The family of the late Canadian country legend Ian Tyson, CM AOE, has confirmed the singer-songwriter died from on-going health complications on Dec. 29, 2022, at his ranch in southern Alberta, Canada, at age 89.
Tyson was born to British immigrants in Victoria, and grew up in Duncan B.C. A rough stock rider in his late teens and early twenties, he took up the guitar while recovering from an injury he sustained in a bad fall in the rodeo.
Ian Tyson’s story from there is familiar to most. He upped stakes from Vancouver Island and hitchhiked to Toronto, where he met a young singer from small-town Ontario called Sylvia Fricker. As Ian & Sylvia, they were the Canadian stars of the early ’60s folk boom that gave the world Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Joan Baez, the Clancy Brothers, and the Kingston Trio.
Married in 1964, the pair made almost a dozen albums — and wrote some of Canada’s best-loved songs, including Ian’s “Four Strong Winds” and “Someday Soon,” and Sylvia’s “You Were on My Mind” — songs that have all been covered countless times by some of the most famous artists of our time, including Dylan, Neil Young, Judy Collins, and a young Canadian singer the couple mentored in his early days, Gordon Lightfoot.
During the British Invasion, Ian and Sylvia evolved into pioneers of country-rock. Their band, Great Speckled Bird, rivaled the Byrds and other groups which helped create modern country, a decade before the Urban Cowboy phase of contemporary “new traditionalists.”
After hosting a national Canadian television music show from 1970 to 1975, Tyson realized his dream of returning to the Canadian West. The music and marriage of Ian and Sylvia had ended. It was now or never. Disillusioned with the Canadian country music scene, Tyson decided the time had come to return to his first love – training horses in the ranch country of southern Alberta.
After three idyllic years cowboying in the Rockies at Pincher Creek, Tyson recorded the album Old Corrals & Sagebrush, consisting of cowboy songs, both traditional and new. “It was a kind of a musical Christmas card for my friends” he recalls. “We weren’t looking for a ‘hit’ or radio play or anything like that.” Unbeknownst to Tyson and his friends, the cowboy renaissance was about to find expression at the inaugural Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering in 1983; a small coterie of saddle makers, rawhide braiders, cowboy poets and pickers discovered one another in a small cow town in northern Nevada. Tyson was invited to perform his “new western music”— and he’s missed only one or two gatherings in the 30-plus years since.
Bob Dylan and the Band recorded his song “One Single River” in Woodstock, New York, in 1967. The recording can be found on the unreleased Genuine Basement Tapes, vol. 1. Judy Collins recorded a version of his song “Someday Soon” in 1968.
Tyson was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 1989, and was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, He became a member of the Order of Canada in 1994; and in 2003, he received a Governor General’s Performing Arts Award; and was inducted into the Alberta Order of Excellence in 2006.
In 1989, Tyson was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame. In 2005, CBC Radio One listeners chose his song “Four Strong Winds” as the greatest Canadian song of all time on the series 50 Tracks: The Canadian Version. with his former wife and singing partner, Sylvia, in 1992. He has been a strong influence on many Canadian artists, including Neil Young, who recorded “Four Strong Winds” for Comes a Time (1978). Johnny Cash would also record the same song for American V: A Hundred Highways (2006).
Ian Tyson sharef the Calgary Folk Festival stage with fellow-Canadian Corb Lund a few years back. Lund recorded two of Tyson’s songs, “Montana Waltz” and “Road to Las Cruces” on his latest project, “Songs My Friends Wrote.”
Life has not been without its difficulties, however. In 2006, he seriously damaged his voice after a particularly tough performance at an outdoor country music festival.
“I fought the sound system and I lost,” he said afterwards. With a virus that took months to pass, his smooth voice was now hoarse, grainy, and had lost much of its resonant bottom end. After briefly entertaining thoughts that he would never sing again, he began relearning and reworking his songs to accommodate his “new voice.” To his surprise, audiences now paid rapt attention as he half-spoke, half-sung familiar words, which seemed to reveal new depths for his listeners.
Tyson released his most recent single “You Should Have Known” in September 2017 on Stony Plain Records, the label that Tyson’s released 15 albums with since the ‘80s. The song unapologetically celebrated the hard living, hard drinking, hard loving cowboy life and joins his favorites such as hits like “Four Strong Winds,” “Someday Soon,” “Summer Wages” and more.
The family will hold a closed service and have requested privacy at this time.
The bass of the Christmas tree in Dorothy Fielder Park, set over the park’s water fountain.
Story and photos by Mary Jane Farmer for The Van Alstyne News, Scene In Town
Van Alstyne is Christmas Town
Christmas is around the corner. It’s only 4+ weeks until Dec. 3, when the city will be lighting up its newest Christmas tree, accompanied by festivities in celebration of the season.
This week, the Van Alstyne Parks crew installed a Christmas tree over the fountain in downtown’s Dorothy Fielder Park. They have also wrapped the park’s trees in Panther blue Christmas lights, planted wintertime flowers in the park’s border, and added greenery and lights on the gazebo. But this project isn’t 100% completed. The entire Christmas project around town is coordinated to be completed at about the same time.
First, getting all the electricity in working order.
The city’s Public Works Department is now the Parks & Public Works Department, with Will Grissom heading the Parks’ responsibilities and Justin Johnson over Public Works. And while both crews are always willing to help each other out with manpower, both crews also have their own separate and necessary projects.
City Manager Lane Jones said, “(It’s a) Big job, and we have few people to get the job accomplished.” He added, “The job of decorating the city for the holidays is a sizable task requiring time to accomplish. The dedicated staff of the P&PW has taken on the task, but with limited time available given the demands of daily duties. To get the job done, the process has gotten underway early.
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And n0w for the top of the tree. Notice the ornaments still in place from last year.
“Thousands of lights, two large trees and many ornaments will be up and ready for the tree lighting event planned for December 3rd. Until then, Santa’s Elves (Parks and Public Works staff) will be busy making ready,” Jones said.
Chief Elf Grissom said that many of the other places to be decorated include the Fire Station, Police Station, Public Library, and the city welcome sign at the Valero gas station at U.S. Hwy 75 and Van Alstyne Parkway. They will also be decorating the downtown corners, wrapping and adding Christmas banners to downtown poles. Much of that will also happen in the Central Social District Park
It is the second year that Parks has installed the man-made Christmas tree at the downtown park, and this year served as a reminder for those who had the opportunity last year of just now tedious it can be. For those new to the Parks crew, it was practice.
Getting the star ready to add next.
Star is up and for hanging the remainder of the branches
Guys at Dorothy Fielder Park said that the lights are in the branches, so that job is completed. Next — the ornaments. Wednesday, the crew had put up all they had, but said they would have more soon to fill in the empty spots.
The tree going up at the Central Social District Park (215 E Van Alstyne Parkway is twice the size of the one now gracing Dorothy Fielder Park, said. And that’s the one where all the Tree-Lighting festivities will be going on Saturday, Dec. 3. These not only include the ubiquitous and infamous countdown, but also horse and carriage rides, a specialty food truck, carolers, and more. It all starts at 6 pm.
And while you readers are marking the Christmas Tree Lighting on your calendars, remember to mark the next Saturday, Dec. 10, down for the Christmas Parade. It will be taking a new route this year, and, since step-off is at 6:30 pm, aka dark-30, one can just imagine the glowing lights on many floats.
Stay tuned, Christmas fans. More about both the Tree Lighting and the Parade later. And one way to help stay up-to-date will be to ‘like’ and monitor the Facebook page Van Alstyne City Municipal Events.
NOTE: An indictment is a formal charge and not an indication of guilt. The Van Alstyne News does not include suspects’ names until or unless they are indicted
By Mary Jane Farmer for the Van Alstyne News
Ivan Benway
Indictments
The Grayson County Grand Jury recently indicted two area people, one from Van Alstyne and the other from Howe.
According to the GC District Attorney’s office, the Grand Jury indicted Ivan Joseph Benway, age 48, on a charge of Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon. Van Alstyne Police Lt. Steven Hayslip reported the incident happened on July 12, 2021, and the indictment stemmed from an automobile accident that happened that day and the suspect is accused of intentionally causing the crash in a reckless manner. Grayson County Jail records show this suspect was jailed by the Grayson County District Attorney’s Office on a warrant and that he posted $15,000 bail in surety bonds the day after his incarceration.
Also indicted was Abraham Tellez, age 32, of Howe and this was for the offense of Evading Arrest/Detention with a Vehicle. Van Alstyne police reported that about 7 p.m. on Aug. 14, police were sent to northbound U.S. Highway 75 because of a reckless driver.
Police located the vehicle and witnessed the vehicle being driven erratically, almost striking several other vehicles, Hayslip said. They initiated a traffic stop with emergency lights turned on the patrol car, but the driver did not pull over. The vehicle sped up to speeds reaching 100 mph, but then left the highway at the Haning Street exit. The driver, Abraham Tellez, was taken into custody and jailed for the offense and also on a charge of Driving While Intoxicated. He posted a total of $11,500 bail in surety bonds they next day for his release.
Arrest — October 26, about 9:30 p.m., Van Alstyne Police arrested a suspect on a charge of burglary of vehicles.
Hayslip said police were called to a home in the 200 block of Paris street because of a burglary in progress. They found the suspect on the scene and arrested him on the felony charge.
The suspect posted bail of $1,500 in surety bonds on the 27th of October, according to Grayson County Jail records.
All other arrests during this time frame were for Driving While Intoxicated. Some of these arrests were enhanced because the suspect(s) had children in the car under the age of 15, had open containers of alcohol with them while driving, and, in one case, it was the third or more time the driver had been charged with DWI.
By Mary Jane Farmer for the Van Alstyne News, Scene in Town.
NOTE: Names are not included until/unless a suspect is indicted.
Since October’s onset, Van Alstyne Police have jailed numerous people, including people from Sherman, Savoy, and Mesquite jailed on felony charges.
October 17 — Police Lt. Steven Hayslip reported that police a vehicle going north on U.S. Hwy 75 at FM 121 because of moving violations. When the officers approached the vehicle, they smelled the distinct odor or marijuana coming from inside the vehicle. With that as probable cause to search the vehicle, police conducted a full search of it and of the three adult occupants.
Hayslip said the search uncovered 60 grams of Methamphetamine, more than one gram of Fentanyl, and about five grams of Marijuana. They also found a fully-automatic Glock pistol.
The two other men both said they had Marijuana on them, so police placed all three of them under arrest.
There was a one-year-old baby in the car, also. Police turned the baby over to Child Protective Services, who, in turn, turned him/her over to his/her mother in Sherman.
Jailed was a Mesquite man on charges of Manufacture/Delivery of a Controlled Substance Penalty Group 1 (Meth), Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Felon, Possession of Controlled substance over 1 gram (Fentanyl), Possession of Marijuana between 5-50 Pounds, and Abandoning/Endangering a Child with Intent/Criminal Negligence, with a total set at $85,000, and he remains incarcerated. The two Sherman men with him received charges of Possession of Marijuana less than two ounces, and both bailed out on Surety Bonds of $1,500 the following day.
October 12 — Police were called by a driver who reported a reckless driver on U.S. 75. The reporting caller described the errant vehicle and said it had a hard time maintaining lanes. Hayslip said police located the car and they, too, saw it weaving back and forth. They initiated a traffic stop. While talking with the officers, Hayslip said, the female driver, admitted to them that she had Heroine in her purse. Police searched it and found loaded syringes. They also found a small amount of Fentanyl in the purse, also.
Police jailed the suspect, a Savoy resident, on charges of Manufacture/Delivery of a Controlled Substance Over 4 Gram -PG 1 and of Possession of Controlled Substance less than 1 Gram, both felony charges.
Bail was set at the jail at a total of $13,500, which she posted the following day in surety bonds for her release.
Theft of Property — On Oct. 12, police investigated the theft of a catalytic converter. Hayslip said this was taken from a residence in the 600 block of Williams Way.
Anyone with information that could help in the investigation and return of the stolen item to its rightful owner is urged to call the Police Station at 903-482-5251. The dispatcher can connect the caller with the right officer.
Other arrests — Police arrested numerous others, mostly the results of traffic stops, since October 1, including:
Denison man on a Grayson County warrant charging him with Tamper/Fabricate with Physical Evidence with Intent to Impair;
Sherman man on Grayson County warrants charging him with Failure to Appear on previous DWI and Assault causing Injury;
Van Alstyne man on a Grayson County warrant charging him with Theft of Property between $100-$750;
Van Alstyne man on a charge of Driving While Intoxicated;
Sherman man on a Collin County warrant charging him with Graffiti causing Pecuniary Loss between $100-$750.
The late great songwriter was born Aug. 16- in the year 1936.
Story by Michael Corcoran, used with permission. Subscribe to Corcoran’s stories and his upcoming book by clicking on the links below.
Note: I (Mary Jane Farmer) was an ardent BJS fan, loving his hugs as much as his music and his interviews I got to do with him. My photos (included here, but not in the original article, were taken within the last few years. And yes, as the article states, I do have my fair share of Billy-Joe-Shaver stories! No matter when or where someone took a photo of Billy Joe, the incredible singer/songwriter was always wearing his denim shirt and brown hat.
Photo by Sharon Ely
May 2002
When Billy Joe Shaver gives directions to his modest house on the outskirts of Waco, he says to disregard the handwritten sign on his front door. “Please do not disturb. I haven’t slept in two days,” it says.
“That’s just so some ol’ drunks don’t come by at 5 in the morning to talk,” Shaver explains. ” ‘Course I used to be one of ’em, so I really can’t complain too much.”
The self-effacing “lovable loser and no-account boozer” left the bottle behind long ago and has returned to his honky-tonk hero status with a stunning new album. Critics are gushing over Shaver like they haven’t since 1993’s Tramp On Your Street and fans are packing his shows and lining up afterward to shake his two-fingered right hand and give him homemade gifts.
The 61-year-old in the blue work shirt, whose face is the map of Texas music, can’t fully enjoy the attention, however. He doesn’t even listen to the record he’s so proud of, because hearing it just reminds him of the hole in his band, the hollow in his heart, where his son Eddy used to be. The 38-year-old ex-prodigy, who looked like a Guitar World cover in the making when he started playing professionally with his dad at age 12, succumbed to a heroin overdose on Dec. 31, 2000, the morning after he received an advance to record a solo album for Antone’s Records.
“We knew going in that it was our last record together,” Shaver says. “So we worked really hard to make it a good ‘un. I really think that Eddy did some of his best playing ever on this record.” The theme of The Earth Rolls On, which opens with the positively bouncing “Love Is So Sweet,” is that life is hard, but worth it. Often accused by Texas singer-songwriter purists of overplaying, Eddy shows relative restraint here, finger-painting the moods of songs such as “Star of My Heart,” which his father wrote in early 2000 while Eddy was in treatment for heroin addiction. At the end of the album, the guitarist finally cuts loose, breaking free from the past. The song, the album’s title track, is about finding a light in the darkness of tragedy.
“It’s just such a loss,” says Shaver, a deeply religious man who has known great blessings and, it seems, great curses as well. A year before losing his son, Billy Joe knelt at the deathbed of Eddy’s mother, Brenda, the woman he married three times (and divorced twice) since they met at a high school football game in Bellmead when she was 16 and he was a 20-year-old just back from the Navy. “She was my first love and my last,” Shaver says, showing a photo of a beautiful young woman with light brown hair and softly biased eyes that would be passed on to Eddy. “She was a farm girl,” Shaver says, then smiles at a favorite memory. “She’d be out there riding a tractor in her bikini.” A few months before Brenda died of cancer, Billy Joe’s mother, Victory, passed away. Her name was the title of a gospel album Billy Joe and Eddy recorded in 1998.
“I always figured I’d be the first to go,” Shaver says. Looking back on a rough-and-tumble life of bare feet, bare knuckles and bared soul, you believe him.
His father bailed on Billy Joe before he was born, and with his mother having to work two jobs, baby Shaver and his older sister were raised by their grandmother in Corsicana. “She gave us reality,” Shaver recalls. “Our grandmother told us straight out that there wasn’t no Santa Claus, but just play along with the other kids. Unless the Salvation Army dropped off something, we didn’t get no Christmas presents.”
Grandma was also a strict disciplinarian. When a 10-year-old Billy Joe snuck off to see comic hillbillies Homer and Jethro, as well as a little-known opening act named Hank Williams (an experience recounted in “Tramp On Your Street”), his guardian was waiting up with a switch in her hand. “I think the reason I remember that show so well was because of the whippin’ I got,” he says.
When his grandmother died, 12-year-old Billy Joe moved to Waco to live with his mother, who worked as a waitress at a honky-tonk called the Green Gables. “I was barefoot, wearing overalls held together by safety pins, and people would give me nickels for the jukebox,” he says of nights spent with the bouncer as his baby sitter. “There were a lot of military people around Waco then, and I guess I reminded them of their kids back home, so they treated me real good.” Shaver had felt at home in a roadhouse that smelled of beer and smoke, where the jukebox always seemed to play Lefty Frizzell when he walked in.
Back at home, Billy Joe clashed with his stepfather and often took off on freight trains or rode his thumb right outta Waco. When he turned 17, his mother signed the papers for him to join the Navy. “I was glad to go, and they were glad to see me go,” he says.
The Navy experience didn’t turn out too well for the hotheaded recruit, however. Shaver spent the last several months of his enlistment in the brig at Portsmouth, N.H., after he decked an officer at a party. Billy Joe was facing a court martial, but after penning a plea to the commanding officer, explaining his side of the scuffle, Shaver says he was released with an honorable discharge. He’s always managed to find the words that would get him out of seemingly hopeless situations.
TO KNOW BILLY JOE SHAVER AND NOT HAVE A STORY TO TELL IS LIKE COMING HOME FROM A WILLIE NELSON PICNIC WITHOUT A SUNBURN.
There are famous Billy Joe stories, like how he lost three fingers at the knuckle on his right hand in a saw accident at Cameron Mills when he was 22. Shaver had recently read an article about how a man in Asia had his severed fingers reattached, so in the midst of great pain he gathered up his three lopped digits. “The doctor said he couldn’t do anything for me,” Shaver says. “I told him that in Japan they just sewed somebody’s fingers back together, and he said ‘Well, this ain’t Japan.’ ” He returned to work with his hands bandaged and his fingers in a jar. When a woman at the mill asked for his fingers for some sort of voodoo ritual, he gave them to her.
Shaver and Jennings backstage at the
Armadillo. Photo by Burton Wilson.
There’s also the one about the time he spent six months in Nashville tracking down Waylon Jennings, who had promised to do an entire album of Shaver songs after hearing “Willie the Wandering Gypsy and Me” during an impromptu guitar pull in a trailer backstage at the infamous Dripping Springs Reunion show, the precursor to the Willie Nelson picnics, in 1972. “Waylon asked me if I had any more of them ol’ cowboy songs, and I said I had a whole sack full of ’em,” Shaver says. But afterward, Jennings wouldn’t return Billy Joe’s calls.
Mary Jane Farmer — Taken at Larry Joe Taylor Texas Music Festival
Frustrated and broke, Billy Joe finally found Waylon in the hall of a recording studio late at night. “I told him that if he didn’t make good on his promise to record my songs, I’d whip his ass right there. I was so (angry) I didn’t even notice these two big biker bodyguards at his side.” Before the two could pounce on Shaver, Jennings raised a halting hand and sat down with the fuming songwriter to talk about the album that, hey-Hoss-I’m-still-gonna-do-but-I-just-been-busy. “Waylon asked me if I knew just how close I came to getting a major ass-whipping,” Shaver says with a laugh.
When Jennings recorded “Honky Tonk Heroes” in 1973, he broke so many rules that the album turned into the opening salvo of the “outlaw country” movement. Besides playing 10 tracks by an unproven songwriter, Jennings insisted on using his own touring band in the studio. The result was a record that holds up like Creedence Clearwater Revival, riding a great groove on tracks like “Black Rose” and then taking a touching turn on “You Asked Me To,” Billy Joe’s best love song to Brenda.
But even though Shaver, still struggling in his early 30s, had finally caught his big break, he fought Jennings every step of the way. “He wanted to change some lyrics or do the songs a little bit different, and I didn’t want him to,” says Shaver, whose songs are so much a part of him that he has never recorded another writer’s material except on a Merle Haggard tribute album and a collection of Townes Van Zandt covers coming out soon.
Billy Joe ended every show with his prayer, unashamedly Christian to the corn. Photo by. Mary Jane Farmer
But even as he’s stubborn about his precious compositions, the word that friends most often use to describe Shaver is “humble.” Austin guitarist Stephen Bruton, who played on the 1973 debut “Old Five and Dimers” (” Billy Joe couldn’t believe that he was really making a record”), says that whatever success Shaver has attained since then, including writing a top-five hit for John Anderson (“I’m Just an Old Chunk of Coal”) hasn’t changed him a whit. He still carries himself like “the hobo with stars in my crown” of one of his earliest songs, “Ride Me Down Easy.” Ask about his time as a bull rider in the early ’60s, and Billy Joe will say, “Well, I didn’t really ride ’em. I just tried to stay on as long as I could.” Told that he’s the best songwriter Texas has ever produced, and Billy Joe will start talking about Van Zandt and Willie Nelson.
But Shaver earns a nod as the musical poet laureate of the Songwriter State, not just because he has the ability, like Springsteen, like Waits, like Prine, to nail an entire set of emotions and circumstances with a single line (his most famous: “Well, the devil made me do it the first time/ the second time I done it on my own” from “Black Rose”), but also because in Billy Joe’s lyrics you can hear music. The rhythm of his words is all the beat you need, as witnessed by this classic chorus: “I been to Georgia on a fast train, honey/ I wudn’t born no yesterday/ Got a good Christian raisin’ and an eighth-grade education/ Ain’t no need in y’all treatin’ me this way.” Can’t you just hear Eddy’s finger-pickin’ in the background as the tune whooshes down the tracks?
Billy Joe wrote “Georgia On a Fast Train” after repeated snubs by Nashville when he first started hitchhiking there in the late ’60s. He had been trying to find his way to L.A. but couldn’t get a ride West, so he crossed Interstate 10 outside of Houston and caught a truck driver headed to Tennessee. Unable to afford a demo tape, Shaver tried to play his songs for record execs, but was turned away at the front desk. Finally, he got Bobby Bare to listen, and soon Music Row was buzzing about the square-jawed hayseed from Waco who could put complex issues in simple terms, as he did with his Vietnam War ditty “Good Christian Soldier” (“We’re playin’ cards and writing home and having lots of fun/ Tellin’ jokes and learnin’ how to die.”)
Another ubiquitous stance at Billy Joe’s shows. Photo by Mary Jane Farmer
It was that song that launched Shaver’s Nashville songwriting career. Even with Bare’s backing, Billy Joe was about to give up on the town where songs were written in offices instead of boxcars. But the night before he left for Texas, Kris Kristofferson stopped by to hear what Shaver had. After Billy Joe sang “Good Christian Soldier,” Kristofferson said he wanted it — which was rare, because Kris wrote all his own songs.
Then came the call to come down to Dripping Springs in the summer of 1972, where he would meet Waylon and, eventually, his life and country music would change.
“I really do think that Billy Joe has an angel following him around,” says Freddy Fletcher, the Pedernales and Arlyn studios owner who played drums for Shaver in the late ’70s and early ’80s. “We’d find ourselves in terrible predicaments out on the road, but somehow Billy Joe would find a way out of it.” Once during a snowstorm near Minneapolis, Shaver’s van and U-Haul trailer skidded off the road and was sideswiped by an oncoming truck on the access road. The impact shoved Shaver’s van right back into its rightful lane.
Another time, Shaver escaped unscathed after baiting a crowd in Baton Rouge. “It was at a place called Jim Beam Country, during the “Urban Cowboy” craze, and the audience wasn’t listening to a single word Billy Joe was singin.’ They wanted to hear Johnny Lee covers or whatever,” Fletcher says. “At one point, Billy Joe announced ‘There ain’t a cowboy among the whole bunch of ya. Y’all look silly with your feathers in your hats.’ ” A few roughnecks had to be held back by their buddies after the set, but Shaver and the boys were soon on the road to the next adventure.
These days, the mellower Shaver carries an attache case wherever he goes, even if, on a recent Wednesday afternoon, he’s just going to Griff’s truck stop near Crawford for chicken-fried steak. “It’s something I picked up from Waylon,” he says, tapping his brown briefcase. “Even a gypsy needs to be organized sometimes.” His usual lunch partner when he’s not on the road is mechanic Jim Hollingsworth, his friend since seventh grade. “After he started getting some fame in Nashville, some people asked me if I knew Billy Joe Shaver,” Hollingsworth says. “They said I went to school with him, he was in my class, but I told ’em I didn’t know any Billy Joe Shaver. Only Shaver I knew was Bubba Shaver.”
Billy Joe was Bubba until he started signing his poems with his real name as a disguise. “It was considered a sissy thing to write poems” Shaver says. His words made an impact on his ninth-grade home-room teacher at LaVega High, who was the first to tell Bubba he had real talent. Hollingsworth and Shaver recently paid a nursing-home visit to Mrs. Legg, at age 101, and she recited one of Billy Joe’s old poems from memory.
On the way back from Griff’s, Shaver pulls his white van alongside the Chapel Hill cemetery and gets out. “I prayed every day to Jesus, asking him how I could help my son,” Shaver says as he takes a slow walk to the middle of the graveyard. “But that heroin is stronger than love.” Eddy is buried next to his mother, whom Billy Joe said Eddy never really got over losing in 1999.
BillyJoe with his constant companion and band member, Jeremy Lynn Woodall — Photo by Mary Jane Farmer
“Eddy was always straight with me.” Billy Joe says of the son who was also his best friend. “He told me after he’d first tried heroin that he didn’t know what the big deal was.” Some of Eddy’s friends were using regularly, according to Billy Joe, and it wasn’t long before the son was hooked.
“I don’t blame Eddy, because I’ve been there myself, but I still can’t believe he would do that to himself.” Billy Joe runs his fingers across the letters of Eddy’s name, the closest he can come to touching his only son.
Later, Shaver tells the story of how drugs and alcohol almost drove him to end his life. It was in the late ’70s, and the family of three was living in Nashville. “I wasn’t being a good father or a good husband, and it was eatin’ away at me.” He says one night he saw Jesus sitting at the foot of his bed, shaking his head. “I got up out of bed and got in my pickup and started driving.” He ended up standing on a cliff, and contemplated jumping off. Like the Robert Duvall character in “The Apostle,” in which Shaver had a featured role, Billy Joe asked Jesus for direction, and the Lord told him to go back home and take care of his family. On the walk down the trail, Shaver says he started writing “I’m Just an Old Chunk of Coal (But I’m Gonna Be a Diamond Some Day).” The next morning, he started packing, pulled Eddy out of school and headed down to Houston, where he would be away from his accomplices in sin — the dealers and friends who didn’t want to drink alone.
As he kicked his habits cold turkey, living off random royalty checks and wasting down to 165 pounds, Shaver got a call out of the blue that would put him back on track. It was from Willie Nelson, whom he’d known since the late ’50s honky-tonk circuit. Willie and Emmylou Harris were about to start a tour of arenas and, although there wasn’t time to put his name on the bill, Shaver could open the shows and make a few hundred bucks a night. “I can’t tell you all the times Willie’s bailed me out of situations, but that was a big ‘un,” Shaver says. “I wasn’t sure if I’d ever get up on a stage again.”
Photo by Mary Jane Farmer
It was a call from Willie on the morning of Dec. 31, 2000, that helped Shaver get through his most difficult day. “When Eddy died, Willie said I needed to be among friends. He said I should come on out to Spicewood (to Poodie’s Hilltop Bar, where Shaver had a gig scheduled), but I didn’t decide to go until the last minute.” It was, Billy Joe says, the toughest gig of his life, the memories flooding each song until Willie and pals had to take over. But he got through the night and headed back to Waco, where he still lives — even though his band is in Austin — because his two pit bulls, Etawna and Shade, love the big back yard.
At Eddy’s grave, Billy Joe picks up a little Texas flag that somebody stuck in the dirt, not yet covered with grass. “You will always be around,” it says. “That’s from ‘Live Forever,’ that song we wrote together,” Billy Joe says. “Eddy had that beautiful melody and the guitar part, and after he played it for me, it just stuck in my head. I thought, ‘Man, I gotta really come up with something special for this one.’ ” A few months later, Billy Joe was driving the band back from a gig one night — he always drives — and he started thinking about how some songs seem to have lives of their own. A few years ago, Bob Dylan recorded “Old Five and Dimers (Like Me),” but when it came out on the soundtrack for “Hearts of Fire,” the song was credited as a traditional folk song. “At first I was (angry),” Shaver says, “but the more I thought about it, I took it as a compliment. Every writer wants to write something that’ll last long enough to be part of the public domain.”
With Eddy’s melody in his head on that long drive home, Billy Joe came up with the verse that brings context to the crazy life of a drifter with a sack fulla “cowboy songs.”
“Nobody here will ever find me/ But I will always be around/ just like the songs I leave behind me/ I’m gonna live forever now.”
(Billy Joe Shaver passed way in Oct. 2020 at age 81.)
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