From KUTX:
This Week In Texas Music History is supported by Brane Audio.
On March 3, 1922, country singer Jimmy Heap was born in Taylor, Texas. He learned guitar as a teenager and formed the first version of his band the Melody Masters upon his return from the Army Air Corps in WWII. They began playing the Central Texas dance hall circuit and made their names with a residency at Dessau Hall on the outskirts of Austin.
In 1948, Jimmy Heap and the Melody Masters began their own radio show out of Taylor, as historian Deirdre Lannon writes, and its theme, the “Dessau Waltz,” became their first regional hit when released on Austin’s Lasso Records.
In 1949, they signed with Imperial Records, where they released an early version of “The Wild Side of Life,” later a honky-tonk anthem once Hank Thompson cut it in 1952. Likewise, in 1953 Jimmy Heap and the Melody Masters issued their biggest single, “Release Me,” on Capitol Records, later rendered iconic by Ray Price.