Margo Price Covers the Billy Joe Shaver Song That Might Have Saved Her Life

It’s been just over two years ago that a forefather of outlaw country passed away. The visionary artist and songwriter Billy Joe Shaver helped create the outlaw sound that inspired other greats like Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson. A Texan by birth, Shaver arrived in Nashville in 1965, and after years of struggling for recognition, he helped pen nearly all of Waylon Jennings’ Honky Tonk Heroes, the 1973 record that many consider the first Outlaw Country album. To honor his amazing body of work and his contributions to the canon of classic country songs, New West Records together with Pedernales Records have put together a new tribute album, Live Forever: A Tribute to Billy Joe Shaver.

Set for a November 11 release, the collection features some of the greatest voices in country music paying homage to Shaver’s songs. The artists represented include Miranda Lambert, Nathaniel Rateliff, George Strait, Willie Nelson, Lucinda Williams, and Margo Price among many others. Accompanied by Joshua Hedley, Price performs “Ragged Old Truck,” a memorable waltz that is masterfully recreated to sound as if the recording is as old as the song itself.

Price holds this particular Shaver song in very high regard, saying, “I first met Billy in a dusty parking lot outside of Luck, Texas. I was drinking straight out of a bottle of Wild Turkey and he asked me for a pull. We talked for a long time about his songs. I told him my favorites were ‘Black Rose’ and ‘Ragged Old Truck’ and I said, that second one might have saved my life. I was in a deep depression when I first heard it and that song pulled me out. He put his hand, minus a few fingers, on my shoulder and said, ‘Me too darlin, me too.’”

Listen to Margo Price and Joshua Hedley’s beautiful take on “Ragged Old Truck” below.


Photo Credit: Alysse Gafkjen

WATCH: Aaron Bibelhauser & Relic, “Loving You Again”

Artist: Aaron Bibelhauser & Relic
Hometown: Louisville, Kentucky
Song: “Loving You Again”
Album: Lovin’ & Leavin’: A Bluegrass Tribute to Mickey Clark
Single Release: December 13, 2019

In Their Words: “After the passing of Kentucky songwriter Mickey Clark, I decided to produce a collaborative bluegrass album centered around some my favorite songs from his catalog, in particular his lovin’ and leavin’ songs — that was the way he would describe them. ‘Loving You Again’ is an emotional expression of this timeless dichotomy. Poignant lines like ‘There’s ramble written on my boots, there’s a map in my guitar’ capture the human longing to wander, while the resolving lyrics fly in the face of that free-spiritedness: ‘When I look into your eyes, I know I won’t go far.’ Recording this track with my twin brother Adam and our band Relic seemed like an incredibly special way to honor our old friend. We’ve been making music together with this band for over a decade and when we get the chance to share our take on such a special song, it seems our journey has only just begun.” — Aaron Bibelhauser


Photo credit: Winston Garthwaite
Video by Chris Witzke

LISTEN: “He Was a Friend of Mine” from ‘Epilogue: A Tribute to John Duffey’

Artist: Dudley Connell and John Cowan
Song: “He Was a Friend of Mine
Album: Epilogue: A Tribute to John Duffey
Release Date: June 20, 2018
Label: Smithsonian Folkways

In Their Words: “It’s hard to believe John Duffey left us more than two decades ago now and that there is a whole generation of Bluegrass fans and artists who never saw John perform. If this tribute album causes those young people to turn on YouTube and listen to John, I would say my mission has been successfully completed. On the other hand, for an older generation member like me, it’s sweet to stroll down memory lane with John.” – Akira Otsuka (producer, curator, and musician)

Blitzen Trapper, ‘Flyin’ Shoes’

"Fall is just a feeling that I just can't lose," sang Townes Van Zandt on "Flyin' Shoes," a track both about a soldier's acceptance of his inevitable death and our mortal reality that someday, no matter how hard we may try to deny it, we too will eventually see our last season, sigh our last sigh, and tie on those flyin' shoes. In true Van Zandt fashion, he performs the song with a mix of sweet solemnity and eerie resignation — and apart from the lyrics that cut deeper than anything just based around easy tears, it's that delivery, where those very tears rest atop a stilted smile, that hurts even more.

Thus, it's not an easy thing to cover Van Zandt, but it's done more out of gentle appreciation that anything else on Days Full of Rain, a new tribute to the master which was released last month and includes Townes takes by the likes of Jolie Holland, Blind Pilot, and Barna Howard. One of the LP's standout tracks is the album's opener, which finds Blitzen Trapper offering a version of "Flyin' Shoes." There's a lot of the same forlorn rasp in singer Eric Earley's voice — a tone that hovers in that same gray area of emotion, set to a slightly sped-up time, spare guitar strums, and delicate echoes of harmony.

"There was a time my old man would listen to Rear View Mirror on repeat while he was working on cars," says Earley. "Those songs are forever entangled with the smell of motor oil and exhaust in my mind.  'Flyin' Shoes' was on that record and it shows Townes's ability to write with such beauty about impending death, about suicidal thoughts … about tying on them shoes and leaving for good."

Blitzen Trapper has always been excellent at capturing the restless feeling of knowing that most things are ephemeral — whether it be a love, a life, or a state of mind. So, here, they're artfully adept at preserving Van Zandt's same lonesome song, while reminding us that there are some things — like the power of a beautiful lyric — that truly live on.