HAROLD REID SPENT HIS LIFE GATHERING PEOPLE TOGETHER. WHEN HE DIED, THE WORLD WOULDN’T LET THEM GATHER FOR HIM. Harold Reid sang bass for the Statler Brothers for nearly forty years — three Grammys, a Country Music Hall of Fame ring, thirty-three top ten hits — and never left Staunton, Virginia. Born there, raised his family there, started singing gospel with three childhood friends there in 1948. The town was not a backdrop to his career. It was the career. Everything he built, he built within driving distance of the house he grew up in. He died of kidney failure on April 24, 2020. He was eighty. And because the world was locked inside itself, nobody could gather to say goodbye to a man who had spent his entire life gathering people together. That is not tragedy layered on tragedy. That is an erasure — the one thing Harold Reid represented most, presence and proximity, was the one thing his death was not allowed to have. Staunton tried. The mayor laid a wreath at the Statler Brothers monument downtown, family and council members standing six feet apart in masks. Toby Keith, quarantining in Mexico, posted a video of “Flowers on the Wall” played on a guitar he had bought from a furniture store. No production. No crew. Just refusal to let the silence win. But none of it was what Harold Reid would have had — a room full of people, standing close, singing together. The pandemic took that from him last.
Harold Reid Spent His Life Gathering People Together. When He Died, the World Wouldn’t Let Them Gather for Him. Harold…