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(YouTube) Spiffy Pancho met his match, you know, on the deserts down in Mexico..Where he got the bread to go, ain't nobody knows   (youtube.com) divider line 37
More: Spiffy  
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1583 clicks; posted to Music » on 06 Nov 2009 at 3:56 AM   |  Make this a Fark FavoriteFavorite    |   share: Share on OMGTWITTER WEB2.0share on StumbleUponshare on Facebook  more»   |    Get this fabulous T-Shirt and impress the methane out of your friends! shirt it!

37 Comments   (+0 »)


 
vicejay [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 02:55:24 AM  
Well, very glad for the greenlight.. But I was too clever for my own good.

Had spelled "deserts" as "desserts," which tied in with, "where he got the bread to go.." (You know, desserts/deserts, carbs, etc.) Would not normally tied in, b/c the "bread to go," which Lefty got somehow after he did what he had to do. But, some helpful soul corrected my spelling in the headline.

/sigh. Miss ya Townes

 
gilgamesh23 [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 03:30:35 AM  
Love the song. Think we must have a Townes fan 'mongst the modmins since we get a van Zandt greenlight every few months or so.

 
MorningBreath [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 06:37:41 AM  
there is a local station out here in CT that highlights an artist every other friday, they spent the whole afternoon on Townes, probably one of the best afternoon's of radio ever heard.

 
skippytheferret 2009-11-06 06:44:00 AM  
A brilliant man. Somehow I believe he's up there in heaven singing for the saints and angels.

You picked a great song but you could have picked any one of a hundred, Waiting Around to Die, Cowboy Junkie's Lament or I'll be Here in the Morning...The man was a great songwriter.

 
ZAZ [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 07:45:54 AM  
The man was a great songwriter.

Yes, but not so great a singer.

 
Gulper Eel [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 07:48:02 AM  
Emmylou's version, from '77 or so.

Good lord, she was fine then. Now, too.

 
ZAZ [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 07:57:26 AM  
Thanks, Gulper Eel, that was better.

 
TheBitterest [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 08:03:07 AM  
I've always preferred the Willie and Merle version...

 
Crewmannumber6 2009-11-06 08:21:50 AM  
Waiting Around To Die was the first song he ever wrote, as a teenager. If the song alone doesn't give you goosebumps, then knowing that while you listen should.

/still trying figure out how to get a greenlight on a Gram Parsons post

 
doublesecretprobation [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 08:29:02 AM  
Crewmannumber6: Waiting Around To Die was the first song he ever wrote, as a teenager. If the song alone doesn't give you goosebumps, then knowing that while you listen should.

if you've ever seen "heartworn highways" and seen him play it in his kitchen while his neighbor crys, it'll kill you every time you hear it.

 
MisterLoki 2009-11-06 08:36:36 AM  
doublesecretprobation: Crewmannumber6: Waiting Around To Die was the first song he ever wrote, as a teenager. If the song alone doesn't give you goosebumps, then knowing that while you listen should.

if you've ever seen "heartworn highways" and seen him play it in his kitchen while his neighbor crys, it'll kill you every time you hear it.


Here is the video from "Heartworn Highways"(new window). The song starts at about 4:20, but if you like Townes, I would suggest watching it in its entirety.

 
skippytheferret 2009-11-06 08:46:22 AM  
ZAZ: The man was a great songwriter.

Yes, but not so great a singer.


I dunno, his voice had character. It gave something to the music.

 
Crewmannumber6 2009-11-06 08:49:33 AM  
doublesecretprobation: Crewmannumber6: Waiting Around To Die was the first song he ever wrote, as a teenager. If the song alone doesn't give you goosebumps, then knowing that while you listen should.

if you've ever seen "heartworn highways" and seen him play it in his kitchen while his neighbor crys, it'll kill you every time you hear it.


I've seen it and it gets me every time. There is no songwriter his equal today. The only one I can think of worth mentioning right now is David Rawlings, who writes Gillian Welch's songs

 
clkelley5v1 2009-11-06 08:51:15 AM  
got a puppy last week, named him pancho, so i'm getting a kick out of these replies.

 
CatJumpJohn 2009-11-06 09:44:37 AM  
Thanks, Subby. Townes is one of my favorites.

I play with this country singer from time to time, and one weekend we had to fill four hours at a local bar. Towards the end of the night, he goes up and plays Waitin Round To Die, so I counter with Tecumseh Valley, and he hits back with Mr. Mudd and Mr. Gold, and we got into a Townes-Van-Zandt-off.

Depressed the hell out of the bar...not because we sucked (mostly), but because the songs were so damn perfect.

Steve Earle once said, "Townes Van Zandt is the greatest songwriter alive and I'll stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table in my cowboy boots and tell him that."

Townes Van Zandt heard that and replied, ""I've met Bob Dylan's bodyguards and if Steve Earle thinks he can stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table, he's sadly mistaken."

/I won the Zandt off
//by a hair
///but not 1% of 1% as good as the man himself

 
jricks3 2009-11-06 09:57:23 AM  
Introduced by Nanci Griffith, no less.

Thanks, subby - made my day.

 
Tumunga 2009-11-06 10:13:12 AM  
uhm, that really sucked. Sorry. I don't get it. I used to hear crap like that at Chubby's, on the corner of LaSalle and Michigan in Indianapolis. It's closed now...I wonder why?

/love me some Menudo.
//the troll line is set...
///waiting...
////waiting...
//five slashies.

 
gwowen 2009-11-06 10:19:30 AM  
When you have several hours to spare check out the "Townes van Zandt Private Concert" on Youtube. Filmed in his hotel room at a Holiday Inn in Houston.

/ Loves him some Rex's Blues
// Kind of obsessed with Mr Mudd And Mr Gold at the moment...

 
JimmyDeGration 2009-11-06 10:22:55 AM  
TVZ was the greatest American songwriter. (Bob Dylan can lick my sack) That is all.

 
douchebag/hater 2009-11-06 10:36:52 AM  
There is a documentary out on him, what a massive fark-up. very good song writer, though.

Likes me some EL Harris but her voice, high and grating, leaves something to be desired.

And this

JimmyDeGration 2009-11-06 10:22:55 AM
TVZ was the greatest American songwriter. (Bob Dylan can lick my sack) That is all.


1) You are entitled to your opinion, as weird as it is
and
2) Nice to see you come out of the closet, but hope as you might I doubt Dylan will oblige you.

 
bmfderek 2009-11-06 10:41:02 AM  
ZAZ: The man was a great songwriter.

Yes, but not so great a singer.


I'm with you there brother.

 
skippytheferret 2009-11-06 10:43:52 AM  
douchebag/hater: There is a documentary out on him, what a massive fark-up. very good song writer, though.

Likes me some EL Harris but her voice, high and grating, leaves something to be desired.

And this

JimmyDeGration 2009-11-06 10:22:55 AM
TVZ was the greatest American songwriter. (Bob Dylan can lick my sack) That is all.

1) You are entitled to your opinion, as weird as it is
and
2) Nice to see you come out of the closet, but hope as you might I doubt Dylan will oblige you.


THe TVZ documentary is called "Be Here To Love Me" and it's so sad...On the scale of the Shane MacGowan documentary "Fall From Grace With God". TVZ drank himself to death basically.

 
zunkus 2009-11-06 10:46:19 AM  
This song always kind of makes me want to drink.

 
R.A.Danny [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 11:27:46 AM  
I listen to this song almost every morning on my way to work.

 
yelmrog 2009-11-06 11:44:38 AM  
bmfderek: ZAZ: The man was a great songwriter.

Yes, but not so great a singer.

I'm with you there brother.


This was only four years before he died. His voice was pretty well shot. Earlier stuff was much better vocally.

Still, a hell of a songwriter and a true eccentric.

 
Crewmannumber6 2009-11-06 11:51:48 AM  
yelmrog: bmfderek: ZAZ: The man was a great songwriter.

Yes, but not so great a singer.

I'm with you there brother.

This was only four years before he died. His voice was pretty well shot. Earlier stuff was much better vocally.

Still, a hell of a songwriter and a true eccentric.


I disagree. For his genre he has the perfect voice. His tones send chills through me.

 
ryant123 2009-11-06 11:58:51 AM  
TheBitterest: I've always preferred the Willie and Merle version...

What about Hoyt Axton? (pops)

 
Jedekai 2009-11-06 01:52:49 PM  
If you didn't know:

The song was about the death of the frontier, Pancho was a metaphor for the last of the banditos getting too old to run anymore, but not willing to give up. The Mexican government said that if they turned themselves in they would only be deported to the U.S. in the 1910s, instead of facing execution or prison.

Lefty was the last bounty hunter, always able to catch Pancho but knowing he was out of a job if he did. Since they were the last of the real plainsmen left, when Pancho was shot down Lefty had nothing left to live for - his nemesis was dead.

So he moved to Cleveland (the money came from all the bounties he had collected - hidden and stashed away for his retirement) and waited to die. There was nothing else left for him.

/There's a statue of Pancho and Lefty in Eastern Montana (Miles City, I think) explaining what the song meant. The bounty hunter in the song was a native of Montana, but I can't remember his name.

 
HonkyTonkHero 2009-11-06 07:37:08 PM  
Here is a good version of To Live is to Fly. Ryan Bingham mistakes it as a Guy Clark song this night for some reason. Not sure why, but he does a good job with it.

To Live is To Fly Link (new window)

 
Princess_of_Farking_Farkness 2009-11-06 07:39:24 PM  
Scott Glenn should play him in a bio pic!!!!

 
shanteyman 2009-11-06 09:58:21 PM  
Played "If I Needed You" for my wife at our wedding reception, Not a dry eye in the place. Saw TVZ at the Childe Harold in DC in 1980.His bass player was too drunk to continue, so Townes played the second set solo. Great show, greater songwriter.

 
DrBenway [TotalFark] 2009-11-06 11:31:32 PM  
Saw Townes play a couple times in Austin in the very early 90's. First time right up front at the Cactus Cafe -- remarkable evening. He'd have you cringing by telling the dumbest, corniest jokes you could imagine, and then go into something like "Tecumseh Valley" or "Marie" (good lord, that is the saddest, starkest song I've ever heard).

shanteyman:

Saw TVZ at the Childe Harold in DC in 1980.His bass player was too drunk to continue, so Townes played the second set solo. Great show, greater songwriter.

Lucky it wasn't the other way around (I'd reckon more often the case).

 
Juniper Jupiter [recently expired TotalFark] 2009-11-07 12:34:53 AM  
TheBitterest: I've always preferred the Willie and Merle version...

FTW.

/I SAID, "FTW".

 
Peacedog 2009-11-07 02:23:37 AM  
I listen to "Live at the Old Quarter" about twice a week. Probably in the top 3 music purchases I've ever made in my life.

 
gwowen 2009-11-08 02:53:29 AM  
Peacedog: I listen to "Live at the Old Quarter" about twice a week. Probably in the top 3 music purchases I've ever made in my life.

"Uncle Ben's Perverted Rice"

 
TeddyRay 2009-11-08 05:32:12 PM  
I love TVZ singing "Dead Flowers" at the end of The Big Lebowski.

 
Al Kader 2009-11-09 12:47:36 PM  
Good lord, she was fine then. Now, too.

I'm with you on that one.

 
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