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Porter Wagoner 1927-2007
By Bob Doerschuk
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- © 2007 CMA Close Up News Service /
Country Music Association, Inc.
When Porter Wagoner, known as "The Thin Man from West Plains"
because of his lanky frame, succumbed to lung cancer, at 8:25
PM/CST on Oct. 28 in Nashville, a piece of Country Music history
slipped into its rhinestone-studded jacket, stowed its guitar
and headed toward the stage door.
Wagoner, who had survived an abdominal aneurysm in 2006, made
his exit quickly, being hospitalized on Oct. 15 and released to
hospice care on Oct. 26. But before then, he had flourished for
half a century as a member of the Grand Ole Opry, pioneered the
fusion of Country Music and television as host for 21 years of
"The Porter Wagoner Show," won three CMA Awards and four Grammy
Awards, helped Dolly Parton and Mel Tillis launch their careers,
and then joined them in 2002 as a member of the Country Music
Hall of Fame.
In addition to these accomplishments was the impact Wagoner made
on countless fans who embraced him as one of their favorite
entertainers. His homespun humor and accessible vocal style
captivated radio listeners for generations. The gaudy outfits,
upswept hair and room-lighting smile were indispensible elements
in his live shows - but for those who could only listen from
hundreds or thousands of miles away, the sound and feeling of
the man, as broadcast from Nashville, were enough to make him
seem like a friend.
"This is a terrible loss for the music industry on many
different levels," said CMA CEO Tammy Genovese. "Musically, the
'Wagonmaster' contributed a great deal to the format with his
voice, his humor and his undeniable charm. He was a consummate
showman, wrapped like a bright and precious gift to the nation
in his trademark rhinestone-studded suits. He is an
unforgettable figure in Country Music history. He will be
missed. Our prayers go out to his children Debra, Denise and
Richard and their families."
Porter Wayne Wagoner was born on Aug. 12, 1927, in the Ozark
Mountain region of southwestern Missouri. Raised in West Plains,
educated in a one-room schoolhouse, he worked as a young man by
day in a butcher shop and as a Country performer at night. His
style grew from its bluegrass roots into a synthesis of Roy
Acuff, Hank Williams and other contemporaries, blended with
Wagoner's own evolving sound. In 1951, he became a regular on
the KWTO program, out of Springfield, Mo., that would become
"The Ozark Jubilee." A year later he made his recording debut
for RCA Victor, and the following year Carl Smith turned
Wagoner's "Trademark" into a hit.
"A Satisfied Mind" hit No. 1 in 1955 and conveyed Wagoner to
Nashville and membership in the Grand Ole Opry two years later.
In 1960, he launched "The Porter Wagoner Show." Its mix of
traditional Country Music, comedy sketches, and guest shots by
established and upcoming stars helped it earn syndication to
more than 100 television stations and expanded its audience to
more than 3 million by the early '70s. It also introduced the
world to Parton, Wagoner's protégée and duo partner. Through
their seven-year association, they won three CMA Vocal Duo of
the Year Awards, earned a Grammy and cut 14 songs that wound up
in the Top 10, including "Just Someone I Used to Know," "Making
Plans" and the chart-topping "Please Don't Stop Loving Me."
In his solo work, Wagoner reflected extraordinary range. His
songs, whether self-penned or selected to reflect the complexity
of his artistry, combined elements that would seem incompatible
in the hands of a lesser artist. Yet Wagoner displayed
consistent insight as an interpreter, whether delivering gospel
songs, playfully humorous material, stoic recitations or
descents toward the depths of a tortured soul. From "Company's
Comin'" (1954) and "Eat, Drink and Be Merry (Tomorrow You'll
Cry)" (1955) through the stark, fiddle-haunted introduction to
"Albert Erving" from his last album, Wagonmaster (2007) produced
by Marty Stuart and released on ANTI-Records, from his gigs with
the Blue Ridge Boys in his early 20s to his appearance in July
as the opening act for The White Stripes at a sold-out show at
New York's Madison Square Garden, his legacy is unique and
secure.
"I may not be the world's greatest singer," Wagoner said in his
2007 interview with CMA Close Up. "But I know how to sing
Country Music. I know what separates Country from other kinds of
music. I've learned that it's important, if you're a singer or
an entertainer, to know what you're doing. You need to study
this business as if you were going to be a doctor, a lawyer or a
man that makes big decisions. You never do find out all there is
to know in your lifetime. But you learn from that process every
day - and you don't forget what you learn."
Amen, Porter.
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Photo by Chris Hollo, Hollophotographics, Inc.
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- Porter Wagoner: Wagonmaster
By Bob Doerschuk
© 2007 CMA Close Up News Service / Country Music Association,
Inc.
He'd grown up watching "The Porter Wagoner Show" in Mississippi;
he even appeared on it, as a prodigy picker at age 13. The
resurrection of these memories, one fateful day not long ago,
was the first step toward the work that would lead this year to
Wagoner's latest album, Wagonmaster , on Anti Records.
"That all came back on the day the war started in Iraq," Marty
Stuart explained, relaxing at the Tennessee State Museum amidst
his collection of Country Music memorabilia several weeks before
it would be exhibited as "Sparkle & Twang: Marty Stuart's
American Musical Odyssey." "There was CNN coverage all day long.
I watched as much as I could stand and then went to the back of
the bus to take a nap, just to get away from it. Then, when I
came back to the front, 'The Porter Wagoner Show' was on the RFD
Channel. I watched the entire show, and when it was done I felt
like I did when I was a kid: as bad as things can be, it's going
to be OK."
Wagonmaster grew around the sound that Wagoner cultivated on his
show. Between the blazing hoedown fiddle that kicks off the "Wagonmaster"
theme to the last moments, a stark solo rendition of "I Heard
That Lonesome Whistle Blow" during the final moments of "Porter
and Marty," the album's last track, these performances
transplant Wagoner's roots into a conceptually adventurous
setting. On 17 songs, nine of them written or co-authored by
Wagoner, every facet of his persona comes into view, from the
playful side he displays at the Opry ("Be a Little Quieter") to
the dark corners of the soul he'd explored in his classic 1972
recording "Rubber Room" ("Committed to Parkview," written by
Johnny Cash and given to Stuart in 1983 to pass along to
Wagoner. That this request slipped Stuart's mind until now may
prove all for the best, given the stark and scary eloquence that
Wagoner brings to the tune today).
Wagoner's voice is worn yet irresistibly expressive, whether
meditating on the fleetness of life's passage ("A Place to Hang
My Hat"), recounting the stories of strangers on a bus ride
toward their diverse destinies on a Wagoner-Parton co-write ("My
Many Hurried Southern Trips"), remembering a hermit who harbored
a heartbreaking secret ("Albert Erving"), or even just talking
on tape with Stuart about Hank Williams .
On "Brother Harold Dee," though, Wagoner achieves a transcendent
eloquence through the now neglected device of recitation. "Red
Foley taught me how to do that. I got to know him real well in
Springfield, Mo., where he was doing 'The Ozark Mountain
Jubilee,'" he recalled, noting the radio program on which he was
featured until joining the Opry in 1957.
"He knew how to talk to an audience. He told me one time, 'You
can't talk over an audience, because there are hundreds of them
sitting there. So if you lose their attention, talk softer.
They'll listen harder.' And it works."
The impact of Wagonmaster owes much to Wagoner's gift for
bringing characters to life, as a writer, a vocalist or both. "I
try to put myself into every song I project, in a way that makes
it sound as though I've been there. Now, most of them, I have
not been there. I never tried any of the drugs because of my
fear for it. But I've always had a softness for people who get
hooked on whiskey or some type of drugs. In order to sing this
way, you've got to believe that you somehow have it in yourself.
'The Late Love of Mine' was unique in this way because I wanted
to project that the guy was telling this story as though he was
a drinker."
And here Wagoner began to sing the slow, sad waltz of this track
from Wagonmaster: "How can I expect a good woman to love a slave
of the wine? I knew that someday I'd lose her, the late love of
mine."
With that, we're taken somewhere far from here, to wherever that
place is that feeds the genius of Country Music when it's
allowed to flow freely and poetically. It was this place that
Stuart visited, not long after that that incident on his tour
bus, when he dropped by Wagoner's home one night and left
knowing why he would produce, play on and help his friend bring
Wagonmaster into the world.
"Porter was ready, man," Stuart remembered. "He had song after
song after song. The more I sat there, listening, the more I
thought, 'This is why I fell in love with Country Music, right
here.'"
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