Told that a song on his new album brings to mind The Doors, Marty Stuart is bemused, but open to the idea.
âDid it?â he responds during an interview. âThatâs fine. If so, why not?â
âNightriding,â from new album Altitude by Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, kicks off with droning guitars, then evolves to a riff somewhat like that of Jim Morrisonâs âRoadhouse Bluesâ Â Â
âCadillac, sundown,â Stuart intones. âThink Iâll investigate this town.â
To be clear, most of the cuts on the Altitude are more evocative of The Byrds than The Doors. So, is Marty Stuart really a country music traditionalist, as many people perceive him? Yes. And also no.
âI’m totally fine with it,â Stuart says when asked if the country music purist reputation is OK with him. âItâs a self-appointed mission. But my comment would be that country music has broad shoulders.â
Dante Bonutto, who heads up Snakefarm Records, which is releasing Altitude, says that Stuart has earned the right to experiment.Â
âSince he’s definitely someone who pretty much invented the wheel, he’s allowed to put different spokes on it when he wants to, I think,â Bonutto said.Â
Stuart, whoâs been a bluegrass prodigy, a mainstream country music star, and remains a prodigious collector of country music artifacts, was born in 1958, making him a child of the 1960s, with all that comes with it.Â
âI still think of when The Byrds and Bob Dylan and all those guys came to Nashville to make their records in the late â60s,â he says. âThat is like contemporary stuff to me. âŠThat was the stuff that touched me when I was growing up, so it was just a part of country music to me.â
At a recent benefit concert for Northwest Mississippi Community College, Stuartâs base was definitely country â he and the group appropriated the whole history of the genre as their back catalogue, doing songs by Merle Haggard (âBrain Cloudy Bluesâ), Marty Robbins (âEl Pasoâ), Waylon Jennings (âJust to Satisfy Youâ) and Stuartâs own hits from the early 1990s such as “The Whiskey Ain’t Workin.ââÂ
The casually virtuosic Fabulous Superlatives band (Kenny Vaughan on guitar, Chris Scruggs on bass and Harry Stinson on drums; all of them sing) wore matching glitter-flecked black suits, and Stuartâs performing style still owes a debt to his former boss and mentor Johnny Cash.
But that wasnât all. During the hour-long set before a well-heeled audience dressed in tuxedoes and evening gowns, there was also a Woody Guthrie indictment of the rich, a mandatory gospel number, and a big helping of surf rock, obviously a favorite of Vaughan in particular.
âWe hereby declare Senatobia, Mississippi, as the surf capital of the world,â Stuart announced before Vaughan launched into a Telecaster version of âHouse of the Rising Sun.â Also, âWipeoutâ was played by Scruggs solo on the upright bass, with Stinson slapping out the drum solo on the cheeks of his face.Â
âWell, it doesn’t really matter how people categorize us,â Stinson said. âIf anybody’s interested in what you’re doing, then they listen a little bit deeper and find a much wider spectrum, in terms of the music. I think Marty is much more than just a traditional country artist. He came from that world and uses that as a place to plant himself, and then branches out in different directions.â
Possibly because the Altitude album hadnât been released yet during the March 25 concert in Mississippi, that audience didnât get a taste of its cosmic, sometimes psychedelic country music.
The albumâs beginnings go back to 2018, when Stuart, Vaughan, Stinson, and Scruggs toured with Roger McGuinn and Chris Hillman to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the pioneering country rock album Sweetheart of the Rodeo by The Byrds. McGuinn and Hillman were original members, along with the late Gene Clark, David Crosby, and Michael Clarke.Â
âThat was Roger McGuinnâs idea,â Hillman recalled. âRoger had done some dates with Marty; he knew him really well. âŠHe knew the Superlatives would be right on the money because he had done a couple of Byrds songs with them onstage.â
Hillman rates the Superlatives as âthe best band probably in this country right now, if not the Western Hemisphere.â
âWe had so much fun doing the Sweetheart of the Rodeo Tour,â said Hillman, who was also a member of the Flying Burrito Brothers and Desert Rose Band. âThe arrangements were the same as we did on the album in 1968,â he said. âWe played the songs better, but we didn’t change anything. It was a joy to go back out and do those songs, especially with the Superlatives.â
Stinson says the tour with The Byrds was âa joyous experience.â
âI got to play with some of my heroes,â he said. âI grew up on those records and so to get to play that music, especially the Sweetheart record, which was kind of groundbreaking. I got to go back through it and really dissect it, and then put it on stage. It was surreal for me.â
The Sweetheart of the Rodeo Tour, coming around the same time Stuart and the Superlatives were opening for Chris Stapleton and the Steve Miller Band, had a profound effect on Stuartâs songwriting.Â
âIt got me in the mood to write songs with all the sounds that were left hanging around in my head,â Stuart said. âWe were hot on those ideas, and I just carried the inspiration in with me.â
Like a lot of albums released in the past year, Altitude was recorded while COVID-19 was at its height.Â
âWe rehearsed,â Stuart said. âMost of the producing of this record was done in dressing rooms and at soundcheck and trying songs out there in shows before we ever went to the studio.â The original plan to record was ruined by the coronavirus.Â
âWe were hot, we were ready to go to Capitol Studios in Hollywood (California), and make a record,â Stuart said. âWell the pandemic crashed and Capitol Studios shut down, so we found East Iris Studios (in Nashville). We put on our masks and stood 6 feet apart and soldiered on.”
âIâm glad everybody agreed to do that, because I think this record would not have sounded like it does if we would have had to wait several months and relearn it.â
The albumâs Byrd-like sound, complete with the jangling guitars that are McGuinnâs trademark, has Hillmanâs endorsement.
âWhat they’ve done is not a tribute to The Byrds,â Hillman said. âIt just has a few little nice, ever-so-tasty hints of what we did.â
Hillman thinks the driving âCountry Star,â which also owes a debt to Chuck Berry, has the feel of Byrdâs songs such as âSo You Want to be a Rock ânâ Roll Star.â
âThere’s a lot of influence there â not overtly, but it just is there. Marty doesn’t stray far from the well, meaning the bluegrass well. I never did either.â
Stuartâs ability on mandolin shouldnât be overlooked, Hillman said. âMarty is an unbelievably gifted musician,â he said. âI love Ricky Skaggsâ playing and Ronnie McCoury,â he added. âBut I told Marty when we were on the road, âYou got that machine gun hand.â He says, âYeah, thatâs Everett Lilly.ââ
Lilly (1924-2012), played mandolin and sang tenor with the Lilly Brothers and Don Stover. He also spent a couple years with Flatt and Scruggs.
â(Lilly) had that cool right hand and when he took a break on âEarl’s Breakdown,â when he played with Flatt and Scruggs, it was great,â Hillman said. Factor in Vaughan on guitar in the Superlatives, and âyou canât get any better,â Hillman says. âBut itâs two different approaches to music.
âMarty really grasped ahold of the pulled string stylings of Clarence White (who played with The Byrds and Kentucky Colonels before his 1973 death)â, and then Kenny âis so good, all over the place.âÂ
âHe doesnât overblow; he plays just what is needed,â Hillman said of Vaughan.
While Stuart released his last album, Way Out West, on his own Superlatone Records, heâs partnered with Snakefarm, a subsidiary of Universal Music Group, for Altitude.
Bonutto, a journalist and record company executive, heads up the roots-rock focused Snakefarm and its sister label Spinefarm Records, which specializes in heavy metal. In addition to Stuart, Snakefarm has acclaimed Southern rocker Marcus King on its roster.Â
â(Stuart is) obviously an artist I’ve always been aware of, because I love country music and I’m aware of its legacy,â Bonutto said. âThe first time I saw him was when he played the Country to Country (music festival) in London, which is a big annual country music event. I thought his personality was fantastic and his playing is obviously unbelievably good.â
Bonutto wrangled a quick meeting with Stuart at the festival, but had to wait a while before Stuart and his management were ready to sign a new record contract.
âI’m trying to build the Snakefarm label into a global entity [in Americana music],â he said. âThe best way you can build anything is to attach yourself to people who are legendary and iconic. Hopefully you do an amazing job for them and they speak well of you and they become part of the fabric of what you do.â
Bonutto noted that Stuart, who is also a photographer and working on a facility to display his country music artifacts, is not âa one-dimensional character.â
âHe’s a man with a fantastic vision,â Bonutto said. âI think that comes across in the other things.â
Stuart is a leading collector of country music memorabilia, and heâs working on a $30 million museum to display it in his hometown of Philadelphia, Mississippi. A 500-seat theater is already open, and 50,000-square-feet of exhibit space for 20,000 artifacts will be the second phase. An education center is planned after that.Â
âI was a fan, going back to those country or gospel groups or bluegrass groups who come through my hometown when I was a kid,â Stuart said. âI’d always buy a record and ask for an autograph or ask one of the pickers if I could grab a pick.â
In the 1980s, he observed that âold timers, the pioneers, the people who had raised me, were being disregarded.â
âTheir treasures, their personal effects, their guitars and costumes, were winding up in junk stores around Nashville,â he said. âI found Patsy Cline’s makeup kit for 75 bucks in a junk store on Eighth Avenue in Nashville. I couldn’t believe it.â
Stuart met Isaac Tigrett of Hard Rock Café in London, and he showed Stuart how that restaurant chain was investing in and exhibiting rock music memorabilia.
âEven though it was a hamburger joint, I understood the importance of them collecting and curating stuff from The Beatles and the Stones and The Who. ⊠Beyond the Country Music Hall of Fame, I didn’t see anybody doing it, so it just became a self-appointed mission to start rescuing a lot of those things that were winding up in junk stores.â
Stuartâs collection includes treasures such as the handwritten lyrics of âI Saw the Lightâ and âCold, Cold Heartâ by Hank Williams Sr., the boots Patsy Cline was wearing during her 1963 fatal plane crash and Cashâs first all-black performance outfit.
Speaking of country music history, Stuart began his career in bluegrass backing up Lester Flatt before joining Cashâs band. Heâd like to return to those roots and record a bluegrass album.
âI need to, I need to,â he said. âBut it needs to be authentic. It needs to be the real deal, blood-curdling bluegrass.â
Photo Credit: Alysse GafkjenÂ