For a while, it seemed that there was a new Townes' release everytime I went to a store ... and some sounded just terrible ... like they were recorded in the 30's or 40's or on a portable cassette recorder (think of Elvis' Hayride Recordings or some of the Louis Armstrong compilations). And then I read somewhere about his estate being a mess and different companies owning and/or fighting over the rights to his songs.
If you pick up "Texas Rain" you will not be disappointed. There was also a tribute album that came out a few years back that is pretty OK ... especially if you like Townes' stories and his way with words.
As for Nancy's cover of "Tecumseh Valley" on "Other Voices" ... kind of a shame really. I always felt that Arlo dropped the ball as his voice didn't really convey the sense of quiet despair and inability to change one's fate that the song's main character was living (a girl in some dusty small town that goes from being an abused child to the local call girl). On "Marie" from the "Texas Rain" collection though, you can't help but be moved by Willie Nelson's telling the story of a down on his luck migrant worker, who is defeated by life as he can't even provide life's basics for his pregnant girlfriend/wife and she winds up dying. As you can guess, many of Townes's topics are about the underdogs and the struggle that life can be. Very powerful stuff nonetheless.
Regards, Rich
If you pick up "Texas Rain" you will not be disappointed. There was also a tribute album that came out a few years back that is pretty OK ... especially if you like Townes' stories and his way with words.
As for Nancy's cover of "Tecumseh Valley" on "Other Voices" ... kind of a shame really. I always felt that Arlo dropped the ball as his voice didn't really convey the sense of quiet despair and inability to change one's fate that the song's main character was living (a girl in some dusty small town that goes from being an abused child to the local call girl). On "Marie" from the "Texas Rain" collection though, you can't help but be moved by Willie Nelson's telling the story of a down on his luck migrant worker, who is defeated by life as he can't even provide life's basics for his pregnant girlfriend/wife and she winds up dying. As you can guess, many of Townes's topics are about the underdogs and the struggle that life can be. Very powerful stuff nonetheless.
Regards, Rich