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Country legend spreads gospel
By Adam Goldstein
goldstea@mscd.edu
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| This is not your high school history
teacher. This is Matthew Maher, rock and roller extraordinaire. |
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A town in northwest France may seem like an unlikely spot to
discover one of the most powerful and influential voices in American
country music.
It was when I was living abroad in Rennes, among
European hipsters and Celtic revivalists, however, that I stumbled
upon a record
by the Louvin Brothers, a country act from Alabama, titled Satan
is Real. Songs such as “The Christian Life” and “The
Kneeling Drunkard’s Plea” boasted a sermonizing message
straight out of a Southern Baptist church.
It was the musical manner in which their themes were delivered
that made the album a constant audio companion during my time
in France. The Louvin Brothers sang with a seamlessly close harmony,
so much so that their voices seemed to meld into a single entity.
Their tones were unmatched in their passion, urgency and raw
feeling. Together, their voices touted an almost preternatural
power.
When I recently learned that the surviving member of the duo
was coming through Denver for two performances, I was agog. Suddenly,
a distant musical legend had donned flesh and blood.
The deep vocal connection that first captured my ear persists
for Charlie Louvin even now, more than 40 years after the death
of his brother, Ira, in 1965.
“When we were a duet together, I would do the solo part,
and when it was time for the harmony to move in I would move
to my left
a half step, because we just used one mike,” Charlie Louvin
explained in a phone interview before his Denver appearance April
7. “I still do that unconsciously. When I get to where
the harmony should come in, I’ll move off of the mike just
a little. I still hear it in my head.”
Louvin ruminated about a career in music that he started as
a child with his older brother at the behest of his parents.
“We sang together when I was 6 and he was 9,” he said. “We
already knew several songs like ‘The Knoxville Girl,’ ‘Mary
of the Wild Moor’ and ‘I Love You Best of All.’ Songs
that our mother taught us.”
With the encouragement of their parents and the example of
other country acts, the pair began singing their childhood songs
professionally.
“When (Ira) was 18 he decided, listening to the Delmore
Brothers, to have one instrument that would play the lead, the
turnarounds,” he
said. “The Blue Sky Boys used the mandolin and the Monroe
Brothers used the mandolin. So he said, ‘I’m going
to buy me a mandolin, and you’re going to have to start
playing the guitar.”
Although Charlie served stints in the Army during the ’40s
(including time at Lowry Air Force Base in 1946), the act refined
their traditional tunes and wrote originals, both secular and
gospel. By the ’50s, the pair had gained popularity and
joined the Grand Ole Opry in 1955.
The power of their harmonies had a deep impact on pop music,
from country to folk to rock. The Everly Brothers, Elvis Presley,
the Beatles and the Byrds are names on a long roster of Louvin
Brothers devotees who used their harmonies as an instructive
inspiration.
Louvin’s recent appearances at Twist and Shout
and the Bluebird Theater were part of a national tour that includes
Portland,
Los Angeles and the Bonaroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tenn.
Louvin is promoting a new self-titled album that features duets
with some of contemporary music’s most notable Louvin admirers.
Elvis Costello, Jeff Tweedy, George Jones and Alex McManus join
the country music legend on originals and country music standards.
Paul Epstein, the owner of Twist and Shout, saw Louvin’s
appearance as an unprecedented event.
“It definitely has the feeling of gravity and history,” he
said after Louvin performed for a small crowd on April 7. “I
think of people we’ve had (in the store) like Elvis Costello,
Mickey Hart, Suzanne Vega … It’s not in the same
category. This guy goes back to that core of artists that defined
the late 20th century American experience, the rural experience
that is now essentially gone.”
Members of Louvin’s four-piece touring band also saw the
opportunity as historic. Billy Kelly, who plays lead guitar,
explained that the ramifications of Louvin’s influence
made his head spin.
“Think about it,” he said. “Elvis and Buddy Holly
were influenced. The Beatles were influenced by the Louvin Brothers,
not to mention the thousands of country artists. Who knows if
George and John’s harmonies would’ve existed without
them?”
For Louvin, his deep cultural impact seems less important than
the opportunity to play music and remember his brother, whom
he celebrates with a song on the new album. The tribute is a
bittersweet reminder of his lost musical partner.
“It is a hard song for me to perform, because basically,
the song takes me back where I don’t need to go,” he said. |