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 Most people knew Harlan Howard
by the songs he penned - more than 4,000 of them. In a career
that spanned more than six decades, the "Dean of Nashville Songwriters" imbued
himself as one of the greatest - and most prolific – songwriters
of the Twentieth Century. One critic daringly dubbed him the "Irving
Berlin of Country" because of the number of classics he added
to the annals of country music.
More than 100 of his self-penned
tunes hit the top ten and his compositions became chart-toppers for
artists as diverse as Patsy Cline, Ray Charles, Buck Owens, Dean Martin,
The Judds, Reba McEntire, Waylon Jennings, Glen Campbell, and Dolly
Parton. But Harlan Howard's friends knew there was more to the
man than song titles. Behind his enshrinements in the Songwriters Hall
of Fame, the CMA Hall of Fame, the National Academy of Popular Music
Hall of Fame and the Grammy Hall of Fame was a complex and unique man
- a true interpreter of life well and fully lived.
Those fortunate enough to number
among Harlan's intimates knew he was born in Detroit and raised on
farms in Michigan, but times were tough for a young farm boy in the
years following the Depression and he began to run the streets. He
started writing country songs around the age of 12, listening to and
loving the Grand Ole Opry, Ernest Tubb and Floyd Tillman. Although
he managed to complete just nine years of formal education, he educated
himself by reading books – sometimes as many as four and five
a day.
Harlan decided to move to Los
Angeles in 1955 to pursue his dream of songwriting. He could
just as easily have moved to Nashville, but, lacking faith in his ability
as a songwriter, he knew he would have to rely on factory jobs as a
means to live. LA had music and factories; Nashville had music
but no factories. While working as a forklift operator, he devoted
every spare minute to perfecting the craft of songwriting. He
was possessed by songwriting, and each day left the factory with several
new songs stuffed in his shirt pocket.
"I'd come home from work
sometimes with six songs," the writer said. "During
that period of time, I never knew there was that much money in songwriting. I
was just writing because I loved it. I never thought I'd be able
to quit the factory and make a living full-time as a writer."
A year after moving to LA, he
met Tex Ritter and Johnny Bond and played them some tunes from his
cardboard box full of songs. Slowly at first, with their help
and that of others such as Wynn Stewart, Bobby Bare and Skeets McDonald,
he began to have his songs recorded. His first real hit came
in 1959 when Charlie Walker recorded "Pick Me Up On Your Way Down." Shortly
after that both Ray Price and the pop singer, Guy Mitchell, put his "Heartaches
By The Number" on the top of the country and pop charts simultaneously
and his destiny was sealed.
Buoyed by his success and the
royalty checks from those two songs, he moved to Nashville in 1960. As
the hits began to chart, the legend of Harlan Howard began to soar. A
year later - in 1961 - his career exploded, and he had as many as 15
songs in the top 40 of the country charts at one time - an amazing
feat for any writer and one never since equaled.
Harlan also began hanging out
with the other struggling writers, such as Hank Cochran, Willie Nelson,
and Roger Miller at Tootsies Orchid Lounge across the alley from the
old Ryman Auditorium, home of the Grand Ole Opry. Patsy Cline
was a favorite Opry star who used to stop in between shows. This
nucleus would gather wherever there was a guitar and swap their latest
songwriting efforts, hoping to plug a few songs to Opry stars. From
these late night/early morning "guitar pulls" another Nashville
legend was born. Many a "juvenile" (a Howard-coined
favorite term for fledgling young writers) benefited from an all-day
or all-night session at a Howard-hosted guitar pull.
Harlan scored hits in the five decades:
the 50's, 60's, 70's, 80's, and 90’s. Harlan was fond of
saying, "The lyrics usually flow easily and often." The "three-chord
kid", as he was frequently called, believed country music was
mostly lyrical content - about 90% words and 10% melody. He considered
his songs his children and tried to find the perfect home for them;
crediting much of his success with matching the right song with the
right singer.
Artists such as Nanci Griffith,
Mel Tillis, kd Lang, Collin Raye, and Patty Loveless chose Harlan Howard
compositions to establish themselves on country radio. Producers rarely
passed up an opportunity to listen to a tune submitted by Howard for
fear of missing the next country classic.
Although he influenced several
generations of songwriters, his greatest sense of accomplishment came
from helping the "juveniles" along the way. "I've
always hung out with songwriters,” Harlan said. “Most
of the older guys don’t come to Music Row anymore - that makes
me the dinosaur. The young writers wanna be me. Well,
I wanted to be Irving Berlin. I wanted to do what the great writers
on Tin Pan Alley did, except I wanted to aim for this pure southern
country music."
As one Harlan Howard co-writer
stated: "Harlan looked at songwriting differently than other
writers – it was the love of his life. I think what he
contributed to the songwriting community is that he's made writers
feel it's important to be a songwriter. It's a career; it's not
just something you do for a while and then go on to something else. Harlan
was 100 percent songwriter all the time."
In the late ‘80s, Harlan’s
publisher, Tree, was sold to the foreign conglomerate, Sony. Uncomfortable
writing for owners who were more concerned with the bottom line than
with artistic expression, Howard took on a new endeavor and started
a small publishing company, Harlan Howard Songs, Inc. With his
guidance, several "juveniles" had recent chart-topping successes
such as The Chain of Love, Clay Walker; Real Live
Woman, Trisha Yearwood; Someone You Used To Know, Collin
Raye; and She Was, Mark Chesnutt. His hit by Patty Loveless, Blame
It On Your Heart, was named BMI Song of the Year as the most performed
country song of 1994.
Harlan
continued writing well into his seventh decade of life, long after
many other writers had begun to relax on their royalties. Howard
didn't intend to put aside his pen. "I've been wanting to do this
since I was 12, so it's a lifetime hobby and quest," he stated. "I
never tire of it. Sometimes I do get burned out temporarily,
but I can't imagine not wanting to write one more great song, get one
more great record, or work with one more great singer. I like
to give artists a song they have to sing the rest of their lives. Songwriting
is both my living and my pleasure, so I'm a happy man."
On March 3, 2002, Harlan passed
away at home with his wife, Melanie, by his side. He was 74 years
old. A memorial celebrating his life and songs was held at the
Ryman Auditorium. Artists such as Emmylou Harris, Rodney Crowell,
Bobby Bare, Michael McDonald, Jim Lauderdale and Sara Evans were on
hand to render classic Harlan Howard tunes to a SRO crowd.
A
lifetime student of the Civil War, it was a dream of Harlan’s
to be buried close to General Zollecoffer, the first general killed
in the Civil War. Thanks to the generosity of the General’s
descendents, a tombstone is being erected in the family plot. Ever
the consummate writer, Harlan wrote his epitaph years ago… “He
wrote the songs; I held the pen.”
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