Charlie Waller: 1935 to 2004
When IBMA Hall of Honor member Charlie Waller suffered a fatal heart attack on August 18, bluegrass lost one of the greatest interpreters and ambassadors the music has known. Lead vocalist and guitar player for the Country Gentlemen for nearly half a century, Waller was such a distinctive stylist that he was rarely imitated, yet so brilliant a singer that his influence reached into nearly every corner of the genre. He placed dozens of songs into the repertoire through the sheer intensity and conviction of his performances.
Born in Joinerville, Texas, Waller spent his early youth in Louisiana before moving to Washington, D.C., where he was singing and playing in honky-tonks by the time he reached high school age. He was strongly influenced by the pristine enunciation and mellifluous twang of Canadian country singer Hank Snow, but soon learned to apply his superior range to bluegrass as an apprentice with Buzz Busby, a fellow Louisianian who worked the clubs of the DC-Baltimore corridor.
The Country Gentlemen were formed in 1957 and quickly became regional, then national favorites. Unlike most bluegrass groups of the time, they foraged indiscriminately from old folk songs, canonical bluegrass recordings and a dizzying array of pop and country sources, relying in large part on Waller’s voice to sell whatever they came up with to bluegrass, honky-tonk and folk revival audiences alike. A flexible vocalist, Waller could not only lead, but also sing a powerful low tenor under mandolinist John Duffey’s high leads, and even foundation bass parts on the group’s quartets. His rhythm guitar playing punctuated the group’s choppy, muscular rhythm with jittery runs.
For the next 40-plus years, Waller turned a stunning variety of songs into bluegrass staples. Though he showed little interest in song selection — a job handled by others, from early members Eddie Adcock and John Duffey to Doyle Lawson (a member of the band through most of the 1970s) and others after him — Waller made material ranging from John Denver’s “Country Roads” to John Prine’s “Souvenirs” to Gordon Lightfoot’s “Redwood Hill” to Kris Kristofferson’s “Darby’s Castle” to Manfred Mann’s “Fox On The Run” his own. Generations of jam-session pickers and aspiring bands eagerly took them on, enriching the repertoire with sophisticated lyrics and chord structures.
Over the years, members came and went. When the Country Gentlemen were inducted into the IBMA’s Hall of Honor in 1996, it was specifically as the “classic” lineup of Waller, Adcock, Duffey and bass man Tom Gray — and Waller out of necessity took on the role of mentor and ultimate decision-maker. Doyle Lawson, Bill Yates, Bill Emerson, Ricky Skaggs, Jerry Douglas, Mike Lilly, Keith Little, Dwight McCall and many more (over 100 in all) passed through the band’s ranks, but despite their talents, it was Waller’s voice that drew the crowds, and though he was in ill health for the last few years of his life, his rich, resonant voice belied his often devastating appearance.
Songs Of The American Spirit, released shortly after Waller’s death, proves the point in the way that matters most — musically. Much as he did in the Country Gentlemen’s earliest days, Waller offered each of its songs with a unique combination of effortless technique and intense feeling. In a field where continued vitality over the decades is one of the rarest accomplishments, Charlie Waller stood as a giant.