YouTube's algorithm is constantly bombarding me with new territory to explore. Recently it was quite insistent I look into this documentary about Guy Clark, a singer songwriter I'd never heard of.
Here's the trailer:
The full documentary turned me onto a whole world of Texas songwriters, the Outlaw's outlaws, if you will. It became a rabbit hole of record buying and research. I've been a Gram Parsons fan for decades, but somehow missed Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt, and a handful of others doing similar things at the same time. This is where Emmylou Harris went after Gram's untimely death.
I grew up in L.A., and this song is the one that got me.
I paid a small fortune for a near mint original pressing of Guy Clark's first album, "Old No1", and was not disappointed. Then came Townes Van Zandt, Jerry Jeff Walker, Billy Joe Shaver, and Rodney Crowell.
Sorry I'm late today.
-BBJ

5 comments:
I was already very familiar with all these artists but I agree, this documentary is great. Possibly one of the best music docs I have ever seen.
Rodney Crowell is so great it hurts. Here's one he wrote for his sister-in-law. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3y1i2xSAAM&list=RDZ3y1i2xSAAM&start_radio=1
Guy Clark is the BEST. Everything he did was wonderful. His 1992 Boats To Build is one of those rare perfect records. And I mean perfect. Every track, every note, and a duet with Emmylou to boot!
Fantastic songwriters all. There was a great Austin City Limits episode that featured several of tgem & Lyle Lovett, about 20 years ago or more, a n d it's where I first saw Guy.
Guy could write a song. I've always been particularly partial to "Dublin Blues," but there's nary a bad one. Deep in the ATX punk scene, I'd still make my way out to see folx like him and the whole Soap Creek Saloon crowd. But if I coul only pick one, it'd be Mr. Clark and it'd be "Dublin Blues."
"I have seen the David, I've seen the Mona Lisa too / I have heard Doc Watson play 'Columbus Stockade Blues'"
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