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"He has been responsible for a lot of things that have happened in the country music business," singer John Anderson said. "I remember one day I was talking to my old friend Waylon, and I asked Waylon,
'Man, what caused you to pack up and move to Nashville?' He said, 'Hoss, Bobby Bare had a whole lot to do with it.'" Known also for his sense of humor, the 78-year-old Bare answered characteristically when asked what being inducted means: "It means that I will forever be referred to as a hall of famer. It sounds real good." Clement's resume as producer, songwriter, performer, inspiration, raconteur and bon vivant is too lengthy to list, but he veered all across popular music over the last half century. He was Sam Phillips' first producer-engineer at Sun Records in Memphis. He wrote some of Johnny Cash's early hits, putting those unforgettable mariachi horns on "Ring of Fire," and was a repeated touchstone for The Man in Black. He helped Jerry Lee Lewis shape his proto-rock approach and was at the soundboard for the recording of "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On." Also among his many career highlights was the discovery of Charley Pride and their 13-album association. Clement found out in February that he would be inducted into the hall of fame, about five months before he passed away in August from liver cancer at 82. "We do have a message from Cowboy," hall of fame director and CEO Kyle Young said. "He says,
'By all means, relax.'" Two trumpeters then walked on stage and played the horn intro to "Ring of Fire." ___ Online:
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