They Placed a Wreath Upon His Door: George Jones RIP

George Jones Collection George Jones, one of the greatest country singers, and the owner of one of the best voices in any genre, passed away today. The Possum was 81.

You may find more detailed accounts of his life in the obituaries, but each one will mention “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” the great song written by Bobby Braddock and Curly Putnam and recorded by Jones in 1980 not long after his divorce from Tammy Wynette disintegrated into cocaine use and added to the legend of “No Show Jones.” Many call the song, which is about a man who never loses his desire for a lost love, the greatest country song of all time. It also has one of the best twist endings of any song. And the brokenhearted have probably played “He Stops Loving Her Today” on more honky tonk jukeboxes than any other song. Here’s a live performance on The Ronnie Prophet Show in July 1980.

While any discussion of Jones will begin and end with “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” Jones had other hits and other great songs like “The Race is On,” “White Lightning,” and “A Good Year for the Roses.” As the hits stopped in later years he remained a respected country music living legend. In 1999 he had some success with an album I love, Cold Hard Truth. The album included the wonderful song “Choices,” which, like “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” seemed to fit Jones like a glove:

“I was tempted, by an early age I found,
I liked drinkin’, oh, and I never turned it down;
There were loved ones but I turned them all away;
Now I’m living and dying with the choices I’ve made.”

When Jones was supposed to perform “Choices” at the 1999 Country Music Association Awards show, the producers asked him to omit verses from the song, apparently so they could focus on younger artists. Jones stood up for what was right and refused to cut the song and boycotted the show. But Jones was so respected that Alan Jackson cut his own performance of “Pop a Top” short to sing Jones’s song, a tribute that yielded a standing ovation.

Below is Jones’s version of “Choices,” added to a video played during George Jones’s 2013 Farewell Tour. It is a perfect way to say goodbye to the man. RIP.

What is your second-favorite George Jones song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Richard III and Guy Clark: Out in the Parking Lot

    richard iii olivier DNA tests revealed that the body of King Richard III had been found last year in a municipal parking lot in the English city of Leicester. Richard, who Shakespeare portrayed in a less than flattering light, was the last English King to die in battle, dying at the Battle of Bosworth Field. After his death in August 1485, his body was put on display and then he was quickly buried near a church without much fanfare.

    Since the discovery, scientists have used the body to make a 3D model of the way Richard might have looked. But Richard’s days of being involved in battles are not over. While Leicester plans to give Richard a new burial more fitting of his life’s station, the city of York, where Richard was from, is arguing that it should take charge of Richard’s burial. Richard belonged to the House of York, which was part of the the ruling Plantagenets.

    Shakespeare and others have painted Richard III as a villain who murdered his two nephews. That version of Richard has been played by many stellar actors, including Laurence Olivier, Ian McKellen, and Al Pacino. Some historians, though, have argued that history has treated Richard unfairly. While the new discovery will not end the debate, it did resolve one issue, showing that Richard’s curved spine did not create a hunchback as described by the Bard of Avon in the play written in 1592. At the end of Shakespeare’s play, Richard III, we see Richard exclaiming, “A horse! a horse! My kingdom for a horse!” before he is killed. Interestingly, he would end up spending decades not with horses, but with cars out in a parking lot.

    guy clark parking lot Singer-songwriter Guy Clark wrote “Out in the Parking Lot” with Darrell Scott, who has penned a few hits himself. While I have loved the music of other Texas songwriters from the Clark’s era like Townes Van Zandt, it is only recently where I have started to appreciate Clark’s body of work. One of the songs I have been listening to during the last several months is Clark’s “Out in the Parking Lot,” which appears on several Clark albums including Songs & Stories (2011).

    As Clark explains in this performance in a bar in Homer, Alaska from 2003, he wrote the song about the parking lot of a bar in West Texas. But the song strikes universal themes, and anyone who has been in a parking lot outside a bar late at night recognizes the scene. There have been many songs about honky tonks, bars, and pubs, but nobody else has captured the mixed emotions ranging from anger to joy to pathos that stirs just outside the action of the drinking establishment, out in the parking lot. There, “Some have given up, some have given in / Looks like everybody’s lookin’ for a friend / Out in the parking lot.”

    While Guy Clark has never had the mainstream popularity of big Nashville artists, there are some folks in Nashville that have good taste, such as Brad Paisley, who covered “Out in the Parking Lot” on his Time Well Wasted album from 2005. Alan Jackson joined Paisley in bringing this excellent song to a wider audience.

    While I like Paisley’s work and I am glad he brought the song to a wider audience, I hope it ended up bringing some fans to Guy Clark’s great body of work too. While I cannot guess as to which version Richard III might prefer, I suspect his body saw many of the same scenes in his parking lot.

    “Now everybody’s gone, they’ve shut out all the lights / The dust begins to settle and it’s never been so quiet / Out in the parking lot.”

    Do you know any other songs about parking lots? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Troubadour George Strait Announces His Final Tour

    George Strait press conference

    Although I have never been a big follower George Strait‘s career, like most fans of country music, I am surprised by how many songs of his I know. And I cannot dispute that he is a country music legend. Because of all that, I was sad to hear that he recently announced at a press conference that he is beginning his final tour, the “The Cowboy Rides Away Tour,” which will end in 2014. But he does not rule out making appearances after this tour ends. At the beginning of the press conference below, several country music stars pay tribute to Strait.

    So we wish Strait good luck as he embarks on this final tour. One of my favorite songs he recorded was a duet he did with Alan Jackson, “Murder on Music Row,” from the Latest Greatest Straitest Hits (2000) CD. The song laments the Nashville trend toward pop and away from traditional country music. Certainly, after Strait rides off into the sunset, there will be even less country music coming out of Nashville.

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