NASHVILLE, Tenn. (August 10, 2015) – It’s commonplace for any songwriter to write a song about their past. But when Bill Anderson, Vicky McGehee and Jamey Johnson co-wrote “The Guitar Song,” eight years ago, they had no idea they were actually writing it about their future.
The pensive story-song about a fictional guitar that hung unwanted
and tattered in an old pawn shop, yet held so many stories of its past
to tell, went on to become the title track of Johnson’s critically
acclaimed fourth album and starts out with the words:
I’m just a guitar in the pawn shop on the corner
And I’m waiting for someone to play me now and then
My strings are kinda rusty and I’m a little dusty
Oh, but you’d be too if you’ve been where I’ve been
In an eerie and remarkable twist of fate, those lyrics now reflect
the true story of a guitar Bill Anderson played when he was first
getting started in country music – and on Saturday night, August 8, on
the stage of the legendary Grand Ole Opry, the authentic Grammer guitar,
given to Anderson personally by Billy Grammer fifty years ago, made its
way back into the hands of its original owner.
The story all began four weeks ago when Anderson’s secretary received
an email from Mike Grauer, the owner of Bell Road Pawn in Phoenix,
Arizona, which read that one of the shop’s customers had pawned an old
guitar which had the words, “This guitar belongs to Bill Anderson,” in the sound hole.
Familiar with the 50-year Grand Ole Opry member and his long list of
self-penned top country hits like “Whiskey Lullaby,” (Brad Paisley,
Alison Krauss) “A Lot Of Things Different” (Kenny Chesney), “Give It
Away” (George Strait), among others, Grauer searched the Internet and
was shocked when he found an old video on YouTube of Anderson playing an
identical Grammer guitar on The Johnny Cash Show. Grauer sent pictures of the relic, and upon investigation, Anderson and his team were able to confirm its authenticity.
“I thought, okay, here it comes, he’s going to want $25,000 for me to
get it back,” Anderson joked. But to the contrary, when the country
star asked Grauer what he would take for the special timepiece, he
replied that he and his wife had always wanted to witness the Grand Ole
Opry, but they’d never had the chance.
Without hesitation and, “before he changed his mind,” Anderson
recalled, he booked two tickets to Nashville and arranged for them to
experience The Grand Ole Opry in a special way — backstage. As Mike and
his wife, Wendie, celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary, Anderson
introduced them on-stage to a captive audience, wistfully telling the
story of his long-lost guitar that had now found its way home.
VIDEO:
https://youtu.be/T0Q7Ngf_EeQ
Anderson said, his voice breaking, “Mike, you and Wendie just have no
idea… you have no idea, what this means to me. I don’t think I ever
played this guitar in the Opry House because we didn’t come here until
1972, but I played it many times at the Ryman. It’s so special to have
it back. Thank you so much. I wish you a wonderful anniversary.”
Laughing, he added, “It may be your anniversary, but I got the present!”
The long-lost guitar hit Anderson’s hands for the first time in 50
years, and he gave its strings a strum as he held back tears of
sentiment. Today, the BMI Icon Award winner and the only songwriter in
the history of the country music genre to have achieved a song on the
charts for seven consecutive decades, Anderson surprised the audience
with a surprise appearance by co-writer and friend, Jamey Johnson, and
the two performed a chill-bump inducing rendition of the now
non-fictional fan-favorite hit, “The Guitar Song.”
Anderson closed the special performance saying, “Thank you to Mike,
Wendie and Jamey, and thank you to Billy Grammer. May you rest in peace,
my friend.”
“Your old guitar will be well taken care of… I promise I’ll never lose it again.”
Bill Anderson is currently on tour across the country, performing in venues from state to state.