Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Exhibit explores country music’s outlaws, poets and pickers

- Photos and text from wire services

NASHVILLE, TENN. » If the term “outlaw country” evokes images of Willie Nelson’s hippie braids or Waylon Jennings’ “Honky Tonk Heroes,” then you’ll want to see a new museum exhibit offering a deeper look at the poets, pickers and characters that revolution­ized country music in the 1970s.

In the more than four decades since Nelson left Nashville in 1970, the term “outlaw” has become a profitable way of branding the scene that stretched from recording studios in Music City to hippies and rednecks in Austin, Texas.

But for the artists that experience­d it firsthand, the movement was less about breaking laws and more about pushing back on traditiona­l production techniques, wresting creative control from their labels and turning their focus to song craft.

“All of the main characters in the outlaw movement were poets, or if not, had the poet’s soul,” said Rodney Crowell, the Texas-born singer songwriter who came to Nashville in the ‘70s.

The “Outlaws and Armadillos: Country’s Roaring ‘70s” exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, which opened last month and runs through 2021, features never-before-seen photos and interviews with iconic musicians from the era, unique memorabili­a, instrument­s, stage costumes, original artwork and concert posters, as well as special programs and speakers. Displays include Kris Kristoffer­son’s Army uniform, Guy Clark’s Randall knife, Nelson’s sneakers, a stuffed armadillo and a copper still for making bootleg whiskey that was donated by Tom T. Hall.

Austin-based filmmaker Eric Geadelmann, a co-curator of the exhibit, put together videos for the exhibit’s eight screens featuring interviews with Kristoffer­son, Clark, Jessi Colter, Jerry Jeff Walker, Billy Joe Shaver and more.

The exhibit’s walls are lined with dozens of concert posters, many of them from illustrato­r Jim Franklin, who designed surrealist­ic artwork for concerts held at the Armadillo World Headquarte­rs in Austin.

“Austin was grounded in red-dirt Texas music, but there was also psychedeli­a in the air,” said Peter Cooper, one of the museum’s curators.

The exhibit also emphasizes how radio station KOKE-FM and the longtime public television program “Austin City Limits,” both helped promote the progressiv­e country sounds.

“It was hippie girls and pot and endless places to play music live,” Crowell said. “It was freedom from the constraint­s of the recording studio and three-hour sessions.”

One iconic record of that period was a concept album dreamed up by Bobby Bare and Shel Silverstei­n, the Chicagobor­n poet, illustrato­r, author and songwriter. Bare was given carte blanche to come up with his own ideas in the studio and he wanted something different.

“I tried to get all the great songwriter­s in Nashville to write me a great album with a thread going through it that all made sense, rather than just an album full of rejects that didn’t make it as a single,” Bare said.

“Bobby Bare Sings Lullabys, Legends and Lies,” featured Silverstei­n’s characters, a vein of irreverent humor and a recorded laugh track. The reverberat­ions from the album shook up Nashville.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a video featuring Willie Nelson is played in the Outlaws & Armadillos exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, Tenn. From Willie Nelson to Waylon Jennings, the new exhibit explores the wild lives of the poets...
MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a video featuring Willie Nelson is played in the Outlaws & Armadillos exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, Tenn. From Willie Nelson to Waylon Jennings, the new exhibit explores the wild lives of the poets...

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