Chubby Howard Obit (2021)

[pic from WKFI Chubby Howard obit]
Dobro guitarist & DJ Ray “Chubby” Howard passed away December 23, 2021 at age 95. He was a DJ in the late 1950’s on KFHA AM 1480 Lakewood & also hosted a western music show on KTVW-TV 13, sitting at a console, spinning country music platters. Chubby was also a regular on Channel 13’s Country Jubilee along with co-host Grover Jackson. Howard had radio programs on various Tacoma area radio stations, including KMO Tacoma and KAYE Puyallup.

(WKFI) Loved by thousands of listeners, legendary radio broadcaster and steel guitarist Ray “Chubby” Howard was heard on our radio stations for nearly twenty-five years and his career in country music was extraordinary. Ray was born June 5, 1926, in Goose Rock, Kentucky. He enthusiastically embraced life and was a friend to everyone he encountered during his remarkable journey. His love of country music, the steel guitar, radio broadcasting, his friends and fans, and home cooking is renowned. Best defined as a steel guitar lover, player, promoter, devotee, and historian, Ray shared his love for the instrument worldwide.

It all started in the 1930s when his father purchased for him a Sears, Roebuck and Co. white Silvertone steel guitar and amp. After moving to Franklin, Ohio, in the 1940s, attending Franklin High School, and serving in the Navy during WWII, he continued to foster his passion for country music launching the first U.S. steel guitar club in the 1950s, appearing on country music television programs throughout the ‘50s and ‘60s, and making seven USO tours throughout Japan, Korea, Newfoundland, Greenland, and Alaska which included entertainment icons Roy Acuff and Bob Hope. Throughout the 1970s, he toured the nation with Steve Lake and The Swingmasters backing up illustrious artists such as Connie Smith, The Statler Brothers, Crystal Gayle, Loretta Lynn, Lorne Greene, and members of the Hee Haw cast and Lawrence Welk Show. Ray toured the U.S. and Europe in 1983-84 with Grand Ole Opry star Boxcar Willie making twenty-six Opry appearances. Beginning in 1989, he was a member of the house band at Renfro Valley (Kentucky), the longest running radio show in the country, enjoying a ten-year run. Starting in June 1998, Ray became a beloved weekend personality on the Real Roots Radio network engaging listeners around the globe via his weekly live radio show.

Ray was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 2015, the Franklin High School Hall of Fame in 2016, and the Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame in 2019. His passion for country music was unparalleled.

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