The Denver Post

Vail mourns the loss of beloved musician

- By Conrad Swanson Courtesy of Shannon Tanner Conrad Swanson: 3039541739, cswanson@denverpost.com or @conrad_swanson

Every local musician has their song. For Rod Powell it was the Eagles’ “Hotel California,” said friend and musician Shannon Tanner.

Armed with old classics like that and others by Neil Diamond, James Taylor, Jimmy Buffett and Crosby, Stills & Young, Powell pioneered Vail’s music scene, building a community in the process.

When Powell died last Saturday of COVID-19 — one of Colorado’s 19 reported casualties of the coronaviru­s sweeping the country — he left a hole in the local aprés-ski scene, Tanner and fellow musician Scott Rednor agreed.

“Aprés-ski, that’s the social part,” Rednor said. “That’s ‘after ski,’ you drink your beers, you take your shots and you listen to music.”

Powell was king of the crowd pleasers, the consummate entertaine­r, the two musicians agreed.

And if you heard music walking down Bridge Street 30 years ago, there was a high probabilit­y it was Powell.

“He became very, very good friends with thousands of people. He had an innate ability to remember people and their names,” Tanner said. “He was like my brother. We were hooked at the hip every day.”

Tanner learned March 10 that Powell had been hospitaliz­ed with pneumonia.

“The moment he went in, they intubated him immediatel­y,” Tanner said. “He never spoke another word after that. He never ever, ever spoke another word.”

Nancy Powell Wilson, who lives in St. Joseph, Mo., said test results for her younger brother took about five days to return — a frustratin­gly long time.

“It was a hard time,” she said. “I couldn’t even go out there because no one could go into the hospital at the time.”

Her loss was especially tough because the siblings were the last of their family, Powell Wilson said. “We knew we had each other. We knew we were there for each other.”

The pair grew up in the midsize city in northwest Missouri, raised by musical parents, Powell Wilson said. Their father played violin in the city’s symphony for years, and their mother taught piano and sang at funerals and weddings.

Powell inherited their musical talent, playing in local bands before making his way to Vail in the early 1980s.

He played with The New Christy Minstrels and another band named Crossroads, Powell Wilson said. He even cut a record in Nashville, Tenn., but it failed to earn much radio time.

In Vail, Powell found a home at Pepi’s Bar and Restaurant, where he rubbed elbows with locals and internatio­nal celebritie­s alike.

One Christmas Eve, at Powell’s behest, movie superstar Gregory Peck called their parents to wish them a happy holiday, Powell Wilson said. He once caught glimpses of Princess Diana and her young sons, William and Harry. He also received an autograph from former President Gerald Ford.

Once, after playing one of Dan Fogelberg’s songs during a set, Powell Wilson said her brother learned that Fogelberg had actually been in the audience.

“He took $20 out of his tip jar and said, ‘If you’re playing my songs, I better get my tip,’ ” she said.

Like the bar’s namesake, Pepi, Powell grew to be a staple of Vail, Tanner said — building a musical career that lasted decades with steady work and steady friends.

Any time he played, Powell would pick out the notes to his favorite from the Eagles, but another one of his favorites was Buffett’s “A Pirate Looks at 40,” Tanner said.

Often, Powell and Tanner would play together.

“He had a schtick where if I walked in, he would really want me to sing bad and he would really build me up,” Tanner said. “It was a comedy bit. But then we would kill it.”

Tanner said he and others are organizing a jam sometime later this year to memorializ­e their friend.

“We’ll have to do it in a big room, because people are going to fly in for this thing,” Tanner said. “It’s going to be the biggest Vail Jam we ever did.”

 ??  ?? Rod Powell, right, plays guitar with friend and fellow Vail musician Shannon Tanner. Powell died last Saturday of COVID-19. “He was like my brother. We were hooked at the hip,” Tanner said.
Rod Powell, right, plays guitar with friend and fellow Vail musician Shannon Tanner. Powell died last Saturday of COVID-19. “He was like my brother. We were hooked at the hip,” Tanner said.

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