Throwback Thursday: Southern Kentucky’s radio voice, Odis Blanton

Exactly a century ago, Odis Blanton was born in Edmonson County. It was 1925, and the country was in the thralls of the roaring 1920s. Even all the way to rural Kentucky’s countryside, where families would gather around the radio for their nightly entertainment. In the days before a TV screen in every room of the house, listening to the outside world from the big box, sometimes from the front porch or even the backyard, became a community thing for the whole neighborhood.

Today, we shine a little stage-light on a homegrown voice who helped shape the soundtrack of southern Kentucky. Like so many country boys of the era, he grew up chasing dreams carried over the airwaves. According to a full biography reported by Dennis Angle, currently living in the WKU Special Collections Library Archives, Odis’ life as an entertainer began at home. Every Saturday night, with the family gathered around a warm radio, young Odis tuned into the Grand Ole Opry. And somewhere between fiddles and steel guitars, inspiration struck. Those songs planted roots that would grow into a lifetime in music and broadcasting—a career that stretched more than four decades.

By the 1940s, Odis wasn’t just a fan—he was a performer. Fronting his own group, Odis Blanton and the Blue Star Rangers, he filled Kentucky nights with country rhythm, playing a show that aired every day but Sunday on Bowling Green’s WBLJ radio, called “The Farm and Home Hour.” The band also performed regularly at Beech Bend Park under the direction of Charles Garvin. The Blue Star Rangers became a fixture when they recorded with Republic Records out of Nashville—bringing fiddles, harmonies, and that unmistakable twang to houses in Kentucky and Tennessee.

As his popularity grew, Odis traveled far beyond Kentucky. National radio conventions opened the door to Hollywood starlets and country royalty—Jayne Mansfield, and even Elvis Presley himself. In 1954, Elvis came through Scottsville after signing with Sun Records in Memphis, and met Odis at the Andrew Jackson Hotel. A couple years later, the legend returned—this time for a quiet cup of coffee in a small northern Warren County restaurant, before fans realized the King was in town and forced his departure.

And throughout it all, Odis stayed rooted in the community he loved—on air, in auditoriums, and at venues across the area, including performances at the Boots and Saddle Club and the iconic Quonset Hut in historic Shake Rag—a space echoing with stories, soul, and sound. And on Odis’ radio show, a young Bowling Green picker named Sam Bush stepped forward for his first musical performance – it was even picked up by Bowling Green’s first TV station, WBKO. That debut helped launch the career of the man who became the Father of Newgrass, a multi-Grammy winner, and a member of the International Bluegrass Hall of Fame.

Odis Blanton passed away in 2014 at 90-years-old. From a boy at a radio, dreaming in Edmonson County, to a bandleader filling Beech Bend nights, to a broadcaster whose voice carried across generations, Odis Blanton lived a country music story—full of humble roots, unexpected friendships, and big dreams realized. He helped shape the soundtrack of southern Kentucky—one guitar pick, one broadcast, and one listener at a time.

Like a good country song, Odis Blanton left us with a melody that still lingers.