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Jack Henderson Clement (April 5, 1931

(1992). 9780851129396, Guinness Publishing.
– August 8, 2013) was an American musician, songwriter, , film producer, and music executive.

He was producer and engineer for at in its early days, discovering Jerry Lee Lewis and recording the "Million Dollar Quartet" session with Lewis, , , and .

Clement played a key role in launching the career of , writing several of Pride's biggest hit songs and producing 20 albums for the singer. Clement was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, Rockabilly Hall of Fame, Memphis Music Hall of Fame, and Music City Walk of Fame.


Biography

Early life
Clement was born on April 5, 1931, in the Whitehaven neighborhood of Memphis, Tennessee.
(2025). 9781493065127, Backbeat Books.
He grew up and went to school in Memphis, learned guitar, and was performing at an early age, playing and . In 1946 at the age of 15, he ran away from home. In 1948, prior to pursuing a career in music, he commenced his service in the United States Marine Corps. While serving in Washington, DC, Clement, fiddler , and mandolinist formed the Tennessee Troupers, a bluegrass band. In 1953, he made his first record for Sheraton Records in . From 1953 to 1955, he studied at Memphis State University, where he gained the nickname "Cowboy". During his student days, he played with a local band, and he co-founded Fernwood Publishing Company with bandmate Slim Wallace in 1954.

Clement's band recorded a demonstration in a that Clement had built in his garage, and he took the record to to be mastered. Upon hearing the demo, wanted to meet and talk to Clement, and on June 15, 1956, Phillips hired Clement as a and for Sun Records.


Career
At Sun Records, Clement began working with acts including Billy Lee Riley, before eventually working with Sun artists , , and . He discovered and recorded Jerry Lee Lewis while Phillips was on a trip to , with one of those recordings, "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On", selected in 2005 for permanent preservation in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress. Clement was also the recording engineer present at Sun Studio during the famous December 4, 1956, "Million Dollar Quartet" session involving Cash, Lewis, Perkins, and . He made the decision to record the impromptu session.

In 1957, Clement wrote Johnny Cash's crossover hit "Ballad of a Teenage Queen", and "Guess Things Happen That Way", which was number one on the country chart and number 11 on the pop chart for Cash the following year. The next year, Cash scored another hit with the Clement-penned "Guess Things Happen That Way". During this time in Memphis, Clement also wrote "It'll Be Me", recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis in 1957 and covered by and in 1962. In 1958, Clement released the single "Ten Years",, it Reached #24 On Cashbox's Country Singles Chart. It was later covered by (1959), (1962), and Roger Mews.

In 1959, he was hired by to work as a producer at RCA Victor in Nashville, where he worked for the next year and a half, producing albums for and others. In 1960, had a top-10 country hit with Clement's song "I Know One".

In 1961, producer and Bill Hall persuaded Clement to move to Beaumont, Texas. Together, Hall and Clement founded the Hall-Clement Publishing Company and Gulf Coast Recording Studios, where recorded the top-10 hit "Patches". During this time, Clement worked with songwriters and , and persuaded to record Lee's song "She Thinks I Still Care", as well as Clement's own song "A Girl I Used to Know". The latter was later recorded by and (as "Just Someone I Used to Know"), and has gone on to become a country music standard. Clement continued to work in Nashville, and contributed arranging, guitar playing, and production on Cash's number-one hit, "Ring of Fire" in 1963. In Beaumont, Clement also worked with artists including and .

Clement returned to Nashville in 1965 and became a significant figure in the country music business, and attracting enough music industry professionals to the area that he was called the "Pied Piper of Nashville". He wrote the comedic "The One on the Right Is on the Left", which was a number-two country and number 46 pop hit for Johnny Cash in 1966. In 1968, he produced albums for Townes Van Zandt.

Clement was instrumental in launching the career of by producing a demonstation tape and playing it for executive Chet Atkins, resulting in Pride's being offered a recording contract. Clement wrote and produced "Just Between You and Me" and "I Know One", which became Pride's first two major hits. Clement produced 20 albums for Pride over a six-and-a-half-year stretch,

(2025). 9781493065127, Backbeat Books.

He founded a business and established multiple recording studios, including Jack's Tracks on , and the Jack Clement Recording Studio on Belmont Boulevard, where recorded "Everything Is Beautiful", which became one of the most successful records of 1969. In 1971 he co-founded (JMI), which launched the career of .

(1997). 9780312151218, St. Martin's Griffin. .

He resumed producing records and writing songs for Johnny Cash, and produced records and wrote songs for and Tompall & the Glaser Brothers.

Songs written by Clement were recorded by singing stars such as Johnny Cash, , , , , , , Jerry Lee Lewis, , Charley Pride, Tom Jones, Dickey Lee, and , , , , , and many more. He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1973. The same year, Bill Hall took control of Hall-Clement, selling it to the Welk Music Group two years later.

In 1974, Clement sold the Jack Clement Recording Studios to producer Larry Butler and Al Mifflin, and established a recording studio in his home, which he named the Cowboy Arms Hotel and Recording Spa. Clement also produced many key recordings by , Johnny Cash, , , , , , , and many more.

Clement was involved in a few film projects as a singer or songwriter of soundtracks. He produced and part-financed the 1975 , Dear Dead Delilah, which was a financial disaster and the last film performance by the actress .

In 1978, Clement released a solo album, All I Want to Do in Life, which generated three charting country singles.

In 1987, Clement was approached by Irish rock band U2 to record at in Memphis. He was not familiar with the band's music, but agreed to arrange the session. The resulting work appeared on U2's next album, Rattle and Hum, ("When Love Comes to Town", with B.B. King; "Angel of Harlem", a tribute to ; and "Love Rescue Me", with backing vocals by ), as well as the song "Jesus Christ", which was included on the 1988 album Folkways: A Vision Shared — A Tribute to Woody Guthrie & Leadbelly. Extracts from the sessions appeared in the 1988 film Rattle and Hum.


Later life and death
In November 2003, Clement performed his song made famous by Johnny Cash, "Guess Things Happen That Way", on CMT's Johnny Cash Memorial Tribute concert TV special.

He recorded a second solo album, Guess Things Happen That Way, in 2004. His documentary, Cowboy Jack's Home Movies was named Best Documentary at the 2005 Nashville Film Festival. In 2005, a documentary about Clement, Shakespeare Was a Big George Jones Fan, was created by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville. It was pieced together from Clement's home videos and interviews with peers, including Jerry Lee Lewis and , and released on DVD in 2007.

Clement hosted a weekly program on Sirius XM's Outlaw Country channel.

He was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame and the Music City Walk of Fame.

On June 25, 2011, a fire destroyed his home and studio on Belmont Boulevard in Nashville. Clement was unhurt, but many priceless recordings and memorabilia were lost. On April 10, 2013, it was announced he would be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Clement died at his home in Nashville on August 8, 2013. He had suffered from . He had a daughter, Alison, also a singer and writer; and a son, Niles, an engineer and photographer.


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