This makes a very good intro to the genius known as Townes Van Zandt.

Posted about 2 years ago

The tunes interspersed here are from a great TVZ boot....of which there are many, but his voice really seems to shine on this one. Recorded at the Whole Coffee House on the Minnesota University Campus in 1973, this is Townes at his peak. If you have been wanting to get into Townes but have been intimidated by his vast catalog or some such other reason, this is for you. This makes a very good intro to the genius known as Townes Van Zandt. Included in this post are some heart felt ruminations by Steve Cooper and Steve Hawley who will introduce themselves as you read. I realize this is a daunting post in terms of time investment, but that's ok, I needed to get it out and, if you so desire, you can revisit as often as you wish.

Merry Christmas Townes!

Tribute by Steve Cooper (August 1997)

In the late 1960s, I mowed a few lawns to get extra cash, most of which I spent on records. One lawn's worth of this minuscule folding dough was spent on Townes Van Zandt's first album, For the Sake of the Song, on the obscure-now-defunct Poppy label.

At first listen, I thought I had wasted my labor and my money. ("Damn, I couldda had In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.") But, something kept drawing me back to the mournful voice contained within the Milton Glaser album cover art. Soon, each song on the album was a distinct, echoing entity and I began a 30-year love affair with the music of Townes Van Zandt.

On January 1 of 1997, Townes Van Zandt died. He was 52. In life, he was a singer, a poet, a Texan, an all-around difficult person, and a talented chronicler of the human condition. He was the singer-songwriter's singer-songwriter. His only "hit" was "Pancho and Lefty," performed not by him, but by Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard.

Unfortunately, Townes was known also for his drugging and drinking and wildly uneven stage performances. ("I'm too drunk to remember the lyrics, but here's what happens in the song ...") Fortunately, his songs did not die with him. All his dozen or so albums are on CD and are highly recommended.

I could, at this point, launch into a chronological discography-with-comment, but, instead, I'll let some of Townes' lyrics - his poetry - do the talking:

"Living is laughing/Dying says nothing at all." - 'At My Window'

"If you needed me/I would come to you/I would swim the seas/For to ease your pain." -'If I Needed You'

"It's legs to walk and thoughts to fly/Eyes to laugh and lips to cry/A restless tongue to classify/All born to grow and grown to die." -'Rex's Blues'

"To live is to fly/Both low and high/So shake the dust off of your wings/And the sleep out of your eyes." -'To Live is to Fly'

"If I had no place to fall/And I needed to/Could I count on you/To lay me down?" -'No Place to Fall'

"Days up and down they come/Like rain on a conga drum/Forget most, remember some/But don't turn none away." -'To Live is to Fly'

And, finally, this for his young daughter, Katie Belle Van Zandt:

"Come some day/I'm bound away/Wind and wings on the water/Whatever may/You must stay/And remain my beautiful daughter." -'Katie Belle Blue'

Townes Van Zandt died on New Year's Day - the same day as his hero, Hank Williams. On the liner notes to that first album I purchased many summers ago, fellow songwriter Mickey Newbury wrote: "Townes Van Zandt, the man. He'll be remembered." That he will.

"We had our day but now it's over/We had our song but now it's sung/We had our stroll through summer's clover/But summer's gone now, our walkin's done." -'None But the Rain'

by Steve Hawley

(July 2003)

The last time I saw Townes was in the '70's, but he's always been stuck in my mind. There have been a lot of performers out there who have played the role of "the Lonesome Drifter," but Townes is the only one I know who was the genuine article. He was like a man from another time and, if I hadn't known him, I would have been likely to label him a pretender. The truth was, the guy you saw on stage was exactly who Townes was off stage. The life he described in his songs was the life he led.

To this day, I still sing his songs when I pick up the guitar. And, today, as back then, his songs aren't for everybody. I'd say that nine out of ten people find his songs uninteresting at best. But that tenth person hears something exceptional in Townes. People who hear him are divided into two camps - devotees and those who couldn't care less. Over the years, I've noticed that those who are drawn to his songs are likely to be very down-to-earth and introspective. They tend to have a penchant for simplicity. If you're drawn to his songs, in time, you develop an attachment for them like you might for a old coat that, even though it's threadbare, you can't bring yourself to throw it out because it's been so many miles with you. For every ten people, there's nine who hear some boring hillbilly crying in his beer, and one who can't believe that any one human being could possibly write so many truly wonderful songs.

Townes came out of Texas. He admired Hank Williams and became a songwriter because Hank had been one - but Townes' songs came out very different from Hank's and, at first, there wasn't much of an audience for them. He traveled around awhile playing on the folk circuit until he met a guy named Kevin Eggers, who was starting his own record company, "Poppy." Kevin became a big Townes fan and the first Poppy release was Townes' first album. After that, the gigs were sometimes in better places, but not a whole lot. For Townes' second album, Our Mother the Mountain, Kevin got a new distrubutor, RCA, and more people got to hear Townes this time. By the time of the third album, he had a real following and was becoming a minor legend in the eyes of his fans. He was still a non-entity to everyone else.

I first met Townes around this time and by the time of his third album, we were traveling from town to town. We had just left New York, where Kevin Eggers had given him a new car as a present. It was a hideous pea-green Ford Torino. That car would later meet its demise when Townes would be driving out on the highway in Texas with a skinful of tequila. The road took a bend, but the car didn't and it went through the front wall of a roadhouse bar. It came to rest in the middle of the floor. At first, nobody moved. They just stared with their mouths open at the new customer who had made an unusually attention-getting entrance. Then Townes got out and sat on a stool and ordered a margarita. He was still there when the cops arrived.

Quicksilver Daydreams Of) Maria

Townes never got the luxury of standing ovations when he came out with a new song. His songs are like new shoes. You have to wear them a while before they really feel like they belong to you.

Most every night, before going on stage, Townes would ask me if there was a song I wanted him to do. I'd often ask him to do "Second Lover's Song, because it was a good song and he didn't play it often unless he was asked to. He'd always do it if I asked for it, but I could see he was a little tired of it. After Nashville I started asking for "Pancho and Lefty."

People were always telling Townes he needed to lighten up in his performances, that he was too dreary. Two of his earliest songs were talkin' blues songs that were really good and he'd usually put one of the other in every set to lighten things up. He also tried to tell jokes, which he wasn't too good at. His best one was about a cop who sees a drunk walking down the street. He says, "Hey, Buddy, you're a little loaded, you aught to go get some coffee". The guy says, "Man, I sure am glad I ran into you officer. See, somebody just stole my car." The cop says, "Where was the car when you last saw it?" The guy says, "Right on the end of this key." The cop looks at the key and says, "Well, go two blocks down to Station House #4 and report it to the desk sergeant." The guy says, "Thanks, officer. You been a big help. I'm headed that way right now." The cop looks down at the guys pants and says, "Hey buddy, before you go, you better zip up your fly." The guy looks down at his pants and says, "Aw man, they got my girl too."

Tying Ten Knots In The Devil's Tail

I've been telling that joke for 30 years and I'm still not tired of it. But Townes also sometimes broke up his set by telling a story about his uncle. He'd always start by saying, "Well, I guess I'll tell this story," and the audience would be expecting a joke. Townes would then tell a true story about his uncle, who had fallen off a harvester on his farm and had his arm ripped off by the machine. They took him back to the farmhouse and called the doctor and somebody buried the arm in the field. After a while his uncle started complaining that his arm was cramped - the one he had just lost. After days of this, somebody went out and dug up the arm and straightened it out and reburied it. After that, the uncle said, "Thanks, that's much better." The audience would stare blankly at Townes. They knew he was an understated guy. Was this some kind of subliminal joke that they just didn't get? Townes never bothered to explain this story or why he had told it and he'd be halfway through the next song and people in the audience would still be saying to each other, "I don't get it." I don't know how many times I told him that he ought to drop the story or at least give it an introduction that would help to make sense out of it for the audience. Each time, he'd drop it but it would creep back into his set a few shows down the line.

Townes wasn't exactly a trendy guy. If anything about him changed, it happened slowly. In fact, I can only remember one occasion on which he actually physically moved fast. We were in Philadelphia, following a tour. We were on the third floor of somebody's town house playing poker. It was summer and the window next to Townes was open. Our friend, Sugar Bear, had gotten bored with the game, went down to the corner bar and put down a $5 bill. He said, bring me a bottle of tequila and a shot glass. He gulped the first shot then set the glass down and said, "Another." After five shots, his money was gone, but a guy next to him said, "Wait a minute, give him one for me." Sugar Bear kept drinking the shots and pretty soon everybody in the bar was paying for his shots to see how much he could drink.

Sugar Bear was an old hand at tequila and he knew that it would all hit him all at once in about a half-hour. He kept his eye on the clock and after 25 minutes, he said, "That's it. I'm not thirsty any more." They tried to get him to stay, but he pushed past everybody and went out the door. He came back to the house and banged on the door. We let him in and he was about halfway up the stairs to the third floor living room when the tequila hit him. He ran the rest of the way up the stairs and began trashing the room. Everybody was chasing him around the room trying to control him, except Townes, who remained in his chair by the window. Then Sugar Bear saw the window and decided he could fly. He dove out the window, like somebody might dive into a lake. Townes jumped up and spun around in a blur, grabbing Sugar Bear's ankles, just as he flew out the window. There was a loud thud as Sugar Bear, now stopped in mid-flight, swung down and slammed against the outside wall of the house. We ran to the floor below and dragged him in the window and finally got him under control. When we got back upstairs, Townes had picked up the cards and was waiting patiently for the game to resume.

That same summer, Townes went into the studio to record his next album. For some reason, he didn't record "Pancho and Lefty" for that album. I never did ask him why. It came out on a later album, as I remember. For those sessions, Kevin Eggers had booked Century Sound. The producer was Ronnie Frangipane, a brash guy who was more interested in his own production work than whether it suited Townes' songs well. Or at least it seemed that way to me. The engineer was Brooks Arthur. Usually, the engineer has his hands on the mixing board throughout the recording, controlling the levels. Brooks had recently bumped into Jackie Onassis in the street. They were both hiding from the rain under a store canopy. Brooks spent the entire session describing his brief encounter with Jackie to whichever of us was in the control room and hardly touched the board. If it had been my record, I would have wanted people who at least were interested in my songs and, hopefully, felt some affinity to them. But Townes never seemed to be concerned. Although he had never worked with Ronnie or Brooks before, he took their approach in stride and seemed to feel that his job was to play the guitar and sing and the rest was somebody else's decision. If you listen to those old recordings now, he seems a bit disconnected, as though his voice and guitar are apart from the other instruments. Maybe that's part of why Townes is so enigmatic to people who listen to him. He always seemed to be alone, apart from the world; just him and his guitar.

The last time I saw Townes was in Cambridge, Massachusetts in '74. I was living in Cambridge and was getting ready to leave the U.S. for good. I was glad to see Townes, as I knew it would probably be the last time. He was playing at Passim in Harvard Square. I heard he was there and went down to see him. After his set, he suggested we go back to his hotel. We sat in his room, passing the guitar back and forth, singing a few songs. I kept noticing a violin case on the floor next to the bed, but he didn't mention it. Finally I pointed to it and he said, "I've had it about a year. I can't seem to get the hang of it." I had also been trying to learn the fiddle. My mother had given me the one she had learned on as a girl and I was determined to at least coax one passable song out of it. But I never was able to. To this day, it's the only instrument I've tried to play that I'm a total failure at. I wonder if Townes had better luck than me. I know he had more patience.

These days, if I hear someone mention Townes, or if I see his name somewhere, a picture pops into my head of him standing there in that old Stetson and his old suede coat. He has his guitar case in one hand and his old blue suitcase in the other. That suitcase had been missing its handle for years and it had been replaced with baling twine. Townes never got around to replacing the twine with something more comfortable or buying a whole new suitcase. It wasn't that he was trying to maintain the ragged image of the wandering troubador. It just never occurred to him that it was of any importance. His life was as simple and as uncomplicated as he could make it. And his songs sounded simple, but they were complicated enough to make you keep thinking about them forever.

Comments (12)

  1. Cody B says

    I'm definitely one of the 1 in the 1 and 10..Nice tribute.

    Permalink posted 12/24/2009
  2. inrumford says

    Hey, at least you know who you are..

    Permalink posted 12/24/2009
  3. Cody B says

    Heh, I don't know if I'd go quite that far, but I like Townes..what.&&^%#% shut up, can it Brewler<,*$&&No really I like him.

    Permalink posted 12/24/2009
  4. inrumford says

    :-)

    and I like u

    Permalink posted 12/24/2009
  5. earthman says

    That was really interesting, thanks for posting

    Permalink posted 12/24/2009
  6. ZZTodd says

    I one of those guys that has been meaning to get into Townes for a while but wasn't sure how to jump in. This is a great start. Thanks!

    Permalink posted 12/26/2009
  7. inrumford says

    The pleasure was entirely all mine good sir!

    Permalink posted 12/26/2009
  8. Dabeef says

    He immediately brings to mind Tom Rush. I can remember listening to this song while face down on my mother's bed and feeling sorry for myself. Of course Tom didn't lead the life that Townes did. Even now this song moistens my eyes. Thanks for the introduction.

    Here's one of his originals from '68, but played much more recently.

    Permalink posted 12/29/2009
  9. Dabeef says

    Oh, Cuckoo Song strikes me as the best of the lot.

    Permalink posted 12/29/2009
  10. inrumford says

    At least you can read the text, I've got nothing but a big black background. Nice rush vids. Have always been a fan

    Permalink posted 12/29/2009
  11. Dabeef says

    I wonder who the heck at MOG central had the bright idea to set the background to very dark so as to obscure the black text. What I started doing is highlighting all of the text in the post so that it's readable.

    Permalink posted 12/29/2009
  12. inrumford says

    well, yeah but what a pain in the ass :-)

    Permalink posted 12/29/2009

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