Early life Born to Reverend and Mrs. Charles Warden in
Mt. Grove, Missouri, Warden grew up singing in church. A self-taught player, he was influenced by
Leon McAuliffe with
Bob Wills and The Texas Playboys. Warden formed his own band during high school, The Rhythm Rangers, playing steel guitar and singing. He also had an afternoon radio show on
KWPM-AM in
West Plains, Missouri. The band gained popularity, moving on to
Kennett, Missouri's
KBOA-AM and
KHWN-AM in
Fort Smith, Arkansas, and gigs in East Texas
honky tonks; eventually leading to
Louisiana Hayride, backing The
Wilburn Brothers and
Red Sovine. Warden left the show in 1951 for a two-year stint with the
US Army. Returning to the
Hayride after the Army, the Rhythm Rangers continued to back Red Sovine until Sovine left to join the
Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, leaving his band behind. Warden moved to
St. Louis, Missouri, where he attended flight school and played local clubs in his spare time.
With Porter Wagoner While visiting his parents in West Plains, Warden met Porter Wagoner at
KWTO-AM in
Springfield, Missouri. With
Speedy Haworth, they formed the Porter Wagoner Trio and were regulars on
ABC television's Ozark Jubilee broadcast from Springfield. In 1957, Warden joined the Grand Ole Opry with Wagoner, and in 1960 began a 14-year television run on the syndicated program,
The Porter Wagoner Show. In 1966, singer Dolly Parton joined the show and Wagoner and Parton, backed by the Wagonmasters, became one of country music's most popular duos. Parton left the show in 1974 to pursue a solo career, and Warden joined her as her full-time manager, a job he held until his death. Warden was inducted into the
Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 2008. Warden had been in failing health and died on March 11, 2017, sixteen days before his 88th birthday. ==References==