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Levon Helm and Sissy Spacek, Midnight Special, April 1980
They played music from deep in the collective continental soul. Four Canadians and a drummer from Arkansas.

First time I saw Levon Helm was backstage at the Garden during the Dylan tour in ’74. Somebody had placed a backboard outside The Band’s dressing room, and he was messing around with the ball, between shows. Wish I had said hello, but I was spying on Dylan’s sound check, so I kept moving.  

Now his family says he is dying of cancer.

My favorite song from Levon is Ophelia because it is so….so…southern.

Boards on the window/Mail by the door….

Reminds me of funky neighborhoods in the south, where people come and go.

Although what could be more southern than Levon’s buzz-saw rasp on The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down?

Only met him once. He played Loretta Lynn’s father, Ted Webb, in the movie Coal Miner’s Daughter. I had written the book for Loretta, and the movie people graciously invited me to the openings in Nashville and Louisville.

I was afraid the movie-makers might commit a Beverly Hillbillies version about a part of the world I love. But as soon as I saw Levon as the slender, bashful miner, I knew the movie was going to be respectful.

The second night, there was a party at the hotel, with Loretta and Sissy Spacek jamming together. Sissy could crack up Loretta by imitating her voice and her down-home bended-knee gestures.

Levon was singing backup. It was the women’s show.

During a break in the music, my wife sidled up to Levon and told him how good he was in the movie, and then she added, “You can sing, too.”

He might have had a bit to drink, but not enough that he couldn’t detect the compliment.

“Thank you, ma’am,” he said.

“He was so cute,” she recalled on Tuesday, when we heard the awful news.

 


Comments

Chris
04/17/2012 9:04pm

Thanks for this, George. Levon Helm is truly special.

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Brian Savin
04/18/2012 8:58pm

We live in a very, very large country that comprises so many very different communities that it is hard to conclude we are united in common mission. I don't understand how we as a country can possibly bridge our cultural differences, and sometimes even wonder whether we should try. George, you do see commonality in our various regions, I think, and I always appreciate and admire how you move seamlessly through them. Learning more about how you accomplish that is an insight having widespread usefulness.

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04/17/2013 7:45am

EducationCity is pleased to announce that new ThinkIts have been released within its Learn English module.

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04/17/2013 7:46am

The food adventures and misadventures from a blogger whose love for good food photography sometimes, admittedly, takes precedence over what she's making.

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04/17/2013 7:46am

Education law deals with schools, school systems and school boards charged with educating children. It is a branch of civil law that encompasses the laws and regulations that govern federal and state education.

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04/17/2013 7:47am

Bamboo flooring is beautiful, durable and much more water resistant than any other wood floor on the market. It is becoming increasingly popular in the U.S.

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04/17/2013 7:48am

Your professor can't read your mind. Understand that you only have yourself to blame if you fail to ask a question in class and that very question ends up on the exam.

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Hansen Alexander
04/19/2012 8:27am

George,
Love the story!

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Alan Rubin
04/19/2012 9:40pm

I recently began listening to The Coal Miner’s Daughter read by Sissy Spacek. It feels as if Loretta is talking directly to me and is definitely superior to reading it. It is obvious why George and Loretta were a perfect fit for the book.


This is a rare example of where it was better to see the movie first as you can picture what Loretta was talking about.


The Coal Miner’s Daughter is one of my all-time favorite movies and the scene where Doo is working the crowd during Loretta’s first public appearance alone is worth the price of admission. They certainly had many rocky periods in their marriage, but Doo’s pride in Loretta always shone through.

My daughter spent a senior semester at Union College in Preston, KY where she also worked in a head start program for 4 year olds. Of the twelve students in the program, four were locals. One of them took Jen and a few other northerners to his uncle’s still high up a holler. Jen said that she had a mixture of exhilaration being up there at night and fear that they might be caught. She echoed GV’s sentiments about the people of Appalachia.

There is no easy answer to Brian’s concerns about bridging the cultural divisions in our country. I’m a native of Manhattan, but I lived in rural areas during my college days and early working career. They were not as rural as the hollers in Kentucky, but there was a terrific sense of community. Once the locals realized that you were not judgmental and enjoyed living in their community, they were very accepting.

To me, education is the key to trying to bridge the “Red State-Blue State” divide. Back in the 1950’s and 1960’s, my mother used to read about five newspapers a day as she felt that it was important ubderstand all side of an issue. That is not possible today since the media conglomerates control most of the news and they are only interested in promoting their agenda, which is rarely if ever even-handed and often distorted.

It is amazing how many of today’s electorate unknowingly vote against their best interests. It is not so important that people share my views; but it is essential that they understand the issues and not blindly vote by rote.

Although I have an optimistic view of the common sense of the average American, I do not have any faith in the giants of today’s media to try to educate them.

.

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04/22/2012 10:35am

I hate to say this but the comments are almost as good as your piece! What a wonderful human being he seemed to be and GV's commentary points that out.

Thanks, George

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Chris Vecsey
04/24/2012 1:39pm

May 5, 2007, around midnight at the Levon Helm Studio,Woodstock, New York

I had to see him again. After those concerts of yesteryear, with Dylan and The Band: Forest Hills, Carnegie Hall, Fillmore East, Central Park, Nassau Coliseum, Madison Square Garden. Time, schism, death, illness: all had eclipsed their music, once as full as a moon. I wanted a new view to match my memories.

Americana in the intimacy of The Barn: Honkey Tonk, Blues, Country Ballads, Scratchy Rock & Roll in Black and White. With all those blaring horns, big voices, the rippling electricity of guitars, the booming basses, I wondered what Levon Helm might bring to the mix.

When he glided to his drum set, fisting his sticks, it all came back, and his place in it. The Band was a commune of strong sounds: Rick Danko's whooping vocals, Richard Manuel's falsetto, Garth Hudson's organic virtuosity, Robbie Robertson's high piercing licks. It was possible to miss how much of the sound was Levon Helm's, how much of The Weight he carried, in his hands and throat and face.

The hands: He played the drums with a chunky gravitas, just the way he played the rhythm mandolin.

The voice: the perfect combination of smooth and constricted, a liquid sinew.

The face: what a handsome Chickasaw elder he was, framed by his straight, silver hair.

A beautiful midnight presence, still glowing.

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George Vecsey
04/24/2012 4:17pm

Chris: thanks for that. I'm jealous that you got to see him.I seem to remember your using the word "generous" about the ramble you attended. I should tell people that my youngest sibling (The Educated One, Mom used to say) is not only a writer and scholar but also a musician. Thanks, man. GV

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09/16/2012 5:26pm

I was a huge fan. Saw The Band at Watkins Glen. Part of my life, and always on my Ipod. Thanks, George.

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