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Dugg Collins comes from the farming and ranching community of Hall County, Texas. He was born and raised in Memphis, Texas. This is an area of the state known as "Bob Wills Country," so from a very early age he was exposed to Western Swing.

Dugg says his musical ability was inherited from his Mother Dollie Mae. If it had strings on it, she could play it. When Dollie died in 1956, Dugg's desire and love for music continued. By age fourteen he was playing guitar and by age fifteen had started playing for dances, mostly as a singer.

By the age of seven he had a desire to be in radio, inspired by the great Paul Kallinger who broadcast his show over XERF in Del Rio, Texas. This of course was the powerful Mexican border station that covered much of the United States. By age sixteen his radio dreams came true when he got his start in Childress, Texas. From that time forward, it's been radio and music for Dugg Collins.

After working many small stations up and down Highway 287, Dugg moved his family to Amarillo, Texas in 1968. He immediately started recording song demos for writers Junior Keith and Johnny Hathcock. It was a Junior Keith song that got him noticed by Aubrey Mayhew and Little Darlin' Records in Nashville. In 1969 Dugg did his very first professional recording session. The label was the home of Johnny Paycheck, who would, in 1970, become Dugg's record producer. In the mid 70's, Dugg signed a contract with SCR in Dallas and placed two songs in the national charts.

During the 80's, Dugg recorded for a record label in Los Angeles, California with little or no success from those sessions. He kept himself busy working night clubs and shows and didn't record again until he made an agreement with StarTex Records in Austin, Texas. Jim Loesberg and Justin Trevino thought too much time had elapsed since his last session and ask him to be their first artist on their new label. "SOUNDS LIKE TEXAS" turned out to be one of the better work Collins ever produced in the studio.

Dugg says he has met and worked with ever hero he ever had in radio and the music business. During the course of his life he has been a concert promoter, worked hundreds of dances, played hundreds of shows, enjoyed a great radio career and with the help of his loving wife Joyce, whom he married in 1963, raised four children and now enjoys six grand children and one more on the way.

HERE ARE A FEW OF THE HONORS IN HIS LIFE:

  • 1979 CMA'S DISC JOCKEY OF THE YEAR - NASHVILLE
  • 1996 THE COUNTRY MUSIC DISC JOCKEY "HALL OF FAME" - NASHVILLE
  • 1996 THE TEXAS PANHANDLE BROADCASTERS "HALL OF FAME" - AMARILLO
  • 1999 THE TEXAS COUNTRY MUSIC DISC JOCKEY "HALL OF FAME" - CARTHAGE
  • 2001 AMERICA'S OLD TIME COUNTRY MUSIC "HALL OF FAME" -AVOCA, IOWA
  • 2002 THE PIONEERS OF WESTERN SWING "HALL OF FAME"-SEATTLE
  • 2002 "SONG OF THE YEAR" FROM THE ACADEMY OF WESTERN ARTIST
  • 2004 KANSAS WESTERN SWING SOCIETY "HALL OF FAME" -TOPEKA
  • 2005 WESTERN SWING MUSIC SOCIETY OF THE SOUTHWEST "HALL OF FAME" – OKLAHOMA CITY

Dugg's Latest Release - August 2005
The second in the LOOKING BACK series.

  • Little Ole Winedrinker Me  
  • I'm The Man
  • Part Time Lover
  • How Do You Talk To A Baby
  • If I Don't Love You
  • You're A Woman
  • Someday I'd Like To Love You
  • Always Chasing Rainbows
  • Don't You Believe Her
  • Hurt Me One More Time  
  

Park City, KS
Genre:
Texas Honky Tonk




  • Hang Your Head In Shame
  • Another Bridge to Burn
  • Bubbles in My Beer  
  • Carless Hands
  • If She Could See Me Now
  • Each Time I Hear That Song  
    Academy of Western Artists Song of the Year
  • Sad Songs & Waltzes
  • Walk Me to the Door
  • Think of Me When A Fool
    Is Talked About
  • Roly Poly
  • When You're House Is Not A Home
  • It Makes No difference Now
  • Dreams of a Dreamer
  • You Lied to Me
  
Genre:
Western Swing