Biography
Stoney Edwards never achieved widespread commercial success, yet his distinctive blend of soul and honky-tonk earned him a loyal audience and placed him among the small number of African-American artists who pursued careers in country music. Born Frenchy Edwards in rural Oklahoma as one of seven siblings, he idolized Bob Wills from childhood and aspired to perform on the Grand Ole Opry. By age thirteen he had become proficient on multiple instruments and often played alongside his uncles. After departing home during his teenage years, he wed in 1954 and relocated to San Francisco, where he remained for fifteen years while holding various jobs and performing music in his spare time.
A workplace accident that fractured his back led physicians to prohibit strenuous labor. Facing the loss of his livelihood, Edwards considered leaving his family so they could qualify for welfare assistance, until his daughter presented him with a wind-up toy. Profoundly affected, he composed his debut song, “A Two Dollar Toy,” and redirected his efforts toward a professional music path.
An invitation to perform at a 1970 Oakland benefit honoring Bob Wills resulted in a recording contract with Capitol Records. The next year he issued his first album, Stoney Edwards, A Country Singer, and introduced the single “A Two Dollar Toy,” which reached the Top 70. His 1972 follow-up, Down Home in the Country, helped expand his audience. “He’s My Rock,” released in 1973, remained in the Top 20 for nearly four months. Although later singles achieved only modest chart placements, several tracks, including his rendition of the Frazier & Owens composition “Hank and Lefty Raised My Country Soul,” later attained recognition as country standards.
Edwards maintained a recording and charting presence into the early 1980s before declining health and career momentum took hold. Complications from diabetes eventually necessitated the amputation of part of his right leg. In 1986 he reentered the studio to record an album alongside Johnny Gimble, Ray Benson, Floyd Domino, Jimmy Day, Leon Rausch, and Ralph Mooney.
A workplace accident that fractured his back led physicians to prohibit strenuous labor. Facing the loss of his livelihood, Edwards considered leaving his family so they could qualify for welfare assistance, until his daughter presented him with a wind-up toy. Profoundly affected, he composed his debut song, “A Two Dollar Toy,” and redirected his efforts toward a professional music path.
An invitation to perform at a 1970 Oakland benefit honoring Bob Wills resulted in a recording contract with Capitol Records. The next year he issued his first album, Stoney Edwards, A Country Singer, and introduced the single “A Two Dollar Toy,” which reached the Top 70. His 1972 follow-up, Down Home in the Country, helped expand his audience. “He’s My Rock,” released in 1973, remained in the Top 20 for nearly four months. Although later singles achieved only modest chart placements, several tracks, including his rendition of the Frazier & Owens composition “Hank and Lefty Raised My Country Soul,” later attained recognition as country standards.
Edwards maintained a recording and charting presence into the early 1980s before declining health and career momentum took hold. Complications from diabetes eventually necessitated the amputation of part of his right leg. In 1986 he reentered the studio to record an album alongside Johnny Gimble, Ray Benson, Floyd Domino, Jimmy Day, Leon Rausch, and Ralph Mooney.
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