yet sophisticated, he became a pioneer of “The Nashville Sound,” also called “countrypolitan,” a mixture of country and pop styles. His crossover success paved the way for later singers such as Kenny Rogers.
“I sing a little country, I sing a little pop and I sing a little folk, and it all goes together,” he said in 1970.
He was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1966. The following year he was the first person to receive the entertainer of the year award from the Country Music Association.
The reference book “Top Country Singles 1944-1993,”’ by Joel Whitburn, ranked Arnold the No. 1 country singer in terms of overall success on the Billboard country charts. It lists his first No. 1 hit as “It’s a Sin,” 1947, and for the following year ranks his “Bouquet of Roses” as the biggest hit of the entire year.
Other hits included “Cattle Call,” “The Last Word in Lonesome Is Me,” “Anytime,” “Bouquet of Roses,” “What’s He Doing in My World?” “I Want to Go With You,” “Somebody Like Me,” “Lonely Again” and “Turn the World Around.”
Most of his hits were done in association with famed guitarist Chet Atkins, the producer on most of the recording sessions.
The late Dinah Shore once described his voice as like “warm butter and syrup being poured over wonderful buttermilk pancakes.”
Reflecting on his career, he said he never copied anyone.
“I really had an idea about how I wanted to sing from the very beginning,” he said.
He revitalized his career in the 1960s by adding strings, a controversial move for a country artist back then.
“I got to thinking, if I just took the same kind of songs I’d been singing and added violins to them, I’d have a new sound. They cussed me, but the disc jockeys grabbed it. ... The artists began to say, ‘Aww, he’s left us.’ Then within a year, they were doing it!”
Arnold was born May 15, 1918, on a farm near Henderson, Tenn., the son of a sharecropper. He sang on radio stations in Jackson, Tenn., Memphis, Tenn., and St. Louis before becoming nationally known.
Early in his career, his manager was Col. Tom Parker, who later became Elvis Presley’s manager.
His image was always that of a modest, clean-cut country boy.
“You cannot satisfy all the people,” he once said. “They have an image of me. Some people think I’m Billy Graham’s half brother, but I’m not. I want people to get this hero thing off their mind and just let me be me.”
Survivors include a son and daughter.







That's Minnie Pearl on the intro, for anyone who knows. She's been dead for years and years, as my grandmother would say.
He was one of my dad's favorites! I'd like to make the world go away...at least the negative side of things. Thanks for the post. best Alohas,DenRA
Yes sir, my pleasure.
same here -> dude's got ties in with my hill-billy past, my uncle swore by him, grandad too -> dude lived to 90, or dang near, that's worthy of induction to the CM Hall of fame alone! Hope I make it to fifty!
always a shame to lose a legend.
I have to say that if ithought abouthim at all, i sort of figured he'd stepped on a rainbow (in Kinky Freidman's lovely phrase) years ago.
Well, you know what the song says abour Rock and Roll Heaven; it prolly applies even more so to Country Heaven.
Eddy Arnold was and still is a part of my original 45 collection. When I had my first little orange and white plastic record player (with a closing lid as it was portable and very sleek), I used to play my 45 of Eddy Arnold singing "Tennessee Stud" and act out the song with my model horses and my Barbie dolls. My Adam West articulated neck Palomino horse was the "Stud" and my Breyer model Palomino was the mare. Ahh the good times we had....
If you take the time to look this little 1959 gem over, it was written by Jimmie Driftwood and produced by Chet Atkins. With Eddy's velvet voice, you can't get much better than that - unless you count Tex Ritter's "Blood On the Saddle".