30-04-2010, 10:53
![[Image: P02377I034R.jpg]](http://image.allmusic.com/00/amg/pic200/drP000/P023/P02377I034R.jpg)
from stl today
Country singer Marty Stuart has been busy for the last couple of years with his RFT-TV show âMarty Stuart Liveâ but found time recently to record a new album (due later this year), and tour with his band, the Fabulous Superlatives. We spoke to him by phone from his home in Hendersonville, Tenn.
What can you tell me about the new album?
Itâs called âGhost Train (The Studio B Sessions). Itâs traditional country music. Thatâs truly home. The RFD-TV show Iâm doing kind of gives me a place to stand and do what I do best, and thatâs traditional country music. Itâs not about being retro, but itâs authentic. Itâs totally, in my opinion, a new chapter. It honors where I come from, but it is a new chapter with new songs, for the most part. We went back to RCA Studio B and took it from being a museum back into a being a world-class recording studio. Itâs a pretty cool record.
Over the last decade or so, youâve gone in a lot of different musical directions, but theyâve all been roots oriented: gospel, bluegrass and so on. And now you say youâre getting back to real country. What for you defines real country music?
To back up to the top of the decade, the first record I did this decade was called âCountry Music.â That was the first record we did with the Superlatives. But I was guilty of trying to grab a hit while making traditional country music, and it really was kind of a split message. It didnât ring as true to me as I wanted it to. I shouldâve got on one side of the line or the other. And then I developed [his label] Superlatone, and I had nowhere really to drive my sword because commercial country radio didnât need me and I didnât have a TV show at that time. Me and the Superlatives as a band in development just started walking around the room and playing the roots of American music. We were honored guests in the Delta gospel world, we were honored guests in the bluegrass world, Americana world. And I noticed that everywhere we went, we made a difference, and maybe inspired and encouraged and put a little new fire into those genres. But I still didnât feel like I had a place to drive my sword. And in reality, that record I did on Porter really got me thinking. I love traditional country music. I notice when I go down the road and listen to traditional country records, I still cry. I kept writing those kind of songs. And when the RFD-TV show came along, it gave me a place to stage it from. I thought, âOkay, I can go just as hardcore as I want and stage it right here.â And thatâs what Iâve been doing for the past couple of years. It works.
The sounds that definite to me are traditional sounds: steel guitar, twanginâ Telecasters. The subject matter is back to the textbook, back to the template that Jimmie Rodgers laid down: cheatinâ, drinkinâ, redemption, murder, jail, mama, love, loss, and on and on. According to the newspaper this morning, those are all still valid topics.
Thereâs a song on your new album that you wrote with Johnny Cash right before he died. Tell me about that one.
The day after June Carter was buried, John Carter [Cash] called me and said, âDaddy wants to record.â I said, âThatâs the best news I ever heard. Letâs go. We gotta keep him engaged.â We recorded songs at his cabin, we recorded songs at his house, we did sessions at my house. We did sessions at Johnâs mom and dadâs old home. It was just about keeping him engaged at whatever level he wanted to be. Iâd just go and have a cup of coffee with him in the morning, if he felt like seeing anybody. But his health kind of dictated it all.
Four days before he passed away, Iâd just come in from Folsom Prison. The governor gave me a pass to go there. I wanted to see where that record was made. I wanted to touch it and smell it and experience Folsom. So they showed me. It was made in the cafeteria. They recorded the record twice in the morning. Early in the morning. But behind the back wall of the cafeteria where they recorded was the old hanging gallery, where they used to take peopleâs lives. Itâs now the prison band hall. The day I was there, the country band was playing, so I sat in with them and we played some songs. I went and saw Graystone Chapel, the place that Glen Shirley wrote about in that song that John sang. I got to thinking about the hanging gallows on the way home. It just kind of got to me. And I thought, wouldnât it be an awful job to be a hangman? When you go home at night, what does your family say: âGreat job, dad?â What a tortured soul youâd have to be to be a hangman. I started the song and that day I was over at Johnâs, we talked about Folsom. I told him what Iâd done and said, âI got this song started, itâs called âHangman,ââ and told him why I wrote it. The words are, âI killed another man today/Itâs hard to believe/I lost track at 30/Now Iâve grown too numb to grieve/The bottle helps me cope when I lay down at night/And when the dope rolls through my veins/It all fades out of sight.â And I had, âHangman, hangman, thatâs my stock in trade/Hangman, hangman, sending bad men to their graves.â
He just spoke up and said to me, âWho killed who, I asked myself time and time again/God have mercy of the souls of hangmen.â
Wow.
Itâs a good one.
You asked about country music. The real country music to me is the kind thatâs been lived through. Just about everything on this record, whether itâs redemption or going to jail or losing Johnny Cash or losing Porter Wagoner, you know, pick a subject I wrote about on this record. I lived through it. And thatâs the best kind of music regardless â the kind youâve lived through.
Thatâs great that you did that record with Porter, who is from Missouri, by the way. Youâve always been someone who respects your country music elders and helps to keep their work alive. Itâs the old Native American system, basically. Itâs the oldest system in the world. In the family of country music you start out as a scout and a water boy and work your way up to being a buck and then a brave. You honor your chiefs and your queens. And somewhere along the way, if you handle it right, you might achieve that level yourself. Iâve always been referred to as a bridge between the past and the future. But I do like where Iâm at right now. Iâm in a position to bring young ones on and encourage that, but Iâm also in a position to see the old ones home and see they get their robes on their shoulders as they go away. Thatâs a great place to be.
You were certainly brought along at an early age. What were you, 13, when you went on the road with Lester Flatt? Was that the right choice for you? I mean, Iâm guessing that going on the road with Lester Flatt is not the same thing as going on the road with Motley Crue. Or is it?
It was very structured. It was a business deal. My folk, it was arranged. Correspondence courses, the taxes, that was all worked out. I got to keep a little money every week. The rest of it went to my mom at the bank. It was well-structured. But was it the right decision? For me, absolutely.
I doubt that my parents would have let me go out with Ozzy [Osbourne], however.
Tell me about âThe Marty Stuart Show.â This is your second year?
Yes, this is our second year. My favorite TV shows down through the yearsâ¦there was an old show in the â50s called Grand Old Opry shows. They were beautifully done, in Technicolor. Theyâre the most beautiful documents of that era of country music ever. They were colorful, happy, just kind of a barn dance situation, if you will. Beyond that, my favorite shows were âFlatt & Scruggs,â âThe Porter Wagoner Show,â the old âJohnny Cash Show.â And a lot of those 30 minute syndicated shows that came out in the â60s. And for years, I kept asking, âWhy doesnât somebody redo one of those shows? Thirty minutes with a great band, the best guests you can get, hay bales, wagon wheels, the whole bit. Costumes. Hillbilly Hollywood. And then one day I thought, âWell, why donât I do it?â
I discovered the RFD network because they still air âThe Porter Wagoner Show.â I called them up, we had a talk and a few months later we were in the studio. The guests have been crazy. From Emmylou Harris to John Prine to Dolly Parton to Merle Haggard to [Stuartâs wife] Connie Smith to Early Scruggs to [Little] Jimmie Dickensâ¦on and on and on. The best of the best.
Last thing: You are a very much a preservationist of country music artifacts. Tell me a little about your efforts in that direction.
Iâve always had that knack, I guess, it started when I was a kid, whether it was collecting 8x10 glossies of artists that came through town or asking them for their guitar pick or saving copies of Country Song Roundup magazine. I just kind of leaned that way. It kinda got more serious as time went on. In the early â80s, when âUrban Cowboyâ came along, it was the end of an era for lots of things around here. Those old costumes like the old guys wore, the Nudie suits; personality guitars with the peopleâs names down the neck; those kinds of things. It was starting to disappear. But I noticed they started surfacing in pawn shops, thrift shops, yard sales. That felt wrong to me. Because I was a part of that new system in Nashville due to my age, but due to my experience and where Iâd been, I noticed there was a breach, and that felt wrong to me.
When I was with the Cash show, we played in London, and I met the cofounder of the Hard Rock Café. He took me there and I saw treasures on the walls from the Beatles and the Stones and Otis Redding and the Who and Jimi Hendrix. And I thought, âMan, even though this is a restaurant, they treat that with a lot of respect. The Country Music Hall of Fame was about the only entity out there taking care of country artifacts. And their policy was that they didnât pay for anything. It was always a donation. And a lot of people werenât in a position to give it, so they were selling. On the way back home to America, I thought, Iâd just bought Patsy Clineâs train case in a thrift shop in Nashville for $75. And Iâd seen a famous guitar leave Nashville to go to Japan for $300. I thought, âI canât do this.â So I started collecting all the suits, manuscripts, boots, guitars ⦠anything to do with the treasures of that world that I could get. It started in my bedroom at my mom and dadâs house, then it became a little warehouse, then two warehouses, and now itâs about 20,000 pieces strong. Itâs probably the biggest collection of country stuff out there. In the last three years, we started an exhibit called âSparkle & Twang: Marty Stuartâs American Odysseyâ which showcases all these things, and is on tour all over the country. Itâs had a wonderful life. Lots of visitors. The good news is, a lot of those artifacts got saved. It is American culture that I just thought was too important to let slip away.
Do you still have Ernest Tubbâs tour bus?
I didnât own that. We just leased that years ago. We traveled in that, the old Black Hornet. Somebody out there told me that that bus is still on the road, but it had over three million miles on it when I shot it in the floor. You could never trust the fuel gauge and it ran out of fuel on me one too many times.