Country Artist Justin Tubb

By 1954, Justin Tubb made it on the Country chart with two duets with Goldie Hill (“Looking Back to See” and “Sure Fire Kisses”). A year later, at age 20, he was made a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Tubb had a few recordings of his own that enjoyed success, including “I Gotta Go Get My Baby” and “Take a Letter Miss Gray”, but he was more successful as a songwriter. He penned many hit songs for other performers, including “Keeping Up with the Joneses”, “Love Is No Excuse”, and “Lonesome 7-7203”, a hit for Hawkshaw Hawkins. Ultimately, six of his songs won awards. In the late 1950s he roomed with a young, up-and-coming songwriter named Roger Miller.

During the 1960s, Tubb worked with his father, Ernest Tubb, on various business projects. Toward the end of his own life, he completed an album of duets with his father, using recordings Ernest had made before his death. The album, Just You and Me Daddy (1999), was released after Justin Tubb died in Nashville on January 24, 1998.

Country’s Family Reunion One
Country’s Family Reunion One Episode 1
Country’s Family Reunion One Episode 2
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