ONE EVENING BEFORE HAROLD REID LEFT THIS WORLD, THE VOICE THAT ONCE HELD THE STATLER BROTHERS TOGETHER HAD GROWN QUIET INSIDE HIS VIRGINIA HOME. There were no stage lights in Staunton that night. No applause. No playful joke waiting between songs. Just Harold, surrounded by family, after years of fighting kidney failure — the deep bass voice that once made millions feel at home now softer than anyone wanted to hear. For decades, Harold was more than the low note in The Statler Brothers. He was the warmth under the harmony. The smile behind the sorrow. The man who could make a crowd laugh, then leave them wiping their eyes before the song was over. Maybe that is why his passing hurt differently. When Harold Reid died on April 24, 2020, country music did not just lose a singer. It lost the voice that made memory sound familiar. And whenever “The Class of ’57” plays, it still feels like he is there — holding the last note for all of them.
One Evening Before Harold Reid Left This World, the Voice That Once Held The Statler Brothers Together Had Grown Quiet…