Showing posts with label Hank Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hank Williams. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Happy 93rd Birthday Hank Williams Sr.

Rare picture of Hank Williams with an electric guitar


Hank Williams died when he was just 30 years old. He would have been 93 today. Instead of posting his bio, which you can read on on-line, I've posted below some passages from Bob Dylan's 2004 Chronicles, Volume I.








Bob Dylan on Hank Williams

This is from the 2004 book written by Bob Dylan,  Bob Dylan, Chronicles, Volume I.  It’s from the first part of the book where Dylan discusses his influences.



“The first Time I heard Hank he was singing on the Grand Ole Opry, a Saturday night radio show broadcast out of  Nashville.  Roy Acuff, who MC’d the program was referred to by the announcer as “The King of Country Music.”  Someone would always be introduced as “the next governor of Tennessee” and the show advertised dog food and sold plans for old-age pensions.   Hank sang “Move It On Over”, a song about living in the doghouse and it struck me really funny.  He also sang spirituals like “When God Comes and Gathers His Jewels” and “Are you Walking and a-Talking for the Lord”.  The sound of his voice went through me like an electric rod and I managed to get a hold of a few of his 78s – “Baby We’re Really In Love” and “Honky Tonkin’” and “Lost Highway “ – and I played them endlessly.

            They called him a “hillbilly singer,” but I didn’t know what that was.  Homer and Jethro were more like what I thought a hillbilly was.  Hank was no burr head.  There was nothing clownish about him.  Even at a young age, I identified fully with him.  I didn’t have to experience anything that Hank did to know what he was singing about. I’d never seen a robin weep, but could imagine it and it made me sad.  When he sand ‘the news is out all over town”, I knew what news that was, even though I didn’t know.  The first chance I got, I was going to go to the dance and wear out my shoes too.  I’d learn later that Hank had died in the backseat of a car on New Year’s Day, kept my fingers crossed, hoped it wasn’t true.  But it was true.  It was like a great tree had fallen.  Hearing about Hank’s death caught me squarely on the shoulder.  The silence of outer space never seemed so loud.  Intuitively I knew, though, that his voice would never drop out of sight or fade away – a voice like a beautiful horn.

             Much later, I’d discover that Hank had been in tremendous pain all of his life, suffered from severe spinal problems – that the pain must have been torturous.  In light of that, its all the more astonishing to hear his records.  It’s almost like he defied the laws of gravity.  The Luke the Drifter record, I just about wore out.  That’s the one where he sings and recites parables, like the Beatitudes.  I could listen to the Luke the Drifter record all day and drift away myself, become totally convinced in the goodness of man.  When I hear Hank sing, all movement ceases.  The slightest whisper seems sacrilege.

            In time, I became aware that in Hank’s recorded songs were the archetype rules of poetic songwriting.  The architectural forms are like marble pillars and they had to be there.  Even his words – all of his syllables are divided up so they make perfect mathematical sense.  You can learn a lot about the structure of songwriting by listening to his records, and I listened to them a lot and had them internalized.  In a few years’ time, Robert Shelton, the folk and jazz critic for the New York Times, would review one of my performances and would says something like ‘resembling a cross between a choirboy and a beatnik… he breaks all the rules in songwriting, except that of having something to say”.  The rules, whether Shelton knew it or not, were Hank’s rules, but it wasn’t like I ever meant to break them.  It’s just that what I was trying to express was beyond the circle. “



Monday, April 4, 2016

Hank's Car



                                                                                                                       Photos of model: Tom Casesa

Charles Carr died in July of 2013.  He was the 17 year old boy who was driving Hank Williams when he died in the back seat of his 1952 baby blue Cadillac convertible, on route to a concert in Canton Ohio.   He died at some point in the night, but the specifics are still a little mysterious.  Carr has said very little over the years since, and there is a feeling that we never  quite got the full story of what happened that night.  The event has been mythologized a fair bit, in books, films and art work.   Sometimes the event is  called his "Last Ride" or referred to as "The Show He Never Gave". There's a 1980 movie by that title, and last year another movie, The Last Ride was released.

 I met Carr in the late 90s at a Hank fest in Alabama.  A friend of mine tracked Carr down and brought him to the museum in Montgomery.  The museum was selling replicas of Hank's car. I bought one and  Carr signed it across the hood.  Amazing to have this. 

On the same trip I met two of the then surviving Drifting Cowboys, steel guitarist Don Helms and fiddle player Jerry Rivers and saw them perform.  Their signatures are on my acoustic guitar. I had the chance to interview Don in 1997.  He is credited with giving Hank' band it's distinct sound.  You can see a video slide show I  made of the interview here:  Don Helms interview.  When he passed in 2008 he was the last remaining member of the core Drifting Cowboy Band.  




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                                                                                                                                 Photos by Tom Casesa








Hank Williams




Finally, I overdubbed one of Hank's demo songs with my piano.   You can see/hear it here:

Tom and Hank



Tom, around 15 yo, with Ole Hank photoshopped in.