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Jerry Jeff Walker
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JERRY JEFF WALKER: A Portrait In Song
"Jerry Jeff has bounced in and out of my life like the Mad Hatter on the way to the tea party."
--Jimmy Buffett
"Mesmerizing on stage, with just him and his guitar."
--Guy Clark
"In the years that I've known Jerry Jeff, every single time I've been to his house he's had a guitar in his hand What I learned from him is the love of music and the craft."
--Pat Green
"I used to follow Jerry Jeff around like a Deadhead When I first saw Jerry Jeff, I thought, 'That's me. Just a total gypsy'."
--Todd Snider
"In high school, I started seeing Willie and Jerry Jeff That kind of stuff changed my life you know. It was so exciting and so good that I figured I wanted to do something like that."
--Jack Ingram
There's a photo on the back of a long-out-of-print Jerry Jeff Walker album that kind of sums it all up. In the picture, Jerry Jeff is outside an old roadhouse on a lonesome highway. It's night, and his collar is turned up against the chill breeze as he hunches over to light a cigarette. His guitar is slung around his back. It's hard to tell if he's entering or leaving the roadhouse, but either way you figure he's got many miles to go before he sleeps.
Somehow, one gets the idea that that is how Jerry Jeff has always pictured himself. Even when he was playing screaming cowboy rock 'n' roll to thousands of people, the solitary troubadour was always on the inside, looking out.
Jerry Jeff has livedand is living againthe troubadour's life. Lots of musicians talk about the road; Jerry Jeff really is the kid who rode his thumb out of his hometown in upstate New York to such exotic destinations as Key West (where he introduced another young musician named Jimmy Buffett to the pleasures of island life) He really did sing for pennies on New Orleans streetcorners, alongside Mr. Bojangles He really did strap his guitar on the back of a motorcycle and go busking across Canada And he really did sing in the smoky cafes and folk clubs of Greenwich Village, following in the footsteps of Bob Dylan and Ramblin' Jack Elliott.
And that all happened before he became a star. Most folks know that storyhow Jerry Jeff moved to Austin, Texas in the early Seventies and reinvented himself as a Lone Star country-rocker. He became, along with Willie Nelson and Asleep At The Wheel, one of the arbiters of the internationally famous Austin musical community. Since then, he has celebrated the music of peers such as Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt, and served as a fountainhead and inspiration to younger musicians such as Robert Earl Keen, Pat Green, Jack Ingram, Todd Snider, and a moderately successful country tunesmith named Garth Brooks.
A string of records for MCA and Elektra followed before Jerry Jeff gave up on the mainstream music business and formed his own independent record label, Tried & True Music, in 1986. Another series of increasingly autobiographical records followed under the Tried & True imprint. The latest, Gonzo Stew, (his 30th album overall) was released in 2001.
He's played for four or five presidents, toured in Lear Jets and bought second homes in New Orleans and Belize (the fruits, in part, of having penned an American pop standard, "Mr. Bojangles"). His band of musicians, known variously as the Lost Gonzo Band and the Gonzo Compadres, have been indispensable parts of the endless caravan.
But even with all that, Jerry Jeff still sees the world with a troubadour's eyes. His songs are the way he makes the world make sense, how he passes on stories of the people he meets, the way he feels on a given morning. He has come full circle, back to his solitary singer-songwriter roots. You might say he was heading this way all along.
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--John T. Davis
Austin, Texas 2002