Don Williams, Country's 'Gentle Giant,' Dead at 78
He was not on the list.
Don Williams, the Country Music Hall of Fame member whose
imposing height and warm, reassuring voice earned him the nickname "Gentle
Giant," died Friday, September 8th, after a short illness. An
internationally popular country star, Williams recorded dozens of hit songs,
including "Tulsa Time," "Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good" and
"It Must Be Love." He was 78.
"In giving voice to songs like 'Good Ole Boys Like Me,'
'Lord, I Hope This Day Is Good' and 'Amanda,' Don Williams offered calm,
beauty, and a sense of wistful peace that is in short supply these days,"
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO Kyle Young said in a statement
Friday. "His music will forever be a balm in troublesome times. Everyone
who makes country music with grace, intelligence, and ageless intent will do so
while standing on the shoulders of this gentle giant."
Born in Floydada, Texas, on May 27th, 1939, Don Williams was
raised in Portland, Texas, where he learned guitar from his mother. Initially
performing in Corpus Christi in a duo called Strangers Two with singer Lofton
Kline, Williams and his partner met singer Susan Taylor and formed the folk-pop
trio that would be called the Pozo-Seco Singers. Based in Nashville, the trio
earned two Top 40 tunes, "I Can Make It With You" and "Look What
You've Done," in late 1966.
After the group disbanded, Williams landed back in Texas to
sell furniture in his father's store before returning to Music City to embark
on a solo career. "Cowboy" Jack Clement signed Williams as a
songwriter to his Jack Music publishing company, where he recorded demos for
songwriter-producer Allen Reynolds, who later went on to helm projects for
Crystal Gayle and Garth Brooks, among many others.
When other artists proved reluctant to record Williams'
songs, Clement signed him as an artist to his JMI Records, releasing his first
country single, "Don't You Believe," in 1972. In 1974, the label
issued "We Should Be Together," which became the singer's first Top
Five hit. Later that year, he scored the first of 17 Number One singles with
the romantic "I Wouldn't Want to Live If You Didn't Love Me." The visionary
Clement also shot some of the industry's first-ever music videos for Williams'
early hits.
In 1980, Williams, who had quickly gained an overseas
following, was named Artist of the Decade by the readers of the London-based
magazine Country Music People. That same year, he reached the pop Top 40 with
the tender "I Believe in You," Between 1974 and 1991, of the nearly
50 singles he released, first on Dot, then ABC/Dot – which would become MCA –
then Capitol and finally RCA, all but three reached the Top Ten. In 1976,
Williams became an Opry member, and was crowned CMA Male Vocalist of the Year
in 1978, with his version of Danny Flowers' "Tulsa Time" earning CMA
Single of the Year. In 1981, he joined Emmylou Harris on "If I Needed You,"
a Top Five duet that would introduce the masses to the work of songwriter
Townes Van Zandt. In the late Eighties, Williams quit touring after suffering
back problems, but soon picked back up, with several hits for RCA until 1991's
"Lord Have Mercy on a Country Boy" ended his streak. Williams was
consistently an international ambassador of country music, earning a massive
following in Europe, especially in the U.K. and Ireland, as well as Australia
and Africa.
In addition to his recording career, Williams appeared in
the 1975 Burt Reynolds films W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings and 1980's Smokey
and the Bandit II. He later name-checked Reynolds in the 1982 Bob McDill-penned
hit "If Hollywood Don't Need You (Honey, I Still Do)," which was one
of the many singles co-produced by Williams with longtime collaborator Garth
Fundis.
In 2004, he released his My Heart to You LP for Sugar Hill
Records; although he staged a 2006 farewell tour, he came out of retirement in
October 2010, the same month he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of
Fame. By that time, he had released more than 35 albums. His most recent studio
album, Reflections, was released in 2014. He retired from touring for good two
years later.
Williams' songs have been recorded by country superstars
Alan Jackson and Lee Ann Womack, as well as rock legends Pete Townshend and
Eric Clapton. Just one day before he turned 78 last May, the tribute album
Gentle Giants: The Songs of Don Williams was issued. A testament to his
widespread and long-lasting influence, the LP featured performances of beloved
Williams hits by Alison Krauss, Chris Stapleton, Pistol Annies, Brandy Clark,
Keb' Mo', Trisha Yearwood, Garth Brooks, Lady Antebellum, songwriter Roger
Cook, Dierks Bentley, John Prine, and Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires. A special
tribute to the longtime Grand Ole Opry member was also performed on the Opry
stage just days after that album was released. That same month, the concert
CD/DVD package, Don Williams in Ireland: The Gentle Giant in Concert, was
released, featuring an onstage performance from the Emerald Isle.
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