| In
the fall of 1951, Johnnie
and Jack were booked in the Virginia, Maryland, and
D.C. areas and Pete and Smitty palled around with them on some of their show dates.
They decided that performing shows was what they wanted to do, not just playing
the clubs. The
next Saturday night, after returning home from a club date, they were listening
to Bill
Monroe who was playing the last act on The
Grand Ole Opry and Pete called Bill to see if he needed
any musicians. Bill
told Pete that he couldn't use anyone at that time, but he knew someone that could
and told him that
Don Reno was being inducted
into the armed services and Toby Stroud,
who was working on the WWVA Jamboree in
Wheeling,WV and would need someone to replace him. As
soon as Pete got off the phone with Bill, he called Toby in Wheeling and they
auditioned over the phone. Toby told them to be in the WWVA
studio at 5am on Monday morning and they loaded the car and headed for West Virginia.
They arrived at the station by 5am that morning to play the first show. Their
first song was a duet by
Johnny and Jack (Let Your
Conscience be Your Guide), and they were now doing
what they really wanted to do: playing shows. Curley
Irvin, who is Smitty's dad, took over their club dates
in DC and they worked at WWVA until Pete was inducted into the service in 1952.
Smitty
was called into the service about six months later and that became the last time
they worked together until about 1955. |