Background Chevalier was born in
Forest Hill near
Lecompte and reared in the community of
Midway in
Rapides Parish just south of
Alexandria, Louisiana. He claims to have grown up "poor and naked in the piney wood hills along the banks of Bayou Boeuf." In 1954, Chevalier enlisted in the
United States Marine Corps where he formed his first band, which appeared in 1957 on
Jimmy Dean's national day-time television program on
CBS. Upon his discharge from the military, Chevalier recorded his first record, "Rockin [!!] Roll Angel".
Gene Vincent had just recorded "
Be-Bop-A-Lula", and the two became good friends and worked together in
Norfolk, Virginia. Vincent died in 1971 at the age of thirty-six.
The Ballad of Earl K. Long and Billy Cannon In 1959, three-time Louisiana Governor
Earl Kemp Long, who was barred by the state constitution from succeeding himself, ran for lieutenant governor on an intra-party
ticket headed by another former governor,
James A. Noe of
Monroe, the owner of
KNOE-TV. Intrigued by the flamboyant character, Chevalier composed and recorded
The Ballad of Earl K. Long which was initially banned from radio play because it was suspected to be a political ploy though Chevalier had not personally met Long. Within a short time the song found its way onto the airways and was enthusiastically received. It sold more than 100,000 copies in the state. That same year, Chevalier released
Billy Cannon, a rollicking tribute to LSU's only
Heisman Trophy winner,
Billy Cannon, who led the
LSU Tigers to win the 1958 national championship. On Halloween Night, 1959, Cannon electrified a partisan LSU crowd and stunned the
Ole Miss Rebels with a fourth-quarter, 89-yard punt return to give the Tigers a 7–3 victory. Chevalier attended the game with Governor Long and while he was not really a football fan, he witnessed the pandemonium of the Tiger Stadium crowd after the touchdown and wrote the song that night. A record was released within days, adding to Cannon's already mythical reputation. Chevalier himself became a household word from
Shreveport to
New Orleans. ==Other career highlights==