THE QUIET ONE — STAUNTON, VIRGINIA, 2014 “When Wilma left, the music left too.” Phil Balsley said that in his living room. Nobody recorded it for the radio. He’d never been the one fans remembered first. For forty-seven years, he stood between Harold Reid’s bass and Don Reid’s lead, holding the baritone — the bridge note, the one that made the harmony feel grounded. The Statler Brothers won two Grammys. They were named CMA Vocal Group of the Year nine times. They opened for Johnny Cash for eight years and sang on the At Folsom Prison album. Kurt Vonnegut called them “America’s Poets.” Phil never wrote a hit. He rarely spoke between songs. Backstage he kept the books, the same way he’d kept them for his father’s sheet metal business in Staunton before any of this began. The other three called him “The Quiet One.” Harold Reid once said he “sang as Balsley as he was named.” On December 28, 2014, Phil’s wife Wilma — his partner of more than fifty years, the Sunday school teacher at Olivet Presbyterian — died at Augusta Health. The Statler Brothers had retired in 2002. The stage lights were already gone. Now the house was quiet too. He stayed in Staunton. Every August 8, fans send birthday cards to a P.O. box in Virginia, addressed to a man most of them couldn’t pick out of a photograph. And the one secret Phil has never told anyone about those forty-seven years on stage — he still keeps it in Staunton.

The Quiet One — Staunton, Virginia, 2014 “When Wilma left, the music left too.” Phil Balsley said those words quietly,…

NASHVILLE, MAY 19, 1979. JESSI COLTER WAS IN LABOR. WAYLON JENNINGS WAS 200 MILES AWAY, TUNING HIS GUITAR FOR A SOLD-OUT SHOW HE REFUSED TO CANCEL. THE BABY CAME AT 2:47 IN THE MORNING. WAYLON HEARD ABOUT IT FROM A PAYPHONE BACKSTAGE AND LIT A CIGARETTE BEFORE HE SAID ANYTHING.They named him Waylon Albright Jennings, but Waylon called him Shooter from the first time he held him. The boy grew up on tour buses and in dressing rooms, sleeping under coats while his father played until 2 AM. Waylon was not a soft father in those years. He was on cocaine. He was on the road 280 nights a year. Shooter has said in interviews that he sometimes went six weeks without seeing him, even when they lived in the same house.Then 1988 happened. Waylon got clean. He looked at his nine-year-old son and saw a stranger he had helped raise from a distance. He cancelled tours. He stayed home. For the last fourteen years of his life, he taught Shooter guitar at the kitchen table, drove him to school, sat in the bleachers at Little League games where nobody knew who he was.Shooter has told one story from those years that he has never told the same way twice — about a night Waylon woke him up at 3 AM with a guitar in his hands and a question that took the boy twenty more years to understand. What Waylon asked him that night, and what Shooter finally answered, is the part of the story that explains the rest.What did your father give you late — and did you ever get to tell him you noticed?

The Question Waylon Jennings Asked Shooter at 3 A.M. Nashville, May 19, 1979. Jessi Colter was in labor, and Waylon…

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NASHVILLE, MAY 19, 1979. JESSI COLTER WAS IN LABOR. WAYLON JENNINGS WAS 200 MILES AWAY, TUNING HIS GUITAR FOR A SOLD-OUT SHOW HE REFUSED TO CANCEL. THE BABY CAME AT 2:47 IN THE MORNING. WAYLON HEARD ABOUT IT FROM A PAYPHONE BACKSTAGE AND LIT A CIGARETTE BEFORE HE SAID ANYTHING.They named him Waylon Albright Jennings, but Waylon called him Shooter from the first time he held him. The boy grew up on tour buses and in dressing rooms, sleeping under coats while his father played until 2 AM. Waylon was not a soft father in those years. He was on cocaine. He was on the road 280 nights a year. Shooter has said in interviews that he sometimes went six weeks without seeing him, even when they lived in the same house.Then 1988 happened. Waylon got clean. He looked at his nine-year-old son and saw a stranger he had helped raise from a distance. He cancelled tours. He stayed home. For the last fourteen years of his life, he taught Shooter guitar at the kitchen table, drove him to school, sat in the bleachers at Little League games where nobody knew who he was.Shooter has told one story from those years that he has never told the same way twice — about a night Waylon woke him up at 3 AM with a guitar in his hands and a question that took the boy twenty more years to understand. What Waylon asked him that night, and what Shooter finally answered, is the part of the story that explains the rest.What did your father give you late — and did you ever get to tell him you noticed?