“THEY SANG ABOUT THE PAST, BUT THEY TOUCHED US RIGHT WHERE WE STOOD.” It was just a song about a high school reunion. “The Class of ’57.” Simple lyrics about who got married, who got rich, and who passed away. But when The Statler Brothers performed it live, something strange happened in the room. A couple held hands a little tighter. A woman wiped a tear thinking about a friend she hadn’t called in years. A man stared into the distance, remembering the touchdown he scored forty years ago. Don Reid didn’t write an anthem for rockstars. He wrote an anthem for the rest of us. The ones who work 9-to-5, who drive used cars, who wonder “what if.” That night, as the harmony washed over the crowd, nobody felt ordinary. For three minutes, every person in that room was the star of their own movie. They weren’t just singing about 1957. They were singing about us.
“THEY SANG ABOUT THE PAST, BUT THEY TOUCHED US RIGHT WHERE WE STOOD.” It was just a song about a…