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Guy Clark

Guy Clark - "Workbench Songs"

About Me

Guy Clarks workshop is a magical place, crammed with wood and tools, photographs of friends and heroes like Townes Van Zandt, and a very versatile workbench. With a swivel of his chair and a pivot of the mind, Clark can switch from working with his hands and his left brain on a guitar to working with his heart and right brain on a song.
Just recently, Clark finished another album of songs and another guitar, and it will come as no surprise to those who know his work that both are carefully built things of resonant beauty. The guitar, the tenth of Clarks recently revived instrument building passion, is modeled after a favorite Martin steel-string. The CD, by fitting coincidence, is the tenth studio album released by one of the most respected songwriters in the world, the man who gave us L.A. Freeway, Desperados Waiting For a Train, and The Randall Knife, among many others. Guy Clark albums, like Guy Clark guitars, do not emerge every day, and they are always worth the wait.
As with his previous recordings, Clark approached the album that would become Workbench Songs with a clutch of songs he deemed ready for exposure, not a master plan or a concept. I guess the common thread that runs through them is me the way they come out. And thats it. Theres no subliminal connection between them, he says.
If there has been any departure or new theme emerging from Clarks oeuvre in recent years, its been his relatively recent enthusiasm for co-writing. Workbench Songs features tracks written with old friends like Rodney Crowell, Steve Nelson, Verlon Thompson, Gary Nicholson, Lee Roy Parnell, and Darrell Scott.
I used to write by myself all the time. And I still like doing it, Clark says. But I find one thing that comes out of co-writing is you have to say the words out loud in the air. It has to become aural. You can sit here all day and mumble lyrics to yourself and think, Oh man thats great. But the minute you say them out loud and hear them on your eardrums its like Oh It cuts out a lot of bullshit of just sitting there fooling yourself for two or three days.
Few writers are as deliberate about their words as Clark, the very personification of the Texas songwriting tradition. Born in the small western town of Monahans, Clark began his music career in Houston folk clubs, where he met lifelong friends and colleagues like Townes Van Zandt. A stint in California ended in the disillusion so famously captured in L.A. Freeway, and in 1971, Guy and wife Susanna settled in Nashville. When his first album, Old No. 1 appeared in 1975, Clarks stature was solidified on the strength of songs like That Old Time Feeling and Texas, 1947.
Clark became better known for his songs than his LPs, and over the years he watched as some of American musics most respected artists covered his songs, including Ricky Skaggs (Heartbroke), Johnny Cash (Let Him Roll), Jerry Jeff Walker (Like A Coat From The Cold), Bobby Bare (New Cut Road), and Rodney Crowell (Shes Crazy for Leaving). These interpretive tributes more than made up for superstardom Clark never really craved anyway.
Now Workbench Songs adds to the catalog with compositions that mingle astute observation of the human condition with wry Texas wisdom. Out In The Parking Lot, co-written with Darrell Scott, has become a crowd favorite in recent years. Clark released it once before on his live Keepers album of 1997, but in retrospect he says it was then too new to commit to tape. The current version vividly captures a scene outside a bar in Anytown, USA that nearly anyone will recognize.
The albums lead off track Walkin Man was a demo recording that earned its way onto the finished album with an unmatchable vibe. Its homage to searchers, pilgrims and leaders like Gandhi and Woody Guthrie that urges anybody who will listen to walk the walk themselves. That flows seamlessly into Magdelene, which Clark calls just a little impressionist painting co-written with friend Ray Stephenson. The track about a man pleading with a woman to run away to Mexico with him floats on the airy background vocals of Morgan Hayes.
Funny Bone shouldnt have worked. Stephenson came over one day with an idea to write a song about a rodeo clown. Clarks first reaction was, Well, thats been written -- several times, he recalls with a skeptical twinkle in his eye. And he just kept pushing me with it and I kept going. I didnt realize how good a song it was until hed gone and a week or two went by.
With longtime sideman Verlon Thompson, Clark co-wrote Tornado Time, a semi-comic picture of natures wrath and Analog Girl, a brisk little commentary on trying to keep it real in a digital world. He and Thompson close the album with a spontaneous home recording of the traditional Diamond Joe set only to guitar and mandolin.
And theres more: a rollicking ode to intoxication called Worry Be Gone, co-penned with Gary Nicholson and Lee Roy Parnell, the exquisite Townes Van Zandt song No Lonesome Tune, and a collaboration with BR549 leader Chuck Mead that paints a picture of Mexicans visiting Graceland in Cinco de Mayo in Memphis.
The sound, it goes without saying, lays back, seducing a listener with integrity and timing rather than bombast. Thats thanks to the sensitive rhythm section of Bryn Bright on bass and studio vet Eddie Bayers on drums. The guitars and mandolins are in the capable hands of Shawn Camp, Jamie Hartford and Verlon Thompson. With elements like those pickers and these songs, it would have been pretty hard for things to go wrong. And sure enough, Workbench Songs holds together with precise angles, tight joints, and strong bracing very much like a hand-made guitar.

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Member Since: 6/13/2006
Band Website: guyclark.com
Band Members: Download Guy's new album "Workbench Songs" from iTunes now and get the exclusive bonus track, Homegrown Tomatoes.
Influences: Get an autographed copy of Guy's new album here. Order now!
Sounds Like: Townes Van Zandt, John Prine, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris
Record Label: Dualtone Music Group
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

Workbench Songs Hits Stores

Greetings Friends, Sorry for the delay but we have a final release date for Workbench Songs. It will be in stores November 21st, perfect time for the holidays. Get one for everyone you know! Guy will...
Posted by Guy Clark on Wed, 08 Nov 2006 03:24:00 PST

Welcome To Guy Clark's Official Myspace Page

Welcome to Guy Clark's official myspace page! The new album Workbench Songs is in stores September 19th but you can preorder an autographed copy and get a free 16 track Dualtone sampler by ordering no...
Posted by Guy Clark on Tue, 01 Aug 2006 09:23:00 PST