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1[[quoteright:305:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/johnny_horton_photo.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:305:"Well, I'm a honky-tonk man and I can't seem to stop..."]]
3
4->''In eighteen-fourteen we took a little trip\
5along with Colonel Jackson down the mighty Mississip'\
6We took a little bacon and we took a little beans\
7and we caught the bloody British in the town of New Orleans''
8-->-- "The Battle of New Orleans"
9
10John [=LaGale=] "Johnny" Horton (April 30, 1925 – November 5, 1960) was an American {{country music}} and {{rockabilly}} singer-songwriter, most famous for his cover of the song "The Battle of New Orleans", which won a Grammy Award in 1959 and was widely parodied.
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12Johnny Horton was born in Los Angeles and raised in Texas, often traveling to California with his family as itinerant fruit-pickers. After several jobs in California, he went to Alaska to look for gold; while there, he began writing songs. Upon his return to the lower 48, he entered and won a talent contest in Henderson, Texas, and decided to return to Los Angeles to try his luck in the music industry.
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14He worked on a local radio station in Pasadena while recording his first few songs, then moved to Louisiana to perform more regularly on the radio show ''Louisiana Hayride''. He signed his first recording contract, with Creator/MercuryRecords, and he and his backing band began recording for them as "The Singing Fisherman and the Rowley Trio".
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16His first efforts didn't end up succeeding, and when the contract expired, he began working in a tackle shop. However, a new manager got him a contract with Creator/ColumbiaRecords, and he went up to Nashville to begin recording, taking many cues from Music/ElvisPresley and shifting from country into more rockabilly music.
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18He had his first hit with "Honky-Tonk Man", which peaked at #9 on the country charts in 1956. He continued recording, releasing two albums, along with several minor hits, but he had back-to-back #1 country hits in 1959 with "When It's Springtime In Alaska (It's Forty Below)" and "The Battle of New Orleans", which was part of an album of historically-themed songs called ''Johnny Horton Makes History''. "Battle of New Orleans" reached #1 on the Billboard Pop Charts as well, was the #1 song of the year, and was awarded the UsefulNotes/GrammyAward for Best Country & Western Performance.
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20Sadly, in 1960, just after his third #1 hit ("Film/NorthToAlaska", the theme song of the Creator/JohnWayne movie of the same name), he was killed when the car he was riding in got into a head-on collision. Several albums of collected singles and unreleased tracks were made, including a "Greatest Hits" album that went platinum in 1961.
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22Several of his songs have been covered, including a cover of "When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)" by his close friend Music/JohnnyCash and "Honky-Tonk Man" which was Music/DwightYoakam's debut single.
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24His recording of "The Battle of New Orleans" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2002.
25
26----
27!! Tropes to Alaska! We're goin' north to troper zone...
28* ArtisticLicenseShips: "Sink the Bismarck" - the Bismarck wasn't the fastest ship (many ships were faster, including the HMS Hood), didn't have the biggest guns (its 15" guns were smaller than the 16" guns many other ships had), and wasn't the biggest ship (although it and its sister ship Tirpitz were the biggest battleships at the time).
29* ChristmasSongs: "They Shined Up Rudolph's Nose"
30* ClosestThingWeGot: An alligator as a last-minute cannon substitute in "Battle of New Orleans"; see WeaponizedAnimal.
31* CommonMeter: "Sink the Bismarck" is in Common Meter Double.
32* CoolShip: The Bismarck, in "Sink the Bismarck".
33* CurbStompBattle: The sinking of ''HMS Hood'' in "Sink the Bismarck" (though embellished somewhat for dramatic licence; ''Hood'' actually fired the first shots).
34-->''The'' Hood ''found the'' Bismarck, ''and on that fatal day''\
35''The'' Bismarck ''started firing fifteen miles away''\
36''"We gotta sink the'' Bismarck" ''was the battle's sound''\
37''But when the smoke had cleared away, the mighty'' Hood ''went down''
38* CurseCutShort: See SubvertedRhymeEveryOccasion.
39* GreatestHitsAlbum: The first posthumous album. It was the first album to contain some of his songs that had previously only been released as singles, and went platinum.
40* HistoricalBiographySong: several of his historical songs were biography songs, including "Jim Bridger" and "Comanche" (the latter being about a horse).
41* LastSecondWordSwap: See SubvertedRhymeEveryOccasion.
42* LyricalColdOpen: "When It's Springtime in Alaska (It's Forty Below)" and "North to Alaska," both with backing vocalists doing the honors.
43* NobleConfederateSoldier: "Johnny Reb"
44* SheIsAllGrownUp: "All Grown Up"
45* SubvertedRhymeEveryOccasion: From "The Battle of New Orleans":
46-->Old Hickory said we could take 'em by surprise\
47If we didn't fire our muskets 'til we looked 'em in the eye\
48We held our fire 'til we see'd their faces well\
49Then we opened up our squirrel guns and really gave 'em — wellll... weeee...
50* TitleThemeTune:
51** For ''Film/NorthToAlaska''.
52** Subverted for "Sink the Bismarck". The song was inspired by the movie ''Film/SinkTheBismarck'', and the studio used it to promote the movie in the US.
53* WeaponizedAnimal: From "The Battle of New Orleans":
54-->We fired our cannon 'til the barrel melted down\
55So we grabbed an alligator and we fought another round\
56We filled his head with cannonballs and powdered his behind\
57And when we touched the powder off, the gator lost his mind!
58* WorthyOpponent: Many of his historical songs, including "Johnny Reb" and "Sink the Bismarck".

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