Fairburn was born in 1924 near Folsom, LA, the son of a farmer of Cherokee, Scots, Irish, and English ancestry. He grew up listening to the Grand Ole Opry on radio on Saturday nights with the family, and his father (who died in 1937, when Werly was 13) bought a guitar for his sons. Werly showed the greatest interest and competed with his older brothers to learn the instrument. He and his brothers learned to play from an elderly Black man who lived nearby, teaching them blues licks, which they adapted to the hillbilly sounds they heard on the radio.
With the outbreak of World War II, 17-year-old Fairburn -- who was married by then -- left the family farm to take a job in New Orleans at the Higgins Shipyard. He enlisted in the Navy and joined its maintenance division in 1943, spending the war serving in Honolulu, Hawaii. It was while in the service that Fairburn began thinking about trying music as a career, but as a precaution, he also got training as a barber when he returned to New Orleans. Music became an avocation, something he did in his spare time, but his style -- heavily influence by both Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams, but also by New Orleans-style R&B -- was attractive enough to get him a spot on WJBW radio broadcasting from his own barber shop.
Thus, in 1948, Faiburn first became known to the local public as the Singing Barber. His broadcasting career continued on WWEZ in New Orleans, and he became the Singing Deejay. Subsequently, he enrolled in a local music school to formalize his playing and understanding of music. During the early '50s, he also made his recording debut on Lillian McMurry's Trumpet Records, best known as the early home of Sonny Boy Williamson II. The highlight of his association with the legendary blues label was Camping With Marie, an upbeat proto-rockabilly-style number that later became regarded as a classic of the music's formative years.
His music was basically country but was done with a beat that made it accessible and even pleasing to younger rockabilly and rock 'n roll fans. His 1956 Columbia single Everybody's Rockin' is considered a quintessential example of rockabilly music. Fairburn was a favorite performer locally in New Orleans and had an audience as far away as Dallas, where he appeared on the Big D Jamboree, even without a hit record of his own. His music was heavily influenced by New Orleans R&B, and his stage repertory included pieces like Fats Domino's All By Myself. Fairburn's openness to those sounds -- coupled with his professional flexibility -- may have helped him adapt when rock & roll hit in the mid-'50s. Unlike a lot of post-twenty year old country artists, who sounded awkward trying to reach out to the youth market, Fairburn took naturally to rockabilly.
In 1964, he was performing one of his own songs, I Guess I'm Crazy, on the Louisiana Hayride when it was heard by his friend Jim Reeves. Reeves decided to record the song himself, and I Guess I'm Crazy was the single that was in release when Reeves' plane went down on July 31, 1964. Fairburn's success in the Southeast didn't follow him when he moved to California in the '60s, but he kept performing steadily, almost up until his death from lung cancer in 1985. In 1994, Bear Family Records released a CD assembling Fairburn's classic sides entitled Everybody's Rockin' and a live performance of Fairburn doing All By Myself at the Big D Jamboree in the mid-'50s surfaced on CD in 2000. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi