Friday, June 30, 2023

1975 - si te quiere de verdad ...

1975 seemed to start off with an attitude along the lines of “hey 1974 was pretty good, let’s just do that again!”  It wasn’t a perfect copy.  George Jones inaugural #1 “The Door” might have a similar feel and theme to his previous-year landmark “The Grand Tour,” but it doesn’t share its grace.  Billy “Crash” Craddock’s “Ruby Baby” is a fun cover of an old Drifters song but it doesn’t transcend nostalgia.  “Kentucky Gambler” is certainly adequate as an uptempo Merle Haggard story-song but it doesn’t have the ornery rip of “Old Man From the Mountain.”  And “I’d Be A Legend In My Time,” repurposed for 1975 by a young Ronnie Milsap, is one of those songs that always ends up on classic-country compilations but just rings a bit more hollow than its contemporaries, somehow.  “City Lights” is a much better song, but Mickey Gilley’s cover of it feels pretty dashed-off next to the definitive Ray Price version. 

Unlike a decade or so prior, though, if you’re underwhelmed by any particular 1975 #1 then for the most part you’ve only got to put up with it for a week.  It’s nice to see Charley Pride back in the #1 mix after about a year’s absence, and “Then Who Am I” is a strong entry in the canon of his prime.  Like most Pride songs, it doesn’t kick up a ton of heat, but there’s a plainspoken commitment to melody and lyric there that always serves the song and the singer well.  TG Sheppard got his first run at #1 with the self-recriminating “Devil in the Bottle,” a convincingly-belted big melody about a repentant boozehound losing his grip.  His style would get smoother and more confident with age, but at the time he was playing haunted drunkard pretty well.

Tom T. Hall continued to score on his own stoic-yet-clever terms, this time with “I Care” off of his kid-friendly Songs From Fox Hollow album.  Sung from the POV of a sympathetic, doting dad or grandpa, the warm specificity of the lyrics kept the cloying aftertaste at bay as well as anyone could ever hope to.  The oft-forgotten Cal Smith slipped in behind him for his third and final run at #1, and last round in the Top 10 in general, “It’s Time to Pay the Fiddler.”  A solid song with a strong metaphor about the impending end of an affair, it was buoyed even more by Smith’s booming drawl that really warrants a rediscovery.  “Linda On My Mind” found Conway Twitty similarly musing about the affair that’s about to blow up in his face, while across the nation husbands of women named Linda who’d been anywhere in the vicinity of Conway Twitty over the past two years found great difficulty sleeping at night.

If 1974 was the year that Dolly Parton broke away from the pack with two genre-defining hits, 1975 was sort of that year for Freddy Fender.  His cultural impact was much smaller in the long run, but speaking of culture, there was a bit of novelty in his Mexican-American heritage.  Yes, Johnny Rodriguez was practically a regular on the country charts by now, and Charley Pride proved that at least the occasional black person could succeed in a largely white genre, but unlike those two gentlemen Fender really sounded like his culture.  Even if he wasn’t singing half the song in Spanish, it’d be hard to miss the Tex-Mex distinctiveness in Fender’s accent, delivery, instrumentation, pacing, you name it on “Before the Next Teardrop Falls.”  Both a touch exotic (at least if you lived north and/or east of Austin, TX) and entirely relatable, it was undeniable enough to top both the country and pop charts in 1975, a precipitous upgrade for a once small-time nightclub singer whose initial successes were stalled out by a weed possession conviction that probably wouldn’t have happened if it wasn’t for the, um, culture.  But suddenly the man born as Baldemar Huerta was on a roll … more on him later.



Parton’s roll wouldn’t be over for at least a decade or so (or, arguably, ever) and she scored again with “The Bargain Store” which, like George Jones aforementioned “The Door,” wasn’t terrible but was burdened with a central concept that fell on the wrong side of anchoring a song versus just weighing it down. Plus, although her presentation back then was more modest, it’s hard to imagine the eventual hypersexy curvaceous millionaire icon having to temper her own romantic expectations to a Dollar General level.  George Jones could sell the hell out of hopelessness. Conway Twitty and even Tammy Wynette could too. Parton could handle humility, but straight-up humiliation might’ve been one of the few things out of her grasp.

Johnny Rodriguez’ “I Just Can’t Get Her Out of My Mind” was a solid and sincere if generic chart king for a week before Merle Haggard scored one of his most memorable hits, the beautifully miserable “Always Wanting You.”  Supposedly it was penned about his unrequited love for the frequently-mentioned Dolly Parton, and honestly that’s truer to the Dolly story than that “Bargain Store” number ever could be. This is not some poor woman begging for affection, this is someone that stone-cold legends write heartsick number-one songs about.   

The less-remembered Billie Jo Spears scored her most-remembered hit in 1975 with “Blanket On the Ground,” an uber-twangy ode to rekindled marital lust. It’s a worthwhile sentiment that other songs like Charlie Rich’s “Behind Closed Doors” managed to actually make sound sexy, whereas “Blanket” just doesn’t.  Between the cornpone delivery and ramshackle beat, it’s about as hot as watching your parents hook up. Joe Stampley sounded considerably more romantically engaged on “Roll On Big Mama” even though I’m pretty sure his POV is a trucker singing about his big rig. It was probably at least the best trucker song of the year, albeit by far not the biggest (we’ll get to that).

Next up was Gary Stewart, a man who had many troubles but sounding 100% invested in whatever song he happened to be singing wasn’t one of them.  It was all wild, lusty elation or deep despair for Stewart; unlike some of his contemporaries that finally scored a chart-topper after a decade or two in the trenches, Stewart was a relatively new chart presence, having cracked the Top 10 for the first time just the previous year.  “She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Double)” not only had an awesomely memorable title, it just raged out of the speakers with heartsick, steel-laced conviction.  He’d never quite hit the Top Ten again (despite a few close ones), much less #1, but he’s certainly one of those artists whose legacy is much bigger in practice than it is on paper.  If jukebox play still figured into the Billboard charts, he’d probably still crack the Top 10 today.



BJ Thomas’ “(Hey Won’t You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song” had a pretty memorable title too, and so far holds the record for the longest song title to top the Billboard charts in both country and pop.  The crossover appeal is pretty obvious: it’s an eminently hummable little number, as easy to imagine Neil Diamond tackling it as Conway Twitty, and Thomas always split the difference between the two pretty intuitively.  It’s a bit weightless, but they can’t all be catharsis.  Jessi Colter’s breakthrough “I’m Not Lisa” earned some crossover love too, getting as high as #4 on the overall pop charts, a well-observed tale of living in the shadow of a partner’s former love.  Good grown-up stuff right there.

The crossover hits kept coming, with John Denver’s “Thank God I’m A Country Boy” straddling the country and pop charts on a hayride to #1.  I’m not going to sit here and pretend it’s not catchy, or that it wasn’t kind of ballsy to release the stripped-down live version as the single, or that his delivery doesn’t show talent and conviction.  But at least to these ears, it sounds hokey and pandering, with the whole “life ain’t nothin’ but a funny funny riddle” line as a particular irritant.  He sounded sincere enough giving more-subdued shout-outs to the rustic life on other, better hits.  Guess it’s not nice to begrudge him picking up the tempo a bit.  I’m retroactively surprised it was only #1 for one week.

I’m also surprised it was displaced by Mickey Gilley’s take on “Window Up Above.”  Speaking of ballsy … George Jones, the song’s writer and original singer, was still alive and right up there on the charts with him (if not exactly “alive and well”).  It’s a solid tune that was given extra dimension by Jones’ legendarily emotional delivery.  Gilley typically didn’t have that extra dimension to give, but he nevertheless scored again and again with smoothed-out versions of country, pop, and soul classics.  If you happened into some dancehall and the cover singer onstage was as talented as Mickey Gilley, you’d count yourself lucky.  But I’m still not sure what it was doing topping the charts.

#1-debuting Linda Ronstadt recorded a ton of covers too, but she had more of a knack of bringing something new to them, like the Everly Brothers “When Will I Be Loved.”  It was brassier, sexier, and groovier than the original, with a little of that L.A. studio gloss but no shortage of country/R&B heart underpinning it.  Even more so than her Laurel Canyon peers, she had it in her to shake up whatever charts she chose to take aim at; by some accounts she’s still among the top ten album sellers in country music history, albeit with a bit of an asterisk of just how many of those were necessarily “country” albums.

Unmistakable non-crossover country took back over for a while.  Don Williams “You’re My Best Friend” wasn’t necessarily his best song, but it was a nice respite from the hard-drinking heartache numbers like TG Sheppard’s “Tryin’ To Beat the Morning Home,” which was a near-clone of his breakthrough from earlier in the year in terms of theme, sound, and melody.  Not a bad song, just a bit redundant.  Teenaged Tanya Tucker scored with another oddball story song, albeit more wholesome than most of her other early hits; if “Lizzie and the Rainman” sounds sort of like a soundtrack to a family-friendly quasi-western that doesn’t exist, it’s because it was loosely based on an old 1956 Katherine Hepburn movie.  Merle Haggard wasn’t one to jump on a trend, usually, but his chug-a-lugging “Movin’ On” fit nicely with the trucker-friendly zeitgeist that’d culminate as ’75 drew to a close.

Conway Twitty struck again, but on an uncharacteristically sour note with “Touch the Hand.”  Yeah, he still sings the hell out of it, and it sounds nice on the surface, but the whole creepy undertone of “hey, I took your virginity, so you more or less belong to me forever now” makes it really hard to sympathize with the about-to-be-dumped narrator.  It’d be nice to dispense entirely with songs that use “made a man/woman of me” as doublespeak for one’s first go-round at sex, as if it’s just that simple.  It’s not as bad as his eventual non-hit “I Was The First” but it’s on the way there.  Johnny Rodriguez’ “Just Get Up and Close The Door” was kind of morally suspect too – a married woman’s paramour is pleading with her to just stick around a little longer – but it lands on the non-creepy side of skeevy, thanks in large part to one of the best vocal performances Rodriguez ever committed to tape, somehow making the back door man into a sympathetic figure.

His fellow Hispanic country star Freddy Fender came roaring back to the top, basically covering himself with a revamp of “Wasted Days & Wasted Nights,” his self-penned masterpiece that had been a minor hit before his first career run was derailed back in the ‘60s.  This time it got the adulation it deserved, a swooning blend of Tex-Mex and swamp-rock that still holds up with the best of any era.  Glen Campbell reasserted himself on the country charts with the crossover hit “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which was a little more state-of-the-art in its anthemic country-pop sweep but has also held up nicely.  It managed to hold on for two weeks and then boomerang back to the top a couple weeks later in an era where that sort of thing had become exceedingly rare.

Conway and Loretta Lynn took over for a week with “Feelins,” a pretty sweet (if slight) bit of steel-drenched country harmony that thankfully ditched the telephone gimmick from their last hit and the creepy shit from Twitty’s last solo smash.  Ronnie Milsap scored another early-career-peak hit with “Daydreams About Night Things,” about as wholesome a song about spending one’s entire day sexually distracted as you could ever hope for.  And then, as October hit, we got Willie Nelson’s first #1 hit.

“Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain” is a slow-moving song.  It’s spare and poetic and the production on Willie’s recording doesn’t do anything to sweeten it up, at least in the ‘70s-radio-friendly sense; it sounds like a very small group of guys jamming on a back porch but doing it really quietly so they won’t wake sleeping babies in the house.  And it’s transcendentally wonderful.  The song hitting number one was sort of a by-product of an even bigger story of the song’s album Red Headed Stranger breaking country album sales records on the strength of Nelson’s ludicrous gamble: maybe all the nice suits and crisp production and other assorted trappings of conventional wisdom that had earned him only modest success (at least as a singer …. as a songwriter he was already something of a legend) were seriously holding him back.  After a few years of declaring some independence and tinkering with the formulas, he went full outlaw on Red Headed Stranger and it turned out being exactly what the world needed out of Willie Nelson (and vice versa).  They just hadn’t thought to ask.  In the years to come, Nelson would shift gears from artist to icon, change a lot of people’s ideas about what a country star looked and sounded like, change the relationship of his home state of Texas to the Nashville mainstream, and all along the way be emboldened to try various things that shouldn’t have worked but did.

Charley Pride continued to blaze his own unconventional trail with conventionally good songs: the sunny, optimistic “Hope You’re Feelin’ Me Like I’m Feelin’ You” was another keeper.  Tanya Tucker followed up with the wholesome, bouncy, vaguely annoying “San Antonio Stroll.”  It’s weird that she kicked off her career with some seriously dark balladry and then shifted gears for a couple of harmless 1975 hits … usually you win them over with the crowd-pleasers and then hit ‘em with the dark shit.  Don Williams remained wary of the (figuratively) dark shit himself; “(Turn Out the Light And) Love Me Tonight,” like most of his classics, embraces the complexity of adult love but still couches it in warm optimism. 

John Denver had another run atop the country and pop charts with “I’m Sorry,” which for once was not specifically about rural lifestyle but more a conventional relationship ballad.  Despite (or maybe because of) some oddball lyrics about China and whatnot thrown in there, it’s a very pretty song and holds up fairly well.  Waylon Jennings’ “Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way” was a less pretty song, specific to the musician lifestyle and repeatedly referencing a star who’d been dead for 23 years, but it’s held up timelessly.  It’s not always clear if it’s bemoaning change, demanding it, or just acknowledging it.  Maybe it’s all three, indicative of a commercial music business that never really knows what it wants but never stops asking for more.  It’s world-weary yet energized, hard-eyed yet soulful.  Somewhere there’s a bar band covering it right this minute (it helps that it’s just two chords).

Meanwhile, “Rocky” by Dickey Lee has vanished almost completely from the public memory, as far as I can tell.  It’s not bad, just a brisk and jangly three-part story that (spoiler alert) ends with the untimely death of one half of a still-young couple just when you’re really starting to like them.  Maybe it was sucked into a black hole of novelty by the year’s final #1.  Merle Haggard’s “It’s All in the Movies” is still generally and sort-of-fondly remembered, so I guess it escaped, but does anyone remember “Secret Love” nearly as much as Freddy Fender’s two earlier 1975 hits?  It’s not bad at all, but kind of a secret song by now, if you will.  Same with Johnny Rodriguez’ “Love Put a Song In My Heart,” which is kind of bland, but did it deserve to disappear?

It's entirely possible (please don’t double-check this with an astrophysicist) that the year-ending #1 song, CW McCall’s “Convoy,” created a big-ass chintzy black hole of weird, incongruous novelty that just sucked “Rocky” and everything after it into some other dimly-remembered dimension.  It rolled hard over the last two weeks of 1975 and then even harder over the first four weeks of 1976.  Some guy no one had ever heard of with a jarring, often-chirpy trucker saga pulled some mid-‘60s Buck Owens shit and hugged that #1 lane for six weeks straight.  But since most of it’s run was in 1976, we’ll just figure out how exactly the hell we’re gonna rank it then.   

THE TREND?

It would still be a decade before the Bellamy Brothers had a country hit about an “Old Hippie” who “gets off on country music/’cause disco left him cold.”  But looking at some of the moving & shaking going on in the 1975 country charts, one wonders if a hearty chunk of the listeners were once at-least-vaguely-counterculture teens and young adults who had to ditch the tie-dyes and get a job at some point.  Now they were raising families and leading a surface-level-conservative life, so country music maybe didn’t seem like the soundtrack of the enemy anymore (if it ever did).  Their old rock & roll heroes had died off and burned out to an upsetting degree.  Pop radio was turning into a mishmash of soft rock and disco.  If they gave country music a shot, they probably wouldn’t be as scandalized as some older listeners by black and Hispanic stars, or rowdy longhairs like Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings, or enterprising pop interlopers like Glen Campbell and Linda Ronstadt.  Or, perhaps, even whatever the hell “Convoy” was.

THE RANKING

  1. Before the Next Teardrop Falls (Freddy Fender)
  2. Blue Eyes Cryin’ In The Rain (Willie Nelson)
  3. Wasted Days and Wasted Nights (Freddy Fender)
  4. She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Doubles) (Gary Stewart)
  5. Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way (Waylon Jennings)
  6. When Will I Be Loved (Linda Ronstadt)
  7. Always Wanting You (Merle Haggard)
  8. Rhinestone Cowboy (Glen Campbell)
  9. Just Get Up and Close the Door (Johnny Rodriguez)
  10. Linda On My Mind (Conway Twitty)
  11. Kentucky Gambler (Merle Haggard)
  12. (Turn Out the Light) And Love Me Tonight (Don Williams)
  13. Feelins (Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty)
  14. Devil In the Bottle (TG Sheppard)
  15. I’m Not Lisa (Jessi Colter)
  16. Then Who Am I (Charley Pride)
  17. It’s Time to Pay the Fiddler (Cal Smith)
  18. Ruby Baby (Billy “Crash” Craddock)
  19. I Care (Tom T. Hall)
  20. Movin’ On (Merle Haggard)
  21. Secret Love (Freddy Fender)
  22. I Just Can’t Get Her Out of My Mind (Johnny Rodriguez)
  23. Roll On Big Mama (Joe Stampley)
  24. You’re My Best Friend (Don Williams)
  25. It’s All in the Movies (Merle Haggard)
  26. (Hey Won’t You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song (BJ Thomas)
  27. Lizzie and the Rainman (Tanya Tucker)
  28. Daydreams About Night Things (Ronnie Milsap)
  29. I’m Sorry (John Denver)
  30. Tryin’ to Beat the Morning Home (TG Sheppard)
  31. The Bargain Store (Dolly Parton)
  32. City Lights (Mickey Gilley)
  33. The Door (George Jones)
  34. Hope You’re Feelin’ Me (Like I’m Feelin’ You) (Charley Pride)
  35. Thank God I’m A Country Boy (John Denver)
  36. Rocky (Dickey Lee)
  37. Blanket On the Ground (Billie Jo Spears)
  38. I’d Be a Legend In My Time (Ronnie Milsap)
  39. San Antonio Stroll (Tanya Tucker)
  40. Love Put A Song In My Heart (Johnny Rodriguez)
  41. Window Up Above (Mickey Gilley)
  42. Touch the Hand (Conway Twitty)

DOWN THE ROAD ...

One of the most diverse and underappreciated catalogs in modern music belongs to Texas honky-tonker/rock & roller John Evans. He usually writes (and often produces) his own material, which album-to-album incorporates everything from hard country to rockabilly to punk to psychedelia. But every great once in awhile tackles and reshapes some beloved nugget or another ... on his wild 2006 release Ramblin' Boy, he Evansed up Freddy Fender's legendary '75 smash "Wasted Days & Wasted Nights." I dig the experimental boldness of it and just generally wanna get more people listening to John Evans, so yeah check it out.



     

Thursday, June 29, 2023

1974 - i will always love jolene

The country music charts of the ‘60s and ‘70s are not like the pop charts of that same era.  The pop charts could be invaded from just about any angle: rockers from LA or London, R&B breakouts from Detroit or Philly, country-pop crossovers from Nashville, old-school songwriters from New York, it was a free-for-all.  Aside from the occasional interloper from Bakersfield or (eventually) Austin, anything that was going to make it on the country charts had to be filtered through Nashville. It’s not hard to imagine that the Music City radio & records business just got more chummy and incestuous as time went on and money rolled in.  It’s a nice feather in the cap of a touring act to say they’ve had a #1, or to be able to rattle off a string of them … if we’re all about making money with these folks, why not spread the glory around a little?  Does your gig flyer also need to show how long you had a #1 hit?  Maybe that’s why 1974 had 41 #1 hits, whereas 1966 had 11, and the years in between hovered around just a little over 20.  And more so than any year, why there’s some undeniable gold, some pretty decent stuff, and some fairly pure dreck, even when you’re just looking at the ones that successfully got all the way up the ladder.  Shit, look at the time.  Better get going.

Merle Haggard’s suitably wintry “If We Make It Through December” rung in the New Year with one of the last four-week runs you’d see in a while.  Tom T. Hall’s evergreeen “I Love” had a bit of a Christmasy vibe itself, albeit from a warmer perspective, a holiday wish list of things the narrator already has and cherishes.  Speaking of enduring, Dolly Parton had already made her #1 debut a couple years prior, but she was ready to really dig in and the world was ready to let her.  “Jolene,” unbelievably in retrospect, only held #1 for one week.  But it still endures as an alternately frosty and hot-blooded tale of romantic insecurity, leaving generations to ponder just how hot Jolene must’ve been to distract a man away from a twentysomething Dolly Parton, sighing and cooing in an intoxicatingly weird sort of despair over rumbling minor-key guitar.



Who knocked that number off its perch?  Bill Anderson, folks.  Ol’ Whisperin’ Bill, not changing a damn thing to keep up with the times with “World of Make Believe.”  Stiff and trembly all at once, it’s of a piece with most of his other hits, and it’s still weird as hell that this was ever good for one fluke hit, much less a decade-spanning string of them.  By all accounts he was a fine songwriter and an all-around good guy, but as he himself once sang: “Still.”  Relative young buck Johnny Rodriguez took over with a warm, resonant cover of Lefty Frizzell’s “That’s The Way Love Goes,” and though it’d eventually be overshadowed by Merle Haggard’s ‘80s cover of the same song, it’s a worthwhile throwback.    

Next up were Tammy Wynette’s lovely, searching “Another Lonely Song” and Charlie Rich’s winsomely melodic “There Won’t Be Anymore.”  Both worthwhile and then some, both by artists that had nice long well-deserved runs on the charts, but does either title ring a bell for you unless you were alive, aware, and old enough to remember listening to country radio by 1974?  It’s interesting how much a #1 hit by a genre-era-defining artist can be overshadowed by time and bigger, more-remembered hits.  #1 singles in their day, B-sides to history I suppose.  “There’s A Honky Tonk Angel (Who’ll Take Me Back In)” isn’t going to crack most people’s list of ten most-remembered Conway Twitty songs either, but it’s kind of clunky and sour in the way that only an anthem to settling for your second choice can be.  Some things are forgotten because they’re forgettable.

Tanya Tucker continued her youthful momentum with “Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone),” a heady and poetic mix of text and subtext that still has somewhat of a foothold in the public imagination today.  For one, it was the first #1 as a songwriter for David Allan Coe, so it’s sort of the start of one of country music’s messier ongoing legacies.  And it’s an almost unimpeachably beautiful song, but it was also an unnervingly mature choice for the still-teenaged Tucker at the time … then as now, “lay with me” doesn’t necessarily mean just taking a nap.  It’s certainly not scuzzy, in the way that some future Coe compositions would be … it’s just a level of frankness than hits a little different coming from a teenage girl instead of the more world-weary likes of Twitty, Wynette, etc.

Charlie Rich’s “A Very Special Love Song” isn’t as charming as his previous #1, just a sweet little ditty that was enough to top the charts but not necessarily to stick around.  Hank Snow, about a decade and a half past his heyday, struck gold again with the slight but engaging “Hello Love” for his final career #1 before the torch was snatched up again by the much more of-the-moment Merle Haggard, proving again that he could be almost chillingly pensive but still hit #1 with “Things Aren’t Funny Anymore.”

Sonny James hadn’t let a broken streak discourage him; “Is It Wrong (For Loving You)” ranks as one of his better singles, a dreamy yet self-assured number with a nice melodic streak to it.  “Country Bumpkin,” the second #1 for the kind-of-forgotten Cal Smith, was even better; spiked with some nicely incongruous distorted guitar, and buoyed by Smith’s warm and cleverly-phrased baritone voice, the three-act tale of a barroom encounter turned enduring love stops just sly of maudlin while it hits you in the heart.  Meanwhile, Melba Montgomery’s “No Charge” goes so far past the maudlin line it must look like just a little dot in the rearview.  Better-remembered for some solid George Jones duets, Montgomery sounds like she’s putting on a hokey mee-maw voice for this mostly-recited tale of a little boy invoicing his mom for some chores and her passively-aggressively shooting one back at him for all of her parental duties, though it’s meant to be warm and cute I guess.  The sonic equivalent of one of those Precious Moments statues, except if you were forced to stare at one for three solid minutes, “No Charge” sucks.

Ronnie Milsap’s “Pure Love” might be kind of hokey by some standards, if nothing else because he seems so damn cheerful throughout, but his first #1 has a sunny charm and even some nice melodic drive to it, at least to these ears.  Back before they had Garth Brooks to pick on, some would-be pundits liked to blame Milsap for the watering-down of country music; I don’t see how he’s much poppier than Lynn Anderson or Freddie Hart, at least at this phase of his career, so maybe it was just his eventual longevity they resented (you’re going to see his name a lot here).  Dolly Parton’s evergreen “I Will Always Love You” was up next, a simple-on-the-surface country-pop song that benefits endlessly from the tender ache in Parton’s delivery on the verses and delicate but unmistakable vocal ramp-up on the choruses.  Keep in mind that Dolly Parton’s fairly unmistakable sex appeal hadn’t necessarily become part of her image yet at this point, even though she never really lost her knack for being able to sell this kind of vulnerability and humility.  It’s too bad this version has been somewhat overshadowed by Whitney Houston’s airhorn-subtle ‘90s pop megahit cover of it … Parton wasn’t one to complain about the royalties, but here’s hoping her absolute gem is never lost to history.

The fact that it was only #1 for one week speaks to the moving-right-along pace the country charts were starting to move at.  Charlie Rich was back with the rueful balladry of “I Don’t See Me In Your Eyes Anymore,” a solid but not unforgettable addition to his mid-70s hot streak.  After a week he ceded to Waylon Jennings, the future outlaw legend scoring his first #1 with “This Time.”  He’d been cracking the Top 10 for almost a decade at this point, gradually bucking the system as his image drifted into a shaggier, edgier take on what a country star looks and sounds like; though Jennings doesn’t have a long history of giving a shit what everyone else thinks, it had to be emboldening to see his orneriness rewarded instead of shuttled down the charts to irrelevance.  Solid song, too, although he’ll have more iconic ones down the line.   



Mickey Gilley swung in next with “Room Full of Roses.”  The cousin of country-rock hellraiser Jerry Lee Lewis was much more savvy businessman than his fiery malcontent cuz, but he was capable of cooking up a similarly sly and soulful vibe on his best work (including this one) and would eventually be a fairly influential figure in the whole Urban Cowboy movement.  Anne Murray took over with her gender-flipped, easy-listening take on George Jones’s “She Thinks I Still Care,” as pillowy-soft a version of an anguished masterpiece of honky-tonk irony as you’re ever gonna hear.  Bobby Bare’s take on the Shel Silverstein romp “Marie Leveau” was neither pillowy nor anguished; a jokey (but still nicely funky) live recording with plenty of audience cheers and chuckles, the tale of a no-good womanizer and a gnarly old voodoo witch has held up as a bit of a kitsch classic.  It was a fun little stretch; Donna Fargo’s “You Can’t Be A Beacon (If Your Light Don’t Shine)” had all the catchy sunniness of a church-camp singalong, then up next was the decidedly earthier “Rub It In” by Billy “Crash” Craddock.  Craddock was a bit more of an overt, vaguely Elvis-ish sex symbol for the ladies than most of his contemporaries, already nearly two decades into his career by 1974 but playing the fun-loving stud role to the hilt with songs like “Rub It In” that were almost too direct to be labeled “suggestive.”

Conway Twitty and Loretta Lynn were also great at cooking up some middle-aged sexuality together (at least on record … in person they were just good friends as far as anyone knows) but you wouldn’t guess it from “As Soon As I Hang Up the Phone.”  A gimmicky number about a dying affair, it leans way too hard on the “hey Conway’s on the phone!” novelty without seemingly noticing that “Conway’s really hard to understand” is part of the Faustian bargain.  “Old Man From the Mountain” was Merle Haggard’s next ride to #1, which is well-deserved because unlike some of his pensive then-recent chart-toppers, it’s brisk and catchy in its orneriness and the whole “could you at least take a break from cheating while I’m off work” message is amusingly direct in its low-bar-to-clear insistence.

It was sort of a palate cleanser for one of the straightest shots of monumental heartbreak to ever top the country charts: George Jones’ “The Grand Tour” is eloquently merciless in its depiction of sadness and loss, but still somehow gut-level relatable, and it leaves enough room for interpretation to even let a little mystique in.  Did his beloved (and their baby by extension) leave by choice or just up and perish?  “Please Don’t Tell Me How the Story Ends,” a Kris Kristofferson classic interpreted by Ronnie Millsap, was more wistful than tortured but it still was an elegant jab to some raw nerves.  And while the next in line, Don Williams’ autumnal ballad “I Wouldn’t Want to Live If You Didn’t Love Me,” sounds like a happier counterpoint, the implied depths of despair if things don’t work out is right there in the title.   September 1974 was quite a heyday for country drama.

Waylon Jennings had another week at the top with “I’m a Ramblin’ Man,” simple on paper but amplified by the swagger of the performance, more in the tradition of hyper-macho blues classics than more-vulnerable country numbers.  It’s endured as one of his signature numbers and probably sounded borderline punk-rock in 1974 country-chart context.  “I Love My Friend” by Charlie Rich was way more low-key, a paean to a one-night stand so warm and tender that it almost sounds wholesome.  That may not be Waylon-brand badass, but it’s still pretty badass.  Nashville warhorse Porter Wagoner found that his protégé Dolly Parton’s rise lifted his boat as well; “Please Don’t Stop Loving Me” was his first trip to #1 in quite awhile.  It’s held up well, maybe partly from not being as overplayed as some of the era’s other hits, although the erstwhile “Wagonmaster” sounds a bit anonymous in comparison to Parton and that’s probably not just with the benefit of hindsight.

The never-anonymous Conway Twitty (if that is his real name) came roaring back with another of his lover-man classics, “I See the Want To in Your Eyes.”  I wonder if the more puritanical white southern voices of the day – who were probably at least aware of some of the bigger country hits by demographic coincidence – railed against the sexual frankness in songs like this one, or if they gave the Conways of the world a pass for at least keeping the language clean and not being as openly dissolute as their rock & roll and R&B contemporaries.  Or maybe they just wrote off the whole country music industry as mostly drinkin’-and-cheatin’ songs but largely let it be because there were scarier cultural menaces to tackle.  The rise of heavy metal, punk rock, and even rap were all more or less just around the corner; Conway singing hearty ballads about his latest fling might not have been an especially big fish to fry.

Mickey Gilley had another one-week run with “I Overlooked an Orchid,” clever and sincere if not exactly monumental, which is kind of par for the course for Gilley.  He’s a gifted singer and musician, but he wasn’t big on grabbing that next heartwrenching gear like Twitty, Rich, Jones etc. seemed so consistently adept at.  Dolly Parton pretty much lived in at least third gear, at least vocally, and so while her self-penned “Love is Like A Butterfly” might be more delicate acoustic-folk than country, her voice fairly glows with twangy joy even in sparse surroundings.  Tom T. Hall was a much more plain-spoken singer, leaning more on his considerable gifts as a songwriter, and even though “Country Is” doesn’t carry his usual cleverness it’s still an engaging listen, running down a list of the experiences and values that make for a “country” existence without sounding overly judgmental or corny about it.  Modern songwriters still have a really, really hard time pulling off a similar trick even though half the songs on the radio since 2001 or so seem to amount to just singing about how countrified one is. 

The tail end of 1974 bore out the realization that country was a lot of things.  Loretta Lynn hit for the first time in awhile with “Trouble in Paradise,” which updated her sound with subtle touches of pop and funk without making her sound out of place.  John Denver scored with the first big salvo of a career that would briefly but dominantly straddle country, pop, and folk music; crazy to think that humble, wistful numbers like “Back Home Again” would conquer the world, but they quietly damn sure would.  Chart mainstay Charlie Rich boomeranged back to the top with “She Called Me Baby,” which was also humble and wistful but clearly that’s where the John Denver similarities end.  Denver’s run of #1s would score him the CMA Entertainer of the Year award the next year; ’74 winner Charlie Rich, goaded into presenting it onstage, would proceed to publicly light the announcement envelope on fire in front of God and everybody in a possibly-drunk show of protest.  It slowed down Rich’s career more than it did Denver’s, and it’s still a little weird that the R&B-influenced, genre-bending Rich thought the painstakingly rustic Denver was kind of a blight on country music’s good name.

Billy Swan’s cheery, kinda-groovy “I Can Help” somehow escaped Charlie Rich’s public wrath, despite sounding to these ears more like roller-rink-friendly R&B than traditional country.  That’s no slam: it’s an enduring winner, and interestingly enough meant that Swan was now tied with his employer Kris Kristofferson for who had the most #1’s as a lead vocalist.  Even though the song was big enough to score #1 on the pop charts as well, Swan quickly went back to his old job as Kristofferson’s bass and keyboard player when he couldn’t score a followup hit after a few tries.  Fun fact: “I Can Help” was written by Swan on an RMI organ that Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge had given him as a wedding gift.  One gets the sense that Kris Kristofferson’s inner circle circa 1974 was not a half bad place to be.

Lynn Anderson closed out the year at #1 with “What A Man My Man Is.”  So the year ended with a bit of a clunk, or at least on a less legendary note than the dizzying genre peaks and near-forgotten gems that buoyed it.  No big deal though … 1975 would mostly be playing with a slightly reshuffled deck, albeit with a few important new wild cards in the mix.

THE TREND?

Mainstays continued to stay, mainly.  But if you look closely, you can see some relatively new (or at least new to #1) artists starting to drop some of their signature tunes (Dolly Parton, obviously, and Waylon Jennings, John Denver, Ronnie Millsap, perhaps Mickey Gilley) while some of the fixtures seem to be easing into the B-side portion of their careers.  Is “Trouble In Paradise” one of the first ten or so songs you’d think of when you think of Loretta Lynn?  Were guys like Merle Haggard and Charlie Rich still doing their best work or were they coasting on cache a bit?  Either way, it seems like a nicely diverse year, with stone-country classics from George Jones and Tammy Wynette sitting alongside fun, funky excursions from folks like Billy “Crash” Craddock, Bobby Bare and Billy Swan.  Any music snob who looked at country music and said it all sounded the same wasn’t really listening.   

THE RANKING

  1. I Will Always Love You (Dolly Parton)
  2. Jolene (Dolly Parton)
  3. The Grand Tour (George Jones)
  4. Would You Lay With Me (In A Field of Stone) (Tanya Tucker)
  5. I Love (Tom T. Hall)
  6. Another Lonely Song (Tammy Wynette)
  7. There Won’t Be Anymore (Charlie Rich)
  8. I’m A Ramblin’ Man (Waylon Jennings)
  9. Country Bumpkin (Cal Smith)
  10. Old Man From the Mountain (Merle Haggard)
  11. That’s The Way Love Goes (Johnny Rodriguez)
  12. This Time (Waylon Jennings)
  13. I Can Help (Billy Swan)
  14. Love Is Like A Butterfly (Dolly Parton)
  15. I See the Want To In Your Eyes (Conway Twitty)
  16. Please Don’t Tell Me How the Story Ends (Ronnie Milsap)
  17. Things Aren’t Funny Anymore (Merle Haggard)
  18. Marie Laveau (Bobby Bare)
  19. Country Is (Tom T. Hall)
  20. Pure Love (Ronnie Milsap)
  21. Back Home Again (John Denver)
  22. I Love My Friend (Charlie Rich)
  23. There’s A Honky Tonk Angel (Who’ll Take Me Back In) (Conway Twitty)
  24. Trouble In Paradise (Loretta Lynn)
  25. A Very Special Love Song (Charlie Rich)
  26. Rub It In (Billy “Crash” Craddock)
  27. Hello Love (Hank Snow)
  28. You Can’t Be A Beacon if Your Light Don’t Shine (Donna Fargo)
  29. I Don’t See Me In Your Eyes Anymore (Charlie Rich)
  30. I Overlooked an Orchid (Mickey Gilley)
  31. What A Man My Man Is (Lynn Anderson)
  32. Is It Wrong (For Loving You) (Sonny James)
  33. I Wouldn’t Want to Live If You Didn’t Love Me (Don Williams)
  34. Room Full of Roses (Mickey Gilley)
  35. He Thinks I Still Care (Anne Murray)
  36. Please Don’t Stop Loving Me (Porter Wagoner & Dolly Parton)
  37. She Called Me Baby Baby (Charlie Rich)
  38. As Soon As I Hang Up the Phone (Loretta Lynn & Conway Twitty)
  39. No Charge (Melba Maxwell)
  40. World of Make Believe (Bill Anderson)  

DOWN THE ROAD ...

We're not gonna get to talk about Dwight Yoakam near enough in a series that lives and dies by the #1 spot. He really didn't make it there very often; his commercial peak spanned the mid-'80s infusion of edgy new talents (he got more #1's than Steve Earle, k.d. lang and Lyle Lovett at 0 apiece, but if you count Randy Travis among the fold he gets blown away) through the mid-'90s or so when he was still very much in the chart mix amongst the upstarts. Not at the very top, but close to it a few times. If George Strait was the steadfast father of late-20th-century mainstream country, Dwight was its cool uncle who rode a motorcycle and used to play punk clubs and had a bunch of famous girlfriends and stuff. 

Young Dwight already dug old stuff and it helped make him stand out amidst all the watery Lee Greenwood-ish crossover stuff going around. He always had a knack for how to sort through the relics, sort of like a thrift-store veteran with a keen sense of timeless versus hokey. If those kids in the L.A. punk clubs were old enough to drink (or at least had decent fake IDs), I bet they shed a tear in their beer and just generally didn't know what hit 'em when Dwight laid "The Grand Tour" on 'em.



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