Texas’ Jerry Jeff Walker wasn’t originally from the Lone Star State, nor was he originally Jerry Jeff Walker. Born on March 16, 1942, and raised in upstate New York as Ronald Clyde Crosby, he reinvented himself by the early 1970s as an Austin-based proponent of the burgeoning outlaw country genre. The name and geographical change notwithstanding, Walker—who passed away on October 23, 2020, about a month before the release of a new anthology of his early work—was the real deal. A key influence on numerous other musicians, he issued dozens of albums in his half-century recording career.
The anthology, Mr. Bojangles: The Atco/Elektra Years, packages five of the most noteworthy ones. It includes Mr. Bojangles (1968), whose title track, Walker’s most famous song, has been covered by everyone from Nilsson to Bob Dylan and provided a major hit for the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.
Also here: Five Years Gone (1969), which features a live-on-the-radio version of “Mr. Bojangles”; Bein’ Free (1970), which is highlighted by Walker’s tale of a character called “Stoney”; Jerry Jeff (1978), which includes covers of songs by such fellow outlaw country artists as Rodney Crowell, Guy Clark and Keith Sykes; and Too Old to Change (1979), which incorporates such numbers as “I’ll Be Your San Antone Rose,” by Clark’s wife Susanna, Paul Siebel’s “Then Came the Children,” and Kris Kristofferson’s “Me and Bobby McGee.”
As these albums demonstrate, there was much more to Walker than “Mr. Bojangles.” He was a first-rate songwriter, capable of sweet, evocative folk tunes that limn memorably iconoclastic characters; and he could also churn out raucous country like Bein’ Free’s “Where Is the DAR When You Really Need Them?” as well as lilting, upbeat numbers like Mr. Bojangles’ “Gypsy Songman.”
And his vocals fit the material to a tee. Witness, for example, his aforementioned cover of “Me and Bobby McGee.” This song has been well recorded by many artists, but none of them do a better job than Walker of making you conjure up a singer who is “busted flat in Baton Rouge.”
Related: Musicians we lost in 2020
The collection is available to order here.
3 Comments
Don’t forget that Jerry Jeff Walker was in Circus Maximus, the band that recorded “The Wind”, one of the great FM tracks from the classic days.
Great song. I have a playlist of FM songs from that era and it’s the first one on it. But it’s hard to find now–the album is out of print and it doesn’t appear on any compilations.
What I’ll always think about JJW is David Bromberg’s speech when he performed Mr. Bojangles live and described how Jerry Jeff met the protagonist of the song in a drunk tank. “Jerry Jeff wasn’t there on a research project…”