11/21/2025
Grandpa Jones (born Lewis Marshall Jones) was a fixture on “Hee Haw” and the Grand Ole Opry, often punctuating skits with a witty remark or showing off his clawhammer banjo skills. Although he wasn't an RCA artist, he has a connection with RCA Studio B that involves his biggest hit record.
Grandpa Jones earned his paternal nickname decades earlier. As a young man in his twenties, Marshall Jones was a devotee of old-time music who often performed on country radio shows. At WBZ-Boston in 1935, singer Bradley Kincaid called him "Grandpa" because of his crotchety demeanor on their morning program. The name and the persona stuck.
Jones’s recording career began in the 1940s in Cincinnati when he and guitar ace Merle Travis recorded together as the Shepherd Brothers on what would be the first release by Syd Nathan’s influential King Records. By the 1950s, Jones and his talented wife Ramona were living in Nashville and making regular appearances on the Grand Ole Opry. He signed with Fred Foster’s startup Monument label in 1960 and scored one of his biggest singles with a version of Jimmie Rodgers’s classic “T for Texas.”
Sometimes known as “Blue Yodel No. 1,” the song was the breakthrough hit for Rodgers in 1928 and the first in his series of Blue Yodels. Jones’s version, recorded at RCA Studio B, gives it an update that makes use of 1960s Nashville studio finesse while retaining some of its raw edge. Despite its lyrical grimness, Jones sings it with a wink, adding an extra flourish to his yodels and then cracking up in laughter as he hits the final chorus. It reached No. 5 on the country chart in February 1963—six years before he joined the “Hee Haw” cast—and demonstrated his devotion to old-time music, a trait he continued to exhibit long after he’d finally grown into his nickname.