User:Bonniejanern



William Robert Beach (aka Bill “Peg Pants” Beach, “Frog” Beach) was born on August 8, 1932 in Glencoe, KY, USA. He began his musical career as a teenager after borrowing a guitar from his cousin to learn a few chords. In 1948, he appeared several times as a guest on the country music radio show “Shorty and Sally Fincher Jamboree Show” out of Wheeling, West Virginia and traveled the region (including York, PA) with the WWVA Jamboree during the summer of 1948 with country music stars like Hank Williams, Sr., Hank Snow and Little Jimmy Dickens. Later in 1948, he was finally able to buy his own Martin D-28 guitar.

Touring with this regional country music radio station heightened his interest in music and after graduating from high school in 1951, Beach moved to Cincinnati, OH to live with his mother in hopes of pursuing a musical career. He began recording at the old Wurlitzer Music Studios in Cincinnati where he met and recorded with the Davis Sisters. His recordings during this time were unreleased.

In November 1952, during the Korean War, Beach enlisted into the United States Marine Corps. His musical career was placed on hold until he was honorably discharged in November, 1955 and returned to Cincinnati, Ohio where he began a recording career with King Records. In June 1956, he wrote and recorded the rockabilly hit “Peg Pants” at King. The B-side of the record, “You’re Gonna Like Me Baby” also had some radio success.

Beach continued writing songs and performing until 1962 when his wife at the time was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. After leaving the music business to focus on his family and the care of his wife, he became a successful business owner in Cincinnati and the surrounding areas. He had several retail sewing centers where he sold and repaired sewing machines and vacuum cleaners. The first store, located in Newport, KY, is still operating under the name “Beach’s Sewing Centers”.

In the late 1980’s, during the resurgence of rockabilly in the United Kingdom and Western Europe, “Peg Pants” once again enjoyed radio success in England, France and Germany. The song has been re-released on several compilation CD’s, including “King Rockabilly”, a CD released in 2004 featuring successful songs from King Records and “Classic Rockabilly”, a four CD box set released in 2007 highlighting Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison and other rockabilly greats from the 1950’s and 1960’s.

For his contribution to the American musical genre of “Rockabilly”, Bill “Peg Pants” Beach was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame, headquartered in Jackson, Tennessee, USA. He still writes and performs songs and has received national notoriety for some of his more recent endeavors. In 1998, he submitted his song “Viagra and the Beeper” to The Nashville Network’s (TNN) International Amateur Songwriting Contest. Beach and his song placed sixth in a field of over 13,000 entrants for this upbeat, parody song.

In February 1999, another song he wrote, “I Believed You Mr. President” was featured during the Cable News Network’s (CNN) coverage of President Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial. Also a parody and humorous song, the words of “I Believed You Mr. President” told the story of how one voter’s innocence was rocked during the Monica Lewinsky scandal that ultimately led to the impeachment trial of the 42nd President of the United States of America.

He and his lovely wife Joan split their time between Naples, Florida and Crossville, Tennessee. They enjoy a full retirement life. In the past, he has been a guest performer at Stan’s Idle Hour, an internationally known tourist destination in the quaint seaside town of Goodland, Florida.