Friday, April 28, 2006

Cowboy Jack

Before our gig in Nashville the other day our picking pal and former Opry regular Walter Forbes took us over to a nice old neighborhood and into a re-purposed big 'ol house that turned out to be Cowboy Jack Clement's Bunkhouse Resort and Recording Spa. Our Mission? To hang and say howdy to his longtime friend, cohort and sometime business partner, Cowboy Jack Clement. Who the heck is Cowboy Jack?
Check out: http://www.cowboyjackclement.com/
Jack was the first recording engineer at Sun Records (Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, a kid named Presley and many, many more) and is still working at his own justly famous aforementioned studio, cutting sessions with the legends and would-be legends of country music.

A session was in progress upstairs so we wandered on up, said hello all around and took seats, shooting the breeze companionably, waiting for a break in the action. The singer coming through the control room monitors sounded familiar and when one of the players waiting to cut a part said "Charlie's singing really well" - I realized it was Charlie Pride.
Charlie was working an old Hank gospel number called "Thank God" with a rock-solid band and as the groove bore them triumphantly verse to chorus a sudden flood of happiness ran through us right there on the couch.
When music is going well - there is very little better on my earth...

They finished the take and another and the door opened, emitting legends Joe Allen and Kenny Malone. We stuck our heads in the door and there sat our friend 'Hoot' Hester, putting mandolin away and getting his fiddle ready for the track. - "Everybody out!" cried engineer Johnny and we went back into the control room with a grinning Charlie to listen to Hoot fiddle.
"I got off the melody" Charlie said, faintly amazed and began singing what he had wanted to track all along.

We said hello to our friends, traded new contact information, promised to be in touch, laughed at a couple terrible jokes - It was all just folks, except some of the folks filled out their union cards for the session, noting songs and times and hurried off to the Opry, we drove back to our rooms to prepare for our gig.

There are things about this business that I do love...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

as he was online with the supposed Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory speculation that Google is secretly be accomplished in a few months. winning the second leg of the Mickelson