Wednesday, September 21, 2016

John D. Loudermilk obit

Songwriter John D. Loudermilk dead at 82

 

He was not on the list.


John D. Loudermilk, 82, a member of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and the author of enduring songs such as "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye," "Tobacco Road" and "Indian Reservation," has died. He was born in Durham, North Carolina and died in Christiana, Tennessee. 

Over the past 60 years, Loudermilk's compositions have been recorded by an eclectic collection of artists that ranges from George Hamilton IV to David Lee Roth. "His uncommon brain was filled with amazing words and powerful music — or vice versa," his friend songwriter Bobby Braddock wrote in a Facebook post.

In 1961, when discussing his approach to songwriting, Loudermilk told The Tennessean, "I'm looking for the most different thing I can find. Everybody's writing 'I love you truly.' You've got to find something new. I talk to drunks at the bus station, browse through kiddie books at the public library (and) get phrases from college kids and our baby sitter. You've got to be looking all the time."

John D. Loudermilk was born March 31, 1934, in Durham, N.C. As a boy, he learned how to play guitar. After high school, when he was working for a television station, he discovered the works of Kahlil Gibran and was inspired to start writing. One of the poems Loudermilk wrote was called "A Rose and a Baby Ruth." He set it to music and performed it on the air. A fellow North Carolinian, college student George Hamilton IV, recorded the song in 1956; it became a Top 10 hit on the pop charts. A few months later, rock 'n' roller Eddie Cochran also experienced chart success with one of Loudermilk's songs: "Sittin' on the Balcony," which Loudermilk had written and recorded under the name Johnny Dee. Loudermilk's version of the song cracked the Top 40; Cochran's, the Top 20.

As a recording artist, Loudermilk didn't experience anything near the success he'd achieve as a songwriter working in Nashville. In the 1960s and '70s, scores of artists across multiple genres recorded his songs, including the Everly Brothers, the Casinos, Linda Ronstadt, Stonewall Jackson, Johnny Cash, Skeeter Davis, Marianne Faithfull, James Brown and Glen Campbell. The Nashville Teens' recording of Loudermilk's "Tobacco Road" was a hit on both sides of the Atlantic. In the last half-century, "Tobacco Road" has been recorded more than 200 times, most recently by Shawn Colvin and Steve Earle on their eponymous 2016 album.

A 1967 Tennessean article found legendary producer Chet Atkins praising Loudermilk's sense of humor: "John is a very funny man. He has one of those phone-answering machines, only his has a great BBC voice announcing 'The residence of John D. Loudermilk, eminent composer.' And all this is accompanied by sonorous pipe organ music."

Earlier this year, Loudermilk's music was celebrated by a number of artists, including Braddock, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell during a tribute show at the Franklin Theatre.

In addition to his 1976 induction into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, Loudermilk was a member of the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame. In 1968, he won a Best Album Notes Grammy Award for the liner notes he penned for his record "Suburban Attitudes in Country Verse." He also has been honored by the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum's "Poets and Prophets" series, which salutes songwriters whose work has made a significant impact on the genre.

Songs written by John Loudermilk include:

"A Rose and a Baby Ruth"

 

"Break My Mind"

 

"Everything's Alright"

 

"I Wanna Live"

 

"I'll Never Tell"

 

"Indian Reservation"

 

"Sun Glasses"

 

"Talk Back Trembling Lips"

 

"Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye"

 

"This Little Bird"

 

"Tobacco Road"

 

"Turn Me On"

 

"Waterloo" (co-written with Marijohn Wilkin)

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