Dick Flood
RnbRaised in the Washington, D.C. music scene, Dick Flood launched his career on The Jimmy Dean Show with The Country Lads before moving to Nashville in 1959. A contemporary of Roy Orbison, Johnny Cash, and June Carter, he became a regular guest at the Grand Ole Opry despite never having a major hit of his own. Flood performed for U.S. troops across Europe and Asia, earning the nickname “The Poor Man’s Bob Hope,” and wrote songs recorded by Roy Orbison, Porter Wagoner, and George Hamilton IV. Dick’s most well-known hit is “Trouble’s Back In Town,” which reached #1 on the Country charts in 1962, as recorded by The Wilburn Brothers.
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