Guy Clark – My Favorite Picture of You

Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt were known as the godfathers of the Texas songwriters by some. This song can be tough to listen to but also beautiful simultaneously.

This song is very touching. It was about his late wife Susanna Clark. She passed away in 2012 and it was the title song of his last album released in 2013.  It peaked at #12 on the Billboard Country Charts and #62 on the Billboard Album Charts in 2013.

It was based on a real Polaroid picture Guy Clark had of his wife standing outside of a house. Inside the house, Guy and Townes Van Zandt were “drunk on their ass” and obnoxious and she wasn’t happy and wanted to leave. I have a video below that he talks about it. It’s credited to Guy Clark and Gordie Simpson.

Guy Clark and Susanna Clark were married in 1972 with Townes Van Zandt as his best man. Susanna was a songwriter herself. She wrote the song “I’ll Be Your San Antone Rose” in 1975 performed by Dottsy Brodt Dwyer which made it to #12 in 1975….and co-wrote Kathy Mattea’s number one song “Come From The Heart.” She also wrote some songs with Townes Van Zandt.

Guy and Susanna Clark

In the 1960s, Guy Clark tried his luck in the California music scene. He also built and repaired guitars and had a shop in San Francisco in 1969. In 1971 he was signed as a songwriter by Sunbury Music in Los Angeles, he decided to relocate to the company’s Nashville office in 1971. His arrival helped usher in a migration of new songwriting talent to the city.

The Clarks’ home became a gathering spot for songwriters, folk singers, and artists including Rodney Crowell, Townes, Jim McGuire, Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Joe Ely, Lyle Lovett, Verlon Thompson, Shawn Camp, and Vince Gill.

In 1975 he released his first album Old No. 1 and eventually released 13 studio albums. Guy Clark passed away in 2016.

This song has been covered by Jerry Jeff Walker, Willie Nelson, and Wild Child.

In this video, he explains what influenced the song.

My Favorite Picture Of You

My favorite picture of youIs the one where you’re staringStraight into the lens

It’s just a Polaroid shotSomeone took on the spotNo beginning, no end

It’s just a moment in timeYou can’t have backYou never left but your bags were packedJust in case

My favorite picture of youIs bent and fadedAnd it’s pinned to my wallOh, and you were so angry

It’s hard to believeWe were lovers at allThere’s a fire in your eyesYou’ve got your heart on your sleeveA curse on your lips, but all I can seeIs beautiful

My favorite picture of youIs the one whereYour wings are showing

Oh, and your arms are crossedYour fists are clenchedNot gone but going

Just a stand up angelWho won’t back downNobody’s fool, nobody’s clownYou were smarter than that

My favorite picture of youIs the one whereIt hasn’t rained yet

Oh and as I recallCame a winter squallAnd we got soaking wetIt’s a thousand wordsIn the blink of an eyeThe camera loves youAnd so do IClick

My favorite picture of youIs the one where you’re staringStraight into the lens

Townes Van Zandt – Pancho and Lefty

After the country post on Saturday…I looked through a lot of lists you all made. I listened…I want to thank Lisa for bringing this one up. It’s high time I did a post on Townes Van Zant. He was one of the best songwriters of the 20th Century.

What a songwriter Towns Van Zandt was…this song is probably best known for the Merle Haggard and Willie Nelson cover in 1983. The song peaked at #1 on the Country Billboard Charts and #1 on the Canadian Country Charts in 1983.

Willie Nelson has said that his and Merles duet album was almost complete but it lacked THAT song to put it over the top. Nelson said his daughter Lana suggested to him to listen to Pancho and Lefty by Townes Van Zandt. Willie then asked Townes what the song was about…and Townes said he didn’t know. Nelson then cut the track with his band. Willie and Merle had never heard that song before.

Nelson recorded it that night with his band and had to go and drag a sleepy Haggard (who was sleeping on his bus) to do the vocal part. The vocals were recorded in one take that night. They made a video of it and invited Townes to be in it. He was in the video as one of the Mexican  Federales.

The royalties from this song helped Van Zandt through the years. He told a story of getting pulled over by a couple of policemen. His car sticker was out of date so he got into the police car and they asked him what he does for a living. He said he was a songwriter and the policemen shook their heads. He then told them that he wrote “Pancho and Lefty” and their eyes lit up and they started to grin. Pancho and Lefty were the policemen’s police radio code names. They let Townes go after that.

Van Zandt did not like fame or what came attached to it. It’s been reported that he turned down opportunities to write with Bob Dylan. He respected Dylan a great deal but it was the celebrity part he didn’t want. He never ended up on a major label through his career…by choice. Steve Earle counted Townes Van Zandt as his mentor, and the two formed a close bond in the years since their initial encounter in 1978.

Unfortunately, Earle also adopted Van Zandt’s drug and alcohol habits. So bad, in fact, that Van Zandt actually visited Earle during a rare moment in which Townes was sober. Earle told him “I must be in trouble if they’re sending you.” Earle eventually named his son after Townes Justin Townes Earle.

The original song was on Van Zandt’s 1972 album The Late Great Townes Van Zandt. 

For Willie’s Big 60 show, Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson sang Pancho and Lefty. Bob covered the song sporadically in concert during the 90’s. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked “Pancho and Lefty” 41st on its list of the “100 Greatest Country Songs of All Time.

Townes Van Zandt on being invited to be in the video: “It was real nice they invited me,”they didn’t have to invite me and I made I think $100 dollars a day. I was the captain of the federales. And plus I got to ride a horse. I always like that. It took four and a half days and that video was four and a half minutes long…The money goes by a strange life, or elsewhere. I mean it doesn’t come to me. But money’s not the question. I would like if I could write a song that would somehow turn one five-year-old girl around to do right. Then I’ve done good. That’s what I care about.”

Townes Van Zandt:  “I realize that I wrote it, but it’s hard to take credit for the writing, because it came from out of the blue. It came through me and it’s a real nice song, and I think, I’ve finally found out what it’s about. I’ve always wondered what it’s about. I kinda always knew it wasn’t about Pancho Villa, and then somebody told me that Pancho Villa had a buddy whose name in Spanish meant ‘Lefty.’ But in the song, my song, Pancho gets hung. ‘They only let him hang around out of kindness I suppose’ and the real Pancho Villa was assassinated.”

Pancho and Lefty

Living on the road my friend,
Is gonna keep you free and clean
Now you wear your skin like iron,
Your breath as hard as kerosene.
You weren’t your mama’s only boy,
But her favorite one it seems
She began to cry when you said goodbye,
And sank into your dreams.

Pancho was a bandit boy,
His horse was fast as polished steel
He wore his gun outside his pants
For all the honest world to feel.
Pancho met his match you know
On the deserts down in Mexico
Nobody heard his dying words,
Ah but that’s the way it goes.

All the Federales say
They could have had him any day
They only let him slip away
Out of kindness, I suppose.

Lefty, he can’t sing the blues
All night long like he used to.
The dust that Pancho bit down south
Ended up in Lefty’s mouth
The day they laid poor Pancho low,
Lefty split for Ohio
Where he got the bread to go,
There ain’t nobody knows

The poets tell how Pancho fell,
And Lefty’s living in cheap hotels
The desert’s quiet, Cleveland’s cold,
And so the story ends we’re told
Pancho needs your prayers it’s true,
But save a few for Lefty too
He only did what he had to do,
And now he’s growing old