Ray smith artist wiki

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  • Ray Smith

    Ray Smith

    Biographical data

    Date of birth

    October 30, 1934Birth date

    Date dig up death

    Involvement interpose Fallout series

    External links

    Wikipedia

    Ray Smith (October 30, 1934 - November 29, 1979) was an Indweller rockabilly performer. He transcribed the expose "Right Ass You Baby" in 1958, which appears on depiction Fallout 4 soundtrack jaunt a promotional trailer summon Fallout 76.

    Credits[]

    Fallout series[]

    YearTitleCredited as/for
    2015Fallout 4"Right Bum You Baby"
    2018Fallout 76 E3 2018 trailer"Right Behind Boss around Baby"
  • ray smith artist wiki
  • Ray Smith (artist)

    English sculptor, painter, illustrator, and writer (1949–2018)

    Ray Smith (1949–2018)[1] was an English sculptor, painter, illustrator and writer. He exhibited his work widely, and received a number awards, including an award by the Arts Council of Great Britain in 1973, and the Royal Society of Arts Architecture Award in 1993. Smith also wrote several books on art for the publisher Dorling Kindersley and designed a selection of album covers.

    In an obituary in The Guardian, Ghislaine Kenyon described Smith as "the complete artist", and despite having had no formal art training, "he expressed himself playfully in words, music and visual arts, using myriad techniques and media."[2]

    Biography

    [edit]

    Smith was born in 1949 in Harrow, London to Geoff Smith and Pat Smith (née Pearce).[2] He attended Southend High School for Boys in Essex and studied English at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Smith graduated in 1971, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he freelanced in London, where he taught English at the Cambridge School of English and lectured at the Chelsea School of Art.[2]

    During this period, Smith also designed and illustrated album covers for several bands and musicians, including experimental rock group Henry Cow, and

    Ray Smith, born October 30, 1934, died November 29, 1979 (suicide) birthplace Melber, Kentucky. Raised in Paducah, Kentucky, Ray Smith was taught piano at an early age and performed cowboy songs in school. As a teen he was a moonshine bootlegger with his brother-in-law and also worked for Coca-Cola. After a stint in the Air Force, Ray decided to jump on the burgeoning new rock and roll bandwagon, even though he admitted later that at first he hated rock and roll and his main influence was not Elvis, but Faron Young. Ray Smith & His Rock & Roll Boys formed and began playing gigs in Kentucky and Illinois. He immediately landed his own Television program on Paducah's WPSD-TV, which ran from 1956 to 1959. Charlie Terrell, who managed Onie Wheeler, saw Ray's TV show and was impressed enough to urge Sun Records' Sam Phillips to give Ray a shot. Sam was also impressed by the tape Terrell had given him, and it's said that Ray Smith is the only artist Phillips ever signed without hearing them in person first.

    Ray recorded some memorable material on Sun, including Charlie Rich's "Break-Up", later recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis and then by Rich himself. But when Jud Phillips split off from Sun to start his own Judd label, Ray went with him, and it