The Ballad of Curtis Loew explained

The Ballad of Curtis Loew
Artist:Lynyrd Skynyrd
Album:Second Helping
Released:April 15, 1974
Recorded:Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, California, January 1974
Length:4:51
Label:MCA Records
Producer:Al Kooper

"The Ballad of Curtis Loew"[1] [2] [3] is a song written by Allen Collins and Ronnie Van Zant and recorded by Lynyrd Skynyrd. The song was first released on the band's 1974 album, Second Helping[4] and again on their compilation, The Essential Lynyrd Skynyrd and later on All Time Greatest Hits. It is on many of their compilation albums and before the Lynyrd Skynyrd plane crash, was performed once live on stage. Ed King says, "The original version of the band only played 'Curtis Loew' one time on stage. We were playing in a basement in some hotel and thought we'd try it. We never played it again until the Tribute Tour with Johnny Van Zant."

Synopsis

A young boy wakes up early and searches for soda bottles to cash in at the local store. He gives the money to an old black man named Curtis Loew, who buys wine and plays blues songs on his old Dobro guitar for the boy all day. The boy often returns to hear Curtis play, despite receiving beatings from his mother; he idolizes Curtis, seeing him as "the finest picker to ever play the blues", and scorns the local people's opinion that he "was useless". When Curtis dies, no one attends his funeral and the narrator laments his passing: "I wish that you was here so everyone would know."[5]

Origin

The band's website says that the song is based on a composite of people who actually lived in the Van Zants' original neighborhood in Jacksonville, Florida. Specifically, the country store "is based on Claude's Midway Grocery on the corner of Plymouth and Lakeshore [Blvd] in Jacksonville." The specific spelling of the surname comes from Ed King writing the liner notes for the Second Helping and deciding to name the bluesman after the Jewish Loew's Theatre.[6] Some of the sources mentioned include Claude H. "Papa" Hammer, Rufus "Tee Tot" Payne, Robert Johnson, and Shorty Medlocke,[7] the grandfather of Rickey Medlocke, Lynyrd Skynyrd's drummer during their 1970 tour and one of the band's current guitarists.[8]

Covers

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dorman . Frank . Odom . Gene . Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock . . 110 . 2003 . 978-0-7679-1027-9 .
  2. Book: Hale, Grace Elizabeth . Ann J. . Abadie . Joseph R. . Urgo . Faulkner and His Contemporaries. University Press of Mississippi . 2002 . 166 . Invisible Men. 978-1-60473-544-4.
  3. Book: Ching, Barbara. Trent . Watts. White Masculinity in the Recent South. Louisiana State University Press . 2008 . 260 . Where Has the Free Bird Flown?. 978-0-8071-3314-9.
  4. http://www.lynyrdskynyrdhistory.com/sec.html "Second Helping" song list
  5. http://www.lynyrdskynyrdhistory.com/lyrics/70-77/sechelp/sonm.html "The Ballad of Curtis Loew" lyrics
  6. http://www.lynyrdskynyrdhistory.com/faq.html#p "Was there a real Curtis Loew?" from the FAQ
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=mVv-M4Sd46kC&dq=curtis+loew&pg=PT97 Odom, Gene and Frank Dorman (2002) Lynyrd Skynyrd: Remembering the Free Birds of Southern Rock. Random House
  8. At the end of the live version on Live from Freedom Hall, Van Zant says "Curtis Loew and Mr Shorty Medlocke. How about it there, Kentucky?"
  9. Web site: Greensky Bluegrass Live at Town Park on 2016-06-17 . Internet Archive. soling. 30 August 2016. 17 June 2016 .