Truly Handmade, Vol. 1 Guy Clark

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
03.05.2024

Album including Album cover

?

Formats & Prices

Format Price In Cart Buy
FLAC 44.1 $ 13.20
  • 1 L.A. Freeway 03:54
  • 2 Let Him Roll 04:01
  • 3 Nickel For the Fiddler 02:54
  • 4 Lone Star Hotel Café 03:53
  • 5 Looks Like Rain 02:19
  • 6 All the Way From California 04:01
  • 7 Texas Goodbyes 02:37
  • 8 Calf Rope 02:31
  • 9 Who Do You Think You Are (Rainbow Pie) 03:36
  • 10 Old Time Feeling 04:12
  • 11 Don't Let the Sunshine Fool You 03:05
  • 12 Miss Alice Pringle 02:24
  • 13 Hold On Brother 04:00
  • 14 Step Inside My House 04:29
  • 15 Susanna Let Your Hair Down On Me 01:16
  • Total Runtime 49:12

Info for Truly Handmade, Vol. 1



When My Favorite Picture of You came out in 2013, it seemed likely we were hearing Guy Clark's last batch of songs. Guy died three years later at age 74, but his legacy endures, thanks the efforts of friends and peers who believed in the hard truths and timeless beauty of his music. Anyone who ever saw Guy's workshop—or the re-creation of it at the Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit—no doubt noticed all the tapes on the wall. Cassettes were filled with songs-in-progress over the decades. Stashed away were even more recordings on reel-to-reel.

Those closest to Guy have been combing through those tapes carefully, seeking gems worth passing along to the public. They've found a lot: Truly Handmade is subtitled "Volume 1," indicating there's more to come. If it's anything like this batch of 15 tracks from the early years of Guy's career, his fans will want to hear all of it.

The focus of Truly Handmade is solo acoustic demos, which reveal the early forms of several Clark classics. Rodney Crowell, who produced Clark's 1981 album The South Coast of Texas, chose a few demos from that record, as well as four from Clark's highly acclaimed 1975 debut Old No. 1. His fans may have heard "L.A. Freeway" or "Let Him Roll" or "Lone Star Hotel" dozens of times, but hearing them like this affords a precious peek behind the curtain.

Even more intriguing are songs that were left on the cutting-room floor. Nearly half the songs on Truly Handmade will be new to even longtime fans. A few stretch back to the early '70s, before Guy had ever released an album. Crowell says "Miss Alice Pringle" — a co-write with Clark's wife Susanna — dates back to at least 1972. "That's when I first heard it, and I always wanted him to record it," Crowell says. We also finally get to hear Guy's own version of "Step Inside My House," which gave Lyle Lovett the title of his 1998 album featuring songs by Texans who deeply influenced his own work. Now we get the blueprint of Lovett's graceful rendition, as well as an important historical artifact: Guy claimed this was the first song he ever wrote.

Guy Clark



Guy Clark
Grammy-winner, Nashville Songwriter Hall of Fame member, Academy of Country Music Poet’s Award honoree, and fearless raconteur Guy Charles Clark died on Tuesday May 17, 2016 after a long illness. His musical touring partner of nearly 30 years, Verlon Thompson, was at his side.

Clark was born in the dusty west Texas town of Monahans on November 6, 1941 to Ellis and Frances Clark. The family, which grew to include Guy’s younger sisters Caroline and Janis, lived at grandmother Rossie Clark’s 13-room shotgun hotel; home to bomber pilots, drifters, oilmen and a wildcatter named Jack Prigg, the subject of Clark’s famous song “Desperados Waiting For A Train.” When Guy’s father returned from WWII and graduated from law school, the Clarks moved to the Gulf coast town of Rockport, Texas. Guy came of age in the pretty little beach town. As captain and center, Guy led the football team. He played guard in basketball, ran the 100-yard dash and threw discus in track and field. He won science fairs, joined the Explorer’s club, presided over the junior class as president, acted in school plays, excelled on the debate team, illustrated the yearbook, and fell in love with Mexican folk songs and the Flamenco guitar.

After a couple of false starts at university, Guy joined the Peace Corps in 1963. He trained in Rio Abajo, Puerto Rico, practicing water survival, rock climbing and trekking, followed by a month of book learning at the University of Minnesota. After turning down an assignment in Punjab, India, Guy moved to Houston, where he opened a guitar repair shop with his friend Minor Wilson. He played guitar and sang folk songs at the Houston Folklore Society, Sand Mountain coffee shop and the Jester Lounge, where he began life long friendships with fellow struggling songwriters and musicians Mickey Newbury, Townes Van Zandt, Jerry Jeff Walker, Kay Oslin, Frank Davis, Gary White and Crow Johnson. He married his first wife, folksinger Susan Spaw, and they had a son Travis in 1966.

In 1969, after splitting with Susan, Guy moved to San Francisco and again joined Minor Wilson in a guitar repair shop. Within a year, he moved back to Houston, met and fell in love with a beautiful dark-haired painter named Susanna Talley. Susanna moved from Oklahoma City to Houston to be with Guy and after a few months, she sold a painting to fund the couple’s move to Los Angeles. Guy landed a job building Dobros at the Dopyera Brothers Original Musical Instruments Company. He played with a bluegrass band on the weekends and pitched his songs to publishing companies in between.

He signed a publishing deal with Sunbury Dunbar and moved to Nashville in the fall of 1971. He and Susanna crashed on songwriter Mickey Newbury’s houseboat for a few weeks and then moved into a small rental house at 1307 Chapel Avenue in East Nashville. Guy and Susanna returned to Newbury’s houseboat on January 14, 1972 along with Mickey and Susan Newbury and Townes Van Zandt as best man; the five friends sailed up the Cumberland River to the Sumner County Courthouse where Guy Clark and Susanna Talley married.

In that first year in East Nashville Susanna and Townes wrote “Heavenly Houseboat Blues,” while Guy turned out “Desperados Waiting for a Train,” “L.A. Freeway,” and “That Old Time Feeling.” By the time Guy released Old No. 1, his debut critically acclaimed album for RCA Records in 1975, he had written several soon-to-be classic songs including “She Ain’t Going Nowhere,” “Let Him Roll,” “Rita Ballou,” and “Texas 1947.”

He jumped from RCA to Warner Brothers in 1978, scoring a number one song with Ricky Skaggs’s take on “Heartbroke” in 1982 and breaking into the Billboard country chart with “Homegrown Tomatoes” in 1983. Clark hit his stride when he signed with Sugar Hill Records in 1989, and then released a string of significant folk and Americana albums with Sugar Hill, Asylum Records and Dualtone Music Group during the next two-and-a-half decades: Old Friends, Boats to Build, Dublin Blues, Keepers, Cold Dog Soup, The Dark, Workbench Songs, Somedays the Song Writes You and his final 2013 Grammy-winning Best Folk Album, My Favorite Picture of You.

For more than forty years, the Clark home was a gathering place for songwriters, folk singers, artists and misfits; many who sat at the feet of the master songwriter in his element, willing Guy’s essence into their own pens. Throughout his long and extraordinary career, Guy Clark blazed a trail for original and groundbreaking artists and troubadours including his good friends Rodney Crowell, Jim McGuire, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Joe Ely, Lyle Lovett, Verlon Thompson, Shawn Camp, and Vince Gill.

His beloved Susanna died from complications of lung cancer in 2012. Due to ongoing health problems, Guy stopped touring and recording shortly thereafter.

This website certainly can’t tell all there is to know about Guy Clark, but hopefully it is of some use in the journey to learn about Guy, his songs, his recordings, his perspective, and his indelible spirit.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO