We arrive early at George S. Lindsey Theater in Florence, Alabama. My wife and I are driving a small van which used to belong to a plumber. A white work van, which looks like a Labcorp vehicle arriving at your place of work to gather stool samples.
Tonight, I am playing with Three On a String for our annual Christmas tour. We will perform four times throughout the state of Alabama, singing Christmas songs, telling stories, and presenting our show to admiring crowds of dozens. Next week is Albertville. The week after that is—I don’t remember.
But anyway, this band has been together since Richard Nixon was in office. The band was founded by Jerry Ryan and Bobby Horton who began by playing 14 songs at a bluegrass festival in 1971.
“We only knew seven songs,” said Jerry. “So we played them twice.”
Fast forward 54 years, Three On a String is a national treasure. Today, you will see white-haired men onstage who play music and tell jokes for a living. But long ago—you should’ve seen them—they were brown-haired men who played music and told jokes for a living.
I suppose what I’m getting at is: These men have not changed in over half a century. They started by playing dance halls, jukes, beer joints, and theaters all over this country. And that’s what they still do.
They still drive their old van full of instruments. They still swap driving shifts. They still pull off the highway every four-to-six miles…