Teddy Wayne Gentry was born in Fort Payne, Alabama on January
22,1952 and lived in the country on Lookout Mountain with his PawPaw in a wooden
frame house. Teddy is 6'2" tall and weighs about 170 lbs. He has brown
hair and green eyes. Teddy has been married for thirty-three years and has two
children, one girl and one boy and four grandchildren, three girls and a boy.
After graduating from High School and before and during his music career, he
worked in many other jobs. "I ran a theatre, I laid carpet, I bagged groceries
and I worked on a farm."
Teddy enjoys spending time with his family and directing operations at his Bent
Tree Farms cattle business when he’s not playing bass for country supergroup
Alabama. After receiving his first check from RCA records, in 1980, for $61,000,
he asked his wife Linda what we should do with the money. She answered, "what
means the most to you?" "Why don't you buy your grandfathers farm--where
you were raised, because I know you love the old place."
Well, that's exactly what he did. His grandfather agreed to sell the 60-acre
cotton farm for $1000 an acre. He had lived on the farm since the late 20s.
“When I was born in 1952, my mother and I went to live with "Papa",
as I called him,” Teddy recalls.
“By 1980, my grandfather was not able to farm the land any more. He said
he'd love for me to have it. As 1981 rolled around, our interest in the cattle
business grew. That year we purchased our great grandfather Owen's farm, which
joined my grandfather's place. That additional 80 acres now grew the farm to
140 acres. At the time we were called Lazy G Ranch.”
“My son Josh was in the second or third grade. One night we were going
over rhymes. We had rhymed several words, and suddenly I said our last name-Gentry.
To which he replied, Bent Tree. I was telling one of the boys working on the
farm the next day about my son's saying Bent Tree. He replied, "You know
what a bent tree is?" I said, "no".
He said, "In Oklahoma, where I live, there were Bent Trees that the Indians
would bend over when the trees were small and tie them to the ground, to point
the direction the tribe was moving at the time."
“I contacted a lady at the Alabama Historical Society who told me we had
bent trees along the top of Lookout Mountain and Little River Canyon where our
farm is. When we found out this information, we decided to change the name of
the farm to Bent Tree Farms.”
When it comes to music Teddy plays by ear and has written hundreds of songs;
he has co-written many of the Alabama hits -- "How Do I Fall In Love",
"Why Lady Why", "My Home's In Alabama", "Fallin' Again",
"Give Me One More Shot", "Sad Lookin' Moon", to name a few.
He's also the founder and president of Creative Cafe.
Teddy was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in November 2005 along with
his partners in Alabama. As part of his acceptance speech Teddy remarked, “Being
put into the Country Music Hall of Fame is the greatest achievement of Alabama's
career. I am moved and honored to be in the elite company of my heroes.”
A good memory that Teddy has of his career is the night ACMA presented them with "The Entertainer Of The Year Award." That was a dream come true for him. Teddy enjoys reading fan mail, especially "from the young fans" and wants all their fans to "Turn other people on to our music." When asked, "Do you have any special comments for your fans?" "I would like to extend many thanks for your support over the years and I hope that we can always put out a piece of product that will make the fans proud of us.
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