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Werly Fairburn
Werly Fairburn
American singer
1
Johnny Horton
Johnny Horton
American country music, honky tonk and rockabilly singer and musician, songwriter
2
Tommy Blake
Tommy Blake
American singer
3
Al Casey
Al Casey
American guitarist
4
Jackie Lee Cochran
Jackie Lee Cochran
American musician
5
Bob Luman
Bob Luman
American singer
6
Sleepy LaBeef
Sleepy LaBeef
American musician
7
Roy Moss
Roy Moss
American musician
8
Ernie Freeman
Ernie Freeman
American musician
9
Carl Perkins
Carl Perkins
American recording artist; rockabilly musician, songwriter
10
Floyd Cramer
Floyd Cramer
American pianist
11
Webb Pierce
Webb Pierce
American honky-tonk vocalist, songwriter and guitarist
12
Wanda Jackson
Wanda Jackson
American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist
13
Joe Poovey
Joe Poovey
singer and musician
14
Esquerita
Esquerita
American musician
15
Hayden Thompson
Hayden Thompson
American musician
16
Johnny Burnette
Johnny Burnette
American musician
17
Sonny James
Sonny James
American musician
18
Ronnie Dawson
Ronnie Dawson
American musician
19
Doug Kershaw
Doug Kershaw
American musician
20
Billy "Crash" Craddock
Billy "Crash" Craddock
American singer
21
Johnny Rivers
Johnny Rivers
American musician
22
Dorsey Burnette
Dorsey Burnette
American rockabilly musician
23
Skeets McDonald
Skeets McDonald
American musician
24
Johnny Mathis
Johnny Mathis
American singer, recording artist
25
Gene Vincent
Gene Vincent
American musician; rock and roll and rockabilly pioneer
26
Charlie Rich
Charlie Rich
American country music singer and musician
27
Lincoln Mayorga
Lincoln Mayorga
American musician
28
Jim Reeves
Jim Reeves
American country singer
29
Margie Singleton
Margie Singleton
American singer-songwriter
30
Frankie Lee Sims
Frankie Lee Sims
American singer-songwriter and electric blues guitarist
31
Gene Summers
Gene Summers
American singer
32
Duane Eddy
Duane Eddy
American recording artist; rock guitarist
33
Jimmy Smith
Jimmy Smith
American jazz musician
34
Leon Payne
Leon Payne
American recording artist; musician, singer, songwriter
35
Tony Booth
Tony Booth
American musician
36
Lefty Frizzell
Lefty Frizzell
Popular country music singer-songwriter, Rockabilly Hall of Fame inductee
37
Jerry Lee Lewis
Jerry Lee Lewis
American recording artist; singer-songwriter and pianist
38
James Burton
James Burton
American guitarist
39
Donnie Brooks
Donnie Brooks
American musician
40
Victor Feldman
Victor Feldman
English recording artist; jazz musician, vibraphonist
41
Billy May
Billy May
American composer, arranger and trumpeter
42
Lee Denson
Lee Denson
American musician
43
Johnny Tillotson
Johnny Tillotson
American singer
44
Eddy Raven
Eddy Raven
American country music singer and songwriter
45
Bill Haley & His Comets
Bill Haley & His Comets
American rock and roll band
46
Arthur Lee
Arthur Lee
American musician
47
Paul Burlison
Paul Burlison
American rockabilly guitarist
48
Warren Smith
Warren Smith
American rockabilly and country music singer and guitarist
49
Jimmy Day
Jimmy Day
American steel guitarist
50
T. Texas Tyler
T. Texas Tyler
American musician
51
Wynn Stewart
Wynn Stewart
American singer
Intro
American singer
Music

Jimmy Lee Fautheree (April 11, 1934 - June 29, 2004) was an American rockabilly and country singer.

Born in Smackover, Arkansas, he began playing guitar at age 12, and was heavily influenced by Merle Travis. In 1946 his family moved to Dallas, where he played on KRLD's Big D Jamboree. By 1951 he was playing on the Louisiana Hayride; that year he signed to Capitol Records and released his first single, "I Keep the Blues All the Time", as Jimmy Lee. Capitol released seven further singles from Fautheree before dropping him in 1952. Despite never charting, the recordings have been cited as influential on later rockabilly artists, including James Burton.

Fautheree subsequently found work as a session musician for musicians such as Faron Young and Webb Pierce. Along with "Country" Johnny Mathis, he performed on Louisiana Hayride as Jimmy & Johnny, and released a charting single under the "Jimmy Lee & Johnny Mathis" moniker on Chess Records, 1954's "If You Don't, Somebody Else Will". Fautheree left Mathis to work with Wayne Walker, a partnership that lasted only four months but yielded a few recordings. Following this he began recording with his brother Lynn, again under the name Jimmy & Johnny; they signed to Decca Records, but by 1957 the pair had moved back to Dallas.

Fautheree went back to solo recording, recording in New Orleans in 1958 at J&M Studio. He recorded briefly with Mathis again between 1958 and 1959. Some self-released material and a single on Paula Records brought him into 1960, and throughout the next decade Fautheree worked increasingly in the genre of gospel music.

By the 1970s Fautheree had left the business, working in asbestos removal. In 1995, he returned to music with Mathis, recording a new single, "It Won't Be Much Longer", together. He played both in the U.S. and abroad in the 2000s, and released a full-length album with Deke Dickerson entitled I Found the Doorknob. Shortly after the album was complete he died of cancer in Dallas on June 29, 2004.

His mother's name was Lodema Hammonds, the daughter of Mack Hammonds of Maud, Texas, who was a descendant of Phillip Hamman, the Savior of the Greenbrier.