|
By Michael Swanger michael@dmcityview.com
Honky-tonk
hero Billy Joe Shaver's songs
reflect his wild side and gut-wrenching
tales of heartbreak
The title of Billy Joe Shaver's
new album, "The Real Deal,"
is a statement of the obvious
to those familiar with the country
music outlaw, though sadly, many
are not. Like his poetically blunt
songs, his life is full of heartbreak
and drama. And though he hasn't
enjoyed mainstream success like
the big-name artists who have
recorded his songs, it appears
as though the 66-year-old Shaver
who walked on the wild side and
lived to tell about it in songs
like "Georgia On A Fast Train,"
"Old Five and Dimers Like
Me" and "Live Forever"
is getting some overdue praise.
Shaver's hard-knock life is
like a country music song. Born
dirt-poor and fatherless in 1939
in Corsicana, Texas, he was raised
in the cotton fields of East Texas
where his mother worked and where
he first heard country and blues
music.
By the age of 9, Shaver was
writing and singing his own songs
and saw it as a sign of what he
was supposed to do with his life.
That feeling was reinforced after
being mesmerized by a Hank Williams
concert he attended in the late
'40s.
"I really believe I was
born to write songs," he
says. "I'm real good at it."
His grandmother raised him until
he was 12 years old, when he reunited
with his mother who had found
work at a honky-tonk in Waco.
It was there that Shaver adopted
his affinity for raw music, boozing,
fighting and womanizing - traits
that would shape his personal
life and songs like "The
Devil Made Me Do it the First
Time (The Second Time I Did it
on My Own)."
After a stint in the U.S. Navy,
from which he was honorably discharged
for fighting with an out-of-uniform
officer, Shaver worked a series
of odd jobs at ranches, rodeos
and sawmills. But after breaking
his back and cutting off two fingers
on his right hand, he decided
to learn how to play guitar.
"I fell back into music
as opposed to people who fell
back on other jobs," Shaver
says. "I knew I was real
good at it."
In 1966, after hitching a ride
to Nashville, he landed a job
writing songs for Bobby Bare's
publishing company. The gig paid
$50 a week, which allowed Shaver
to hone his craft without seeking
day jobs. It was reassurance that
he could make a living in music
and support his wife Brenda Tindell
and their young son, Eddy.
But success didn't come easy
for Shaver as he struggled in
the competitive and songwriting-rich
Nashville scene. To stave off
the pressure, he turned to drugs,
alcohol and adultery, the latter
of which eventually landed him
in divorce court for the first
time in 1986.
His big break came in 1973 when
Waylon Jennings recorded nine
of his songs for the landmark
anti-Nashville album, "Honky
Tonk Heroes." Legend has
it that Jennings made a drunken
vow at Willie Nelson's Fourth
of July picnic to record an entire
album of his songs, but forgot
to keep his promise until Shaver
threatened to kick his ass. "Honky
Tonk Heroes" not only put
Shaver in the national spotlight,
but it also launched the outlaw
movement of the 1970s.
"There was a gang of us
knocking a dent in Nashville,"
he says. "But we were more
like outcasts than outlaws because
the establishment didn't want
us to succeed. They had things
going for them and they thought
we would mess it up because our
music was so raw and honest and
different that it would change
everything. And it did. It changed
for the better."
It also sparked an ongoing trend
by artists like Johnny Cash, Willie
Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Bob
Dylan, Elvis Presley, the Allman
Brothers, David Allan Coe and
Todd Snider to cover Shaver's
simple, yet poignant tunes. Over
the years, Shaver says, he has
written about 2,500 songs, many
of which were inspired by his
own trials and tribulations.
"Most of my songs are written
trying to get back into the house,"
he says with a laugh. "But
they only worked once so I had
to write a bunch of them. The
rest were written trying to stay
alive, and I had to write a bunch
of them, too."
Never was that more clear than
during the '80s when Shaver's
personal life hit rock bottom
during a blur of alcohol and drug
abuse, thoughts of suicide and
marital problems. Even his professional
life, marred by lagging record
sales and record companies that
went belly up, slumped.
Then one night, after having
a vision of Jesus Christ sitting
on the edge of his bed, Shaver
drove to a Nashville mountaintop
and asked God for his life back.
As he was coming down the mountain,
he started writing "I'm Just
an Old Chunk of Coal," a
signature tune that reinvigorated
his faith and resiliency.
"Jesus Christ, he's the
one who made us all No. 2,"
Shaver says. "If you don't
like Jesus, go to hell. May the
guy of your choice bless you,
but I've got Jesus. I'm cool with
him."
After getting right with God,
Shaver left Nashville and moved
his family to Texas, where his
life and career began to improve.
During the '90s, he would team
up with his guitar-playing son,
Eddy. Starting with 1993's "Tramp
On Your Street," the father-son
duo known simply as "Shaver"
began turning heads on the country
music scene and would record a
string of critically acclaimed
albums.
But personal troubles reappeared
in 1999 when Tindell, whom Shaver
remarried for a second and third
time, died of cancer. One month
later, so, too, did his mother.
Following their deaths, Shaver
and his son worked tirelessly
on their next record, "The
Earth Rolls On." Critics
would hail it for its complex
range of emotions that included
love, faith, rambling, fighting
and freedom. Sadly, though, tragedy
struck again when Eddy died of
an overdose of heroin and crack
cocaine on Dec. 31, 2000, months
before the album's release.
Devastated by the deaths of
the three people closest to him,
Shaver toured relentlessly, ignoring
his health. It proved to be a
near-fatal mistake when he suffered
a heart attack onstage at a Fourth
of July concert in Texas and almost
refused the quadruple bypass surgery
needed to save his life.
"Everything went sideways,
so I thought I'd start all over
again," says Shaver, who
in the past few years has reinvigorated
himself.
In 2004, he was inducted into
the Nashville Songwriter's Hall
of Fame and was named Texas State
Musician by the Texas Commission
on the Arts. And in 2005, Dan
Rather profiled him for "60
Minutes II"; he released
"The Real Deal" in September
with guests like Big and Rich,
Nanci Griffith and Flaco Jimenez,
marking the first time he produced
his own work; he quietly wed his
girlfriend of the past three years,
Wanda Lynn Kennedy, a few weeks
ago; and later this month he'll
be a featured writer at the 2005
Texas Book festival in Austin
promoting his new autobiography,
"Honky Tonk Hero."
"I didn't know if I'd live
to see any of it," Shaver
says.
Of all the accolades that have
been heaped on him, none top those
extended to him by his peers.
In May, several singer-songwriters
celebrated the ol' five and dimer
by recording "Tribute to
Billy Joe Shaver - Live,"
featuring performances by Robert
Earl Keen, Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale
Gilmore, Dale Watson and Jack
Ingram. "I thought you were
supposed to be dead before that
happened," he says. "But
I'm glad it happened."
Shaver was also tapped to join
Merle Haggard, Toby Keith and
Jerry Lee Lewis for Country Music
Television's "CMT Outlaws."
The concert special, taped on
Shaver's birthday, airs next month.
"It was a wonderful thing,"
he says. "Merle and Toby
sang happy birthday to me and
gave me a cake. Merle pretty much
hung the moon... well, if he didn't,
I think he told someone where
to put it. I think he's the original
outlaw."
Shaver says being an outlaw
isn't easy.
"It's hard because a lot
of people don't agree with folks
who say what they mean and mean
what they say," he says.
"You have to not worry about
what other people think and just
do it and live with it."
That attitude still fuels his
songwriting. "I don't write
'em unless they're good,"
he says. "I've come to the
point in my life if I like one
I keep on going, but if they don't
amount to much I just go to the
next one."
Through the years, Shaver has
learned how to live with his decisions,
good and bad, as he moves between
the dark and the light. He still
spends more than 200 nights a
year playing honky-tonks, noting
that songwriting is "the
cheapest psychiatrist I know and
God knows I need one."
His bare-boned faith keeps him
in check, too.
"I'm lucky with what I've
got, but I'm still a sinner,"
he says. "You don't have
to worry about drinking and stuff
like that because it's not what
goes in a man's mouth that befouls
him, it's what comes out. So you
just drink up and watch what you
say. Be careful driving home and
don't run over us." CV
Comment
on this story | Return
to top |