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Born in Warroad, Minnesota,
in 1914, Enright August ("Hi-Pockets") Busse was accordionist
for Jack Dalton's Riders of the Purple Sage on KFI (1934), the first band
so-named. He joined the Texas Ramblers and The Saddletramps before founding
his still-active Frontiersmen (1938) who later, through band member Eddie
Martin, introduced steel guitar into Western music. Touring with Roy Rogers
they introduced "Dust," "Along the Navajo Trail,"
"Don't Fence Me In" and, with Rex Allen, Jr., "Can You
Hear Those Pioneers." With Eddie Dean, he recorded the first hits
of "One Has My Name..." and "Hillbilly Heaven" (by
band member Hal Southern). "Hi" wrote songs for and made Westerns,
did radio and TV and toured with Tex Ritter, Tex Williams, Rex Allen,
cast members of Gunsmoke, Bonanza, Big Valley, and dozens more. "Hi"
was responsible for Ray Price's country career, Rex Allen finding The
Reinsmen, Tommy Doss joining Hugh Farr and The Sons of the Pioneers and,
in part, Ken Curtis' run on Gunsmoke.
"Hi" Busse
hosted the Western music radio feature "Song and Story" created
with Rick Huff, and his career was profiled on PBS. For "Hi's"
Hall of Fame induction The Frontiersmen's recorded Curley Fletcher's newly-found
"There's a Round-Up Out in Rangeland Today."
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