EVERY LABEL EXECUTIVE TOLD THEM TO MOVE TO NASHVILLE. FOR FORTY YEARS, FOUR MEN FROM A VIRGINIA TOWN OF 25,000 SAID NO — AND BECAME THE MOST DECORATED ACT IN COUNTRY MUSIC HISTORY.They weren’t brothers. None of them was named Statler. They picked the name from a box of tissues in a hotel room.They were four boys from Staunton, Virginia. Sons of farmers and mill workers in the Shenandoah Valley. Boys who learned to harmonize in a church choir before they could shave. Friends who walked the same streets, attended the same elementary school, sat in the same pews on Sunday morning.In 1964, Johnny Cash hired them as his opening act after a five-minute conversation in Roanoke. He’d never even heard them sing.The hits came fast. Flowers on the Wall. A Grammy. National television. Within a year, Music Row was calling. The label demanded they move to Nashville. The managers said staying in a small town was career suicide. The promoters said no real star ever stayed home.Harold Reid looked them dead in the eye and said: “No.”He said it again the next year. And the year after that. For forty-seven years he said no. All four of them did.They bought their old elementary school and made it their headquarters. Every Fourth of July they threw a free festival that drew 100,000 people from all 50 states to a town of 25,000.Nine consecutive CMA Vocal Group of the Year awards. Three Grammys. Both the Country and Gospel Music Halls of Fame. Kurt Vonnegut called them “America’s Poets.”Some men chase the lights of the city. The legends keep the porch light burning.What Harold Reid said to a Nashville executive at the height of their fame — the moment that explains why none of them ever moved — tells you everything about who they really were. – Country Music
The Statler Brothers: A Legacy of Harmony and Home The Statler Brothers: A Legacy of Harmony and Home In the world of country music, success often comes with a set of expectations—particularly the notion that artists must migrate to Nashville, the heart of the industry. Yet for four men from a small town in Virginia, … Read more