Singing duets is instinctive, intuitive.
— Rodney Crowell
Since 'Houston Kid,' I've got a pretty good track record. Before that, I wrote some hit songs, but I didn't come into my own until I was about fifty. Before that, I had bursts of talent.
My parents were sharecrop farm kids with no education - seventh, eighth grade.
To be earning a living as an artist at any time, any place is kinda the ultimate gift that you can receive from the universe, and I'm very much aware of that. I get to do exactly what I want to do.
I don't think I can create anything of lasting value unless it comes from the heart.
People ask me, 'What is the mystique of the Texas songwriter?' Well, we ran barefoot from March until November. I think there's something about being a barefoot kid that gets you closer to the place - you take root.
I have declared my loyalty to Americana.
It varies from song to song, but melody was always easy for me.
My preference for female company is based for the most part on the fact that women are more self-aware than men, in my experience.
As a poet, Will Rogers just had this natural conversational style.
So much of inspiration comes from collaboration with other musicians.
For me, my career has never been about what I've done. But it's been about becoming, achieving, and pushing myself further.
My mother met my father at a Roy Acuff concert.
I wrote a song a good long while ago, 'I Ain't Livin' Long Like This,' that has been around and been recorded by a lot of people, but it was basically childhood memory.
I'm a vulnerable guy.
I've had a nice career. I'm no David Bowie or Bruce Springsteen out there. I'm not an icon. I'm just a working artist.
I have a history, and I am proud of my legacy as a songwriter, all of the songs that I've brought forth into our culture. I'm proud of that.
Collaboration is a vital part of my creative life. I've had success with Guy Clark and Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash.
I've always said that Guy Clark is a regional songwriter without being regional. He's global. His craft is like, well, Larry McMurtry would be an example. I kind of see Guy Clark and Larry McMurtry in the same wave.
I think, back in the '80s when I was having hits all the time, I took it for granted.
I'm under-appreciated, of course.
When I was doing something on someone else's dime, I was inclined to try to anticipate what they wanted. I knew that wasn't what an artist was supposed to do. In funding my own music, I found my voice.
My people came from western Tennessee and western Kentucky.
Whether they are actual poets or their music exemplifies a poetic sensibility, generally speaking, the Americana artist shuns commercial compromise in favor of a singular vision. Which resonates with me.
I can stitch a song together in about an hour anytime you want, but it won't have the depth.
The old handbook on writing is 'Write what you know.' I come from an autobiographical starting place almost all of the time, but it would be a mistake to presume that I'm not using fiction to extend the narrative.
I will say this: I've always sort of had maybe an inflated sense of my ability to sequence songs in a narrative flow.
Collaboration allows me to challenge myself to find a new passion for music.
Over the years, I've come to realize that writing 'I Ain't Living Long Like This' was an exercise in combined musical influence, mostly that of Hank Williams, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Beatles, and Bob Dylan - artists no one has ever heard of.
I'm a pretty successful songwriter and known in some circles, but I didn't think the story of my career was of any real entertainment value.
I feel like I'm a realized artist, but hey, the good news is I can get better, and I'm going to continue to aim for that.
As I started to study old blues recordings and really pay attention to my favorites, it really started to come to me that all of my favorite pieces of music weren't produced, they were performed. The producer is nearly invisible: no thumbprint other than the composition and the performers.
I don't make music for the radio. And when I was being played on the radio a lot, I didn't.
I'm enough of a southeast Texas boy - there's enough white trash in my blood that when somebody gives me money to make a record, I feel like I have to please them instead of myself.
I knew Townes Van Zandt a little bit.
To me, Hank Williams is the first rock-and-roll star.
I'm very grateful that I was given the ability to create.
As a young man, I craved fame. I was trying to fix holes in my soul that were there from childhood.
The '90s weren't my finest years artistically. I wrote some good songs in there, but in terms of my vision of getting the paint on the canvas, that was not my best time. I didn't like the fact that I had fallen into mediocrity.
That young man that I was in 1988 - I was insecure. Besides making good music, I wanted to be cool; I wanted to be accepted and stuff.
As a creative individual, I really go out of my way to avoid the corporate scene in terms of songwriting. If the first question is how much money is it going to make, I'm going to be in trouble anyway.
As an artist, one of the ingredients to doing good work is self-awareness, and that's something I cultivate.
At the end of the day, Johnny Cash was a poet.
I concern myself with timelessness all the time. If you're not swinging for museum quality, your mind is not in the right place. It doesn't mean you get there, but at least it's the intent.
Invariably, collaboration leads to new forms of self-expression and to the things that move you.
The beautiful despair is never fruitless. It keeps you going. Like when I first heard Bob Dylan do 'Things Have Changed,' or any time I see any work of art really beautifully done, like Michelangelo's 'The David' or that movie 'Lost in Translation' - it inspires me to try and find my own version of that.
My mother was an oral storyteller. She would tell stories over and over again.
Pretty much any artist that I know of that has found that mentor status, if they're generous and okay to bestow a bit of mentor-type information, it's do what you feel, not what you think.
Sustaining a narrative in sentences and paragraphs is very different from songwriting. But the dedication to the craft and just the endurance that it takes, you know, to stick with it and believe you can pull it out and make it real and finish it, I learned that a long time ago writing songs.
Adolescence in our culture for a young woman, for a girl, is a hard road.