I am in the car with Bobby and Andy. Bobby is driving. We’re on our way to Blount County tonight. Three on a String has a gig, and I’m riding shotgun.
We’re crammed in a ‘95 Crown Vic, doing 75 mph on Highway 160 toward Hayden. The car is almost 30 years old, but it still rides like a cloud.
Bobby pats the dashboard.
“They just don’t make’em like this anymore,” he says.
“They sure don’t,” Andy agrees.
You’d like these guys. Bobby and Andy both have white hair, cheerful dispositions, and a lifelong proclivity toward music. They are my father’s age. I’ve always gravitated toward men who remind me of my late father.
Likewise, I’ve always gravitated toward musicians. Because, sadly, I am one.
The life of a musician is hard. The money sucks. The hours suck. And often the audiences are so inebriated you could blindfold them with strips of dental floss.
But if you’re born as a musicman, there is only one vice that will nourish your soul.
Bobby and Andy are band members of Three on
a String, which was recently inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame. These guys’ names are forever engraved alongside the likes of Jimmie Rodgers, Emmylou Harris, Nat Cole, Percy Sledge, and Lionel Richie.
The band has been together for 52 years. And they’re still going strong.
“I think we’ve been together since Nixon was in office,” says Bobby.
The band is in their 70s and 80s. And they have seen everything. Played everywhere. Done it all. They’ve been to every playhouse, operahouse, doghouse, henhouse, and outhouse in the U.S.
But fame has not changed them. They still drive their own beat-up vans. They still erect their own sound system. They still set up their own CD tables.
And when the gigs are finished, when the long nights are over, when the manager pays them, one of the band guys…