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.
Heh- this is pretty good too- Billy Joe telling the tale of the shooting himself.
ReplyDeleteAnd you weren't kidding about the instrumentation, or the lack of intelligibility of the lyrics.
Quite the story. I don't recall hearing of this before, which doesn't speak well of my awareness of state-to-local news.
ReplyDelete