Country singer George Jones lived such a colorful and public
life that several biographies about him have been written in the past few
years. I have three of those on my own
bookshelves: George Jones: The Saga of an
American Singer (Bob Allen - 1984), Ragged
but Right: The Life & Times of George Jones (Dolly Carlisle – 1984),
and George Jones: I Lived to Tell It All
(George Jones & Tom Carter – 1996).
Interestingly, both the first two books were published about the time
that George returned to his roots and built Jones Country in tiny Colmesneil,
Texas (population 600). But Jones continued to add to his legend after
1984, of course, and although Tom Carter’s book covers the years up to 1996
when it was published, those years are somewhat filtered through the eyes of
Carter’s co-author, George Jones himself.
Now, a full three years after Jones’s death, his legacy has
become more settled and his whole story can be told in one volume – and that is
exactly what Rich Keinzle has done in The
Grand Tour: The Life and Music of George Jones. From the very beginning of his career,
country music fans were intrigued by the craziness that always seemed to follow
Jones around the country as he performed.
By the end of that career, George Jones was a respected vocalist (still
with a reputation for craziness) who had managed to grab the attention of music
lovers around the world. It was never
easy for the shy, insecure performer that Jones was throughout his lifetime,
but, public warts and all, he was just too good to ignore.
Rich Keinzle has done his George Jones homework, and it
shows. The Grand Tour recounts everything from the life of poverty into
which Jones was born, through his battle with drug and alcohol addictions that
almost killed him, and on to his rescue by Nancy Sepulvado, the Shreveport
woman, who saw him through the worst of his addictions and saved both his life
and his career. It is impossible to
recount the life of George Jones without spending a great number of pages on
the singer’s problems and demons – and Keinzle does that. But the high points of Jones’s life,
including the best (and worst) of his recordings are also recounted in great
detail.
I appreciate The Grand
Tour – and I am no casual George fan.
George Jones and his music have been in my life for more than five
decades. I grew up near the city of
Beaumont, Texas, which Jones called home for a number of years. My wife’s grandparents knew the Jones family
in Saratoga, Texas, and her grandmother occasionally had George over to the
house when he was a boy. Too, I
personally witnessed two of the milestone events cited by the author in The Grand Tour: the one and only country
music show ever presented at Jones’s Rhythm Ranch in Vidor, Texas, and his
later induction into the Beaumont Walk of Fame, a site that honors the most
famous citizens born in the county surrounding that city. And all that said, Rich Keinzle still told me
a thing or two about George Jones I never knew; it’s that kind of book – maybe a
little bit crude and rough around the edges…but then so was George.
Brilliant review, Sam. This is going to the top of my TBR!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Susan, I appreciate that. I think you'll probably love the book as much as I did. I didn't mention it in the review, but I have a pretty vast collection of the man's recordings and I was able to listen to just about every song mentioned in the book (even the bad ones) while reading about them. That added some "reality" to what I was seeing on the page. Keinzle is a well known music critic and his writing can be pretty blunt at time (as in using the word "shit" as just another word in a sentence in the middle of a long paragraph. But, like I say, that's pretty much the way ol' George was, too.
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