Flowers Off the Wall.
When I got on the Statlers’ Christmas card list,
there would always be a (typically) off-the-wall photo of the boys, spreading
Christmas cheer. The late Harold Reid is here, on Santa’s lap.
By Rick Marschall
In this column I am going
to steal from myself a little, which is a little like dating oneself, of which
I frequently am accused. Dating yourself grows mighty thin mighty quickly: you
always seem to know every topic that comes up; a constant sense of deja vu.
But here I will pick my own pocket, because I posted some thoughts on the web
immediately upon hearing of Harold Reid’s death.
Moments to remember in my
Crowded Life. Some readers know that I wear several hats, and one of them is a
cowboy hat. I have written four books on country music; many articles and
interviews; and have met many of my heroes – Bill Monroe, Roy Acuff, Merle
Haggard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Connie Smith, Porter Waggoner, Linda Ronstadt, Mac
Wiseman, Dolly Parton, Hank Snow, George Jones…
… and the Statler Brothers.
Remembering the Statlers’ bass singer is not that unusual in a column about
comics, because the Statlers loved comics. I will share some moments to
remember.
Harold Reid, bass singer of
the greatest quartet in country music history, died of kidney failure at 80. My
late wife had kidney failure and transplant, and I knew the “look” from recent
photos of Harold that his kidneys were not behaving, a sad and painful thing to
experience.
I
intersected with the Statlers many times. Their first hit remained one of their
biggest – Flowers On the Wall – but right about the end of their
association with Johnny Cash in 1972, they were booked by the Fire Department
of Greenwich CT, of all places, to put on a show. The toney bedroom community
of Greenwich, with more CEOs than the rest of the planet, seems an odd venue
for country music, but the firemen had it right.
I interview
Harold Reid, and began by saying that I had five favorite country singers: four
of them were Merle Haggard, and – Harold interrupted my “joke” and said, “Yeah, we like ol’ Merle...” – and
then I finished my not-very-clever, but sincere, compliment saying that the
four Statler Brothers were the other one.
I learned
in that interview, and then in subsequent chats and meetings, that the four
were not only nostalgia fans, evident from their playlist, but were comics
fans, and collectors. They loved comics, Red Ryder in particular; and
Western movies, Gene Autrey in particular. Comic books, merchandising
collectibles, trivia… through the years I sent them comic books and especially
Big Little Books for their virtual museums
Around 1981
I was a go-between with them and Dean Young to have them score a Broadway musical
based on Blondie. The strip
and characters were being shopped for options by King Features. I spent a
couple visits with Dean in Florida, putting the book together, and as he tooled
around in his convertible he played tapes of the Popeye movie’s music,
and was in love with the Harry Nilsson tunes. (I think he also played the tape
of Paul Williams’ songs for the recent Muppets movie too.) He loved the
music, but, more, he loved the idea of comic characters on stage, screen, and
cassettes. He was dreaming up premises for a Blondie musical comedy.
The
Statlers were already known for their nostalgia songs. Really, love songs to
Pop Culture and America’s collective childhood – odes to Randolph Scott; a
typical Class of ‘57; Saturday morning serials; Gene and Roy; Veronica and
Betty; a mythical movie theater called The Strand; evocations of trivia – Do
You Remember Those?
I asked
Dean if he knew the Statlers. He did not. So I described their appeal – country
but very pop-friendly crossover sound – and said I would make a tape of their
hits in this genre. He would love them as much as he did Nilsson and Williams,
I predicted. At my first chance I called Harold and his brother Don Reid at
their office in Staunton VA. Would be interested in talking about writing a
Broadway score? Oh, yes.
The Statler
Brothers, by the way, were not brothers, except for Harold and Don. None of
them were Statlers; they got the name from a brand of tissues on a table when
they were brainstorming. The other members were Phil Balsley and Lew DeWitt
(later tenor Jimmy Fortune when Lew died young). All were born around Staunton,
pronounced “Stanton,” and never moved from the area.
I was part
of the conference call between Dean and Harold and Don. I forget whether the collaboration
ever made it to second or third base (I would love to hear songs they pitched!)
but it never slid into home, neither that team nor any Broadway Blondie.
The Statlers’ music was special and
transcended country. They did comedy (Harold played Lester "Roadhog"
Moran of the Cadillac Cowboys); they hosted the Nashville Network's
longest-running variety hour; they toured years with the Man in Black
(chronicled in their song "We Worked for Cash"); and it seems like 50
per cent of their songs were nostalgia / patriotic / gospel songs... but 100
per cent were love songs.
They retired at the top of their game some years ago.
Ultimately, they earned twice the number of gold albums than Johnny Cash had;
and were the Country Music Association’s “Top Group” for 11 years in a row.
Collectively, they are members of the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Gospel
Music Hall of Fame. The DVD of their Farewell Concert will have anyone’s heart
racing for a week. The sons of Harold and Don perform now as an act, taking
their middle names as “Wilson Fairchild.”
It is not really accurate theology to imagine Harold
Reid entering a Heaven lined with comic pages, Big Little Books, and movie
posters… but in the meantime we’ll all be back here, playing solitaire till
dawn with a deck of 51...
78