Wynonna Judd nailed it last night when she said country music is “real stories about real peole.”
Too many songs on country radio today come across like weak approximations of real life. But not at this moment on the Palomino Stage, where Texas songwriter Billy Joe Shaver is rocking the crowd with Lone Star State roadhouse country blues.
Shaver’s been through more than enough to wipe that broad smile off his craggy face. He divorced his wife twice but married her a third time before she died of cancer about a decade ago. And his son Eddy died of a drug overdose at the turn of the millennium.
But that, evidently, is just part of real life, the subject he’s mined for four decades in songs that have been recorded by Elvis, Bob Dylan, Waylon Jennings and countless others.
It’s hard to think of a portrait of a couple’s redemption more achingly beautiful, or more true to life, than the one he just sang, “When the Fallen Angels Fly”:
“There’s a story in the Bible
about the eagle growing old.
How it grows new sets of feathers
then becomes both young and strong
then it spreads its mighty wingspan
out across the open sky.
We will have the wings of angels
when the fallen angels fly.”
– Randy Lewis
Photo by Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times