A Place Called Papa Joe's

If you didn't happen to know Billy Joe Shaver, well, you probably should. He is one of the great songwriters of the Outlaw Country era. He almost single-handedly wrote Waylon Jenning's best album, "Honky Tonk Heroes." Now this fellow once got into a little trouble in a place called Papa Joe's. This place:


You should probably think twice about messing with anybody when you're in a place like that, but not everybody does. Billy Joe was an old man by then -- heading to his third divorce with the same woman -- and a younger man decided he could bull the old guy. Well, sometimes that works.

Not every time.

Dale Watson wrote a song about it.



Whitey Morgan's version has easier to understand lyrics, although I don't like the instrumentation as well:



Here's Billy Joe explaining what happened, except that nobody but him thinks the other guy had a gun -- all the evidence presented in court had the other guy with a knife. A knife is of course quite as dangerous as a gun in the right hands; at the right range, more dangerous.



Then, once he won the court case, Billy Joe wrote a song about it too.  Willie Nelson pitched in.



If you're really seated in the tradition you'll know that Willie's "don't cross him/ don't boss him" language comes from his own best album, 1975's "Red Headed Stranger" about a preacher who killed his wife and her lover in the year of 1901. It's quite a compliment, in its way. In another way, perhaps less so.

2 comments:

douglas said...

Heh- this is pretty good too- Billy Joe telling the tale of the shooting himself.

And you weren't kidding about the instrumentation, or the lack of intelligibility of the lyrics.

Gringo said...

Quite the story. I don't recall hearing of this before, which doesn't speak well of my awareness of state-to-local news.