Hall was born in
Big Stone Gap, Virginia in 1922. Although he is often stated to have learned the piano from a local
blues player who also turned Hall into a
drunkard by his early teens, he was actually first introduced to the instrument by his mother. Hall cited
Piano Red as his primary influence in his playing style. After performing in his home town, Hall accompanied
Uncle Dave Macon in 1933 in a traveling broadcast for the
Grand Ole Opry. While working for a sibling group called the Hall Brothers, the third brother, Roy Hall, died in a car accident in 1943. Hall adopted the brother's name for his stage
moniker, and formed his own band, the Cohutta Mountain Boys. It was a five-piece band, with Tommy Odum (lead guitar), Bud White (rhythm guitar), Flash Griner (bass guitar), and Frankie Brumbalough (
fiddle). In 1949, the band cut their first record, which included a
hillbilly boogie-woogie song called "Dirty Boogie", with two different
B-sides released on the
independent record label,
Fortune Records, in
Detroit, Michigan. The Cohutta Mountain Boys' popularity earned them, briefly, a supporting role for singer
Tennessee Ernie Ford in Nashville. Afterwards, the band continued a journeymen existence, eventually returning to Detroit where Hall assembled a new group, the Eagles, and recorded material for Citation Records. Although Hall was in line for
royalties, his ex-wife successfully sued for his share, and on early issues of Lewis' single Hall is not credited. ==References==