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  1. Mar 17, 2011 · Through 1972, Husky charted regularly on Capitol and broke the Top Ten with “Once” (1966-67) and “Just for You” (1967-68). He switched to ABC in 1973 and had his last chart-making single in 1975. His fifty-one charting country sides include his Simon Crum hit “Country Music Is Here to Stay” (#2, 1958-59). In 2005 he released the ...

  2. Mar 18, 2011 · Ferlin Husky, a pioneering country music entertainer in the 1950s and early '60s known for hits like "Wings of a Dove" and "Gone" and who was recently inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame ...

  3. Mar 18, 2011 · Redferns/Getty Images. Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Ferlin Husky died Thursday. He was 85. The news was announced on the singer’ website: “Ferlin passed away today in the Critical Care ...

  4. Aug 10, 2010 · He was born on December 3, 1925 on a farm that was located equally close to Flat River, Hickory Grove and Cantwell, Missouri, just about 75 miles from St. Lo...

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  5. Ferlin Husky had three separate careers. Out of the three, the best-known is his country-pop career, which brought him to the top of the charts in the late '...

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    • John1948FourD
  6. Mar 17, 2011 · Ferlin Eugene Husky was born Dec. 3, 1925, in Cantwell, Mo., and grew up on a farm near Flat River, Mo. His mother named him Furland, but his name was misspelled on the birth certificate.

  7. Mar 17, 2011 · Country music great Ferlin Husky, a pioneer in both the hard-twang Bakersfield and lushly produced Nashville sounds who scored his biggest hit with the ballad "Gone," died on Thursday at age 85.

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