
The traditional image of country music is of a singer/songwriter strumming his guitar and singing songs about his own life and experiences.
There’s a lot of truth in that image, as such country legends as Ernest Tubb, Hank Williams, Loretta Lynn, Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson have made their names singing their own songs.
But they often sang songs by other writers, equally brilliant (if lesser-known) in their own right, people like Elsie McWilliams, Fred Rose, Cindy Walker, Harlan Howard, Hank Cochran and Shel Silverstein. They were the artists behind the artists, but their stories have rarely been told.
Now Tennessee Walt is telling those stories in “Tennessee Walt’s Three Chords” and the “Truth: Country’s Greatest Songwriters,” an all-new show that looks at the people who wrote — but didn’t sing — some of country’s greatest songs, appearing at the Great Neck Public Library (Parkville Branch) on Sunday, Feb. 26.
The artists who are profiled in the new show aren’t household names. They’re the likes of Elsie McWilliams, Fred Rose, Cindy Walker, Harlan Howard, Hank Cochran and Shel Silverstein. Cochran, Howard, Rose and Walker are all in the Country Music Hall of Fame, and McWilliams and Silverstein should be, but even many hardcore country fans have no idea who they were.
“You may not know their names,” Wren said, “but you know their songs: ‘Hobo Bill’s Last Ride,’ ‘Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain,’ ‘You Don’t Know Me,’ ‘Heartaches by the Number,’ ‘Make the World Go Away’ and ‘A Boy Named Sue’ were all written by these men and women.
“People like Hank Williams, Loretta Lynn and Willie Nelson were brilliant songwriters,” he continued, “but they were also great judges of songwriting, and they knew a song that would be great for them when they heard it. Williams’ ‘Lost Highway,’ Lynn’s ‘One’s on the Way’ and Nelson’s “Always on My Mind” were all written by other people, and they deserve some of the credit for those songs becoming classics.
“This show is a chance for the people behind the songs to get their day in the sun.”
Three Chords and the Truth (the title is from Harlan Howard’s famous definition of a country song) is the sixth show from Tennessee Walt, following on the heels of The Other Great American Songbook, Bristol & Beyond: The Birth of Country Music, Hanks a Lot!, Riding with the Outlaws and An Afternoon in the Country. Those shows have been enthusiastically received in dozens of venues in the greater New York area, as well as in Florida, Michigan, Tennessee and Texas.
Tennessee Walt’s Three Chords and the Truth: Country’s Greatest Songwriters will be presented on Sunday, February 26, at 2 p.m. at the Great Neck Public Library (Parkville Branch), 10 Campbell Street in New Hyde Park. Admission is free. For further information, call (516) 466-8055, ext. 273 or visit https://greatnecklibrary.org/branches/parkville-branch/.