On The Wild Side Of Life Minute-With
Mister Jerry Jeff Walker’s Music In Mind
CD Review
By Zack James
Great Gonzos, Mister Jerry Jeff Walker,
The 1980s, the early 1980s, were a
tough time to try and weather the financial doldrums of the alternative
newspaper industry (much like today, in 2017, the whole print press and journal
industry is going down with the ship in the digital age). That was the age of
Ronald Reagan, a time when the night-takers took their revenge in big gobs,
those bastards who almost got kicked in the ass for good back in the 1960s
except we forget the first rule of a power struggle whether down on the corner
boy block or in order to take state power-if you are going to take on the big
guys you had better be ready to go all the way down and dirty or just back off.
The blow-back for the past forty some years is graphic testament to that
failure, to our defeat.
As if to put paid to that night-taker “victory”
those who would in earlier times have come through and supported such ventures
as truth-teller alternative media took a dive, waved the white flag and fell
into line (a straight and narrow line that even the latest polls have shown
they never have backed away from, have passed on that “keeping their heads down”
to their kids, hell, their grandkids, Jesus) the money dried up and the
publication that Seth Garth had been the film critic for in good times and bad
for over a decade The Eye had put him
on short rations, had almost reduced him to the free-lancer status he had
started out in the business doing. To alleviate their dilemma, maybe to draw
one last breathe would have been a better way to put it Benny Gold the long
time editor had begged Seth to take a long swig at the then emerging outlaw
country music scene that was starting to bust out of Nashville, started getting
up a head of steam in Texas, Austin, really and places like Colorado, Iowa and
the like.
Seth Garth, for those who don’t remember
the name from when what he had to say about some song, album (tapes in those
days really), or a performer carried weight via the distribution of The Eye on the coasts and with some
strongholds in the center of the country too or were too young to know who he
was could give, to use and expression from his corner boy days which he had really
never given up, a rat’s ass about country music, the Nashville Grand Ole Opry
stuff. Held his nose whenever anybody mentioned that George Jones had not shown
up at a concert for the millionth time since he was in a drunken stupor out in
Wyoming when he was supposed to be right there in Georgia or that Loretta Lynn,
a coalminer’s daughter had the vapors or something and was a “no show” at one
of her performances. Yeah Seth could give a rat’s ass about this incestuous country
scene no question.
Moreover having just started the process
of divorcing his third wife (three wives and a brood of kids, all young fueling
up alimony, child support and future earnings college tuitions) he was in a
sullen funk about starting all over like some rookie chasing ambulances and cop
cars for a fucking story. Was trying, seriously trying, to decide whether he
might link up with his old corner boy Johnny Blade who was now out of stir
after doing a nickel for his last armed robbery and start pulling a few quick
haul bank robberies. That larcenous heart of his that he had held in check for
a number of years now was beginning to come to the fore. He after all was the
guy back in the day who had perfected the “clip,” had designed the neighborhood
midnight creep into Mayfair swell houses that kept the boys in clover through
high school.
In the end though, at least for the
public prints, Seth decided that he would give the outlaw country scene a quick
run through to see if circulation would rise and The Eye would stop bleeding away financially. So he held his nose
and headed to Austin (he refused to go to Nashville where some of the guys he
was supposed to check out still had connections enough to draw work if the
“outlaw” thing was running a little to the lean side). He first ran into a guy
named Townes Van Zandt who was a true outlaw, could have given a fuck about
Nashville and just wanted to write his lonesome life road lyrics, drown his
sorrows in liquor and chase young honeys, the younger the better. But Townes
with his downer lyrics, his lusts and his short-handed way of talking when he
was not singing was not going to help Seth out of his miseries never mind a
left-leaning newspaper in need of a big circulation jump.
So he pushed on, had a nice interview
with Willie Nelson but the guy was almost too big by then, hell, he was playing
Northern venues to sell-out crowds, radio stations were ready to switch formats
if they could get a hook from him. Same with Kris Kristofferson who was getting
acting jobs as well as drinking the state of California dry. Then Big Bill
Bloom who had made a career out of big bang folk lyrics that everybody in the
1960s was chewing on (or chewing on partially because while everybody knew
maybe three verses of his stuff they could not go the distance on the whole
song, half the time Seth couldn’t either and he wrote about the whole scene)
called Seth to tell him that he had heard that The Eye was on the ropes (The
Eye always gave Big Bill great build-up reviews although a couple of times
Seth had nixed his work but Benny had nixed his nix) and that he was working
the outlaw country racket. Did Seth know about a guy, Jerry Jeff Walker, who
just then was out of jail but who was a great performer, wrote great lyrics and
had a pal, a guy named Guy Clark, who wrote stuff for him too?
Seth told Big Bill that he had never
heard of the guy, was moreover worried about that “just out of jail” bit even
if he was an outlaw but when Big Bill said he could make the connections Seth
in desperation said he would go for it. And strangely enough they connected,
connected when Seth was able to see that Jerry Jeff was just another larcenous
corner boy except down Texas way and out West they called them good old boys
instead of up North in growing up Riverdale. Seth was the guy who gave Jerry
Jeff’s first concert out of jail a big play. Got him a connection to a big
record producer and even got him his first gig north of the Mason-Dixon line.
Got him into Harvard Square for crying out loud. The crowd almost all old
folkies and raw college kids with dates went crazy for a real outlaw country
singer. For a while, maybe a year, The
Eye got by but the Reagan era was in deep throttle by then and once Jerry
Jeff became old news everybody went back to keeping their heads down as the newspaper
sank into its dreams. And Seth became once again a freaking free-lancer with no
place to go but down.
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