Dave
Alvin Pays Tribute to Mickey Newbury in
the 4th release of the series:
"Mobile
Blue" AVAILABLE NOW on YepRoc.com
Sometimes
people argue over who is the greatest living songwriter or who
is the greatest male or female songwriter or who is the greatest
songwriter in Texas, Nashville, New York, California or wherever.
Usually the songwriters that these people bestow the "greatest"
title on is whomever is the current critical darling songwriter
of the week. And they may very well be right, I don't know.
I always abstain from these kinds of discussions because songwriting
ain't baseball or football. Songwriting can't be discussed in
those black and white terms for many reasons. One of the reasons
is that there are too many fantastic unknown or little appreciated
songwriters throughout music history who I think are as good
or even better than many of the names I often hear mentioned.
For
example Mickey Newbury. A case could easily made that he was
as responsible as anyone for the golden era of country songwriting
in the 1960's and 70's. Some of his songs were quasi-autobiographical
heartbreakers while others were beautifully sketched narrative
ballads but almost all are as good as anything written by anyone
anywhere anytime.
John
Prine said that "Mickey Newbury is probably the best songwriter
ever." Kris Kristofferson said, "God, I learned more
about songwriting from Mickey than I did from any other single
human being." You can't argue with those guys.
You
may have never heard of Mickey Newbury but you certainly heard
his songs. They've been covered by (a very short list): Elvis,
Willie Nelson, B.B. King, Tom Jones, Dottie West, Jerry Garcia,
Etta James, Jerry Lee Lewis, Ray Charles, Roy Orbison, Phish,
Joan Baez, Buddy Rich, Keith Richards and, even, Englebert Humperdink.
An extremely impressive list of admirers. I highly recommend
any of his albums if you want to hear a master at work.
The
Newbury song I recorded, MOBILE BLUE, is from his classic concept
album, FRISCO MABEL JOY. It was cut as part of a tribute cd
to FRISCO MABEL JOY and Newbury that was put together by No
Depression's Peter Blackstock a few years back that deserved
more attention than it received. The track was recorded in 2000
by Mark Linett at the sessions for my PUBLIC DOMAIN cd and features
Rick Shea on the biting electric guitar, Joe Terry on the pumping
piano, Bobby Lloyd Hicks slapping the skins, Brantley Kearns
on the swinging fiddle and former Rodger Miller/Hoyt Axton/Dillard
and Clark/Jackson Browne bassist, David Jackson thumping the
stand up bass. The backwards guitar intro is by Jazz guitar
innovator, Bill Frizzell.
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