Leon McAuliffe's Human Design Chart

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          Leon McAuliffe's Biography

          American Western swing musician famous for his steel guitar solos with Bob Wills and The Texas Playboys, inspiring Wills’s phrase, “Take it away, Leon.”
          McAuliffe, at age 16, first played with the Light Crust Doughboys, playing both rhythm guitar and steel guitar. In 1935, at age 18, he went on to play with Bob Wills in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His most famous composition is “Steel Guitar Rag.” His playing, along with that of Robert Lee Dunn (of Milton Brown’s Musical Brownies), popularized the steel guitar in the USA. His playing (and Dunn’s) is also credited with inspiring the rhythm and blues electric guitar style occurring some twenty years later.
          After the war, McAuliffe returned to Tulsa, forming his Western swing band and releasing a number of recordings, including “Panhandle Rag” which reached number six in 1949. McAuliffe soon opened his Cimarron Ballroom in Tulsa. He and his band, Leon McAuliffe and His Cimarron Boys, named for the ballroom, recorded several songs. He also opened a recording studio, Cimarron Records.
          In the late 1950s, he appeared on ABC-TV’s Jubilee USA and other broadcasts. He died after a long illness on 20 August 1988 in Tulsa.

          Link to Wikipedia biography