What a wonderful rendition of this song. Poignant, heartfelt, sung with mournful sadness. Yes, it's Townes' song, but I feel it is his story, & it's our story. A story of conflict of decision, loneliness, sadness & regret in old age, the acceptance of that which we cannot change. One of the best songs that reveals the soul of a life lived with regrets. A song that never fails to bring tears to my eyes.
Dave and Gillian both are top end musicians. Love them both. I played clarinet for 8 years in school, there tone and their harmonies are both excellent to my trained ear.
The general public does not recognise class if it walks up on them on the side walk and grabs them by the balls. Free quote from the movie "The fabulous Baker Boys".
@@tomformanek3312 Townes Van Zandt's songs are challenging for a lot of people, and his vocal delivery is just about impossible to match. Willie and Merle always seemed too polished, and leaned too hard into the sort of surface cowboy story, without really connecting (to my ear) with the addiction aspects of the story. This really feels like it is leaning into the other side of it, and of course these two play and sing together so brilliantly!
I am American from Brooklyn. In my childhood and tween years pre-1974 I heard this song song by Nora,ostensibly my three little brothers sitter.?I was twelve and a part and heard Nora sing this just once in the courtyard on Clark Street to a young woman’s picking a nylon guitar in 1974 and was fixed in time and place like never again. Never been to Eire but my heart
Gillian's voice has a very calming effect on me. I'd listen to her sing the phone book. She's a beautiful person and it shows through. I had the wonderful opportunity of meeting her once and she was very quiet and unassuming but very polite and friendly.
beautiful cover of a great song , Gillian and David are the greatest Americana artists out there , Townes never got recognition when he was alive sadly but he was a great songwriter and a true artist
Wow! I could also listen to them forever....their voices have soft wavering edges and their harmony is gentle like the unexpected breeze, wavering and trembling. This makes for some powerful music.
I played and sang this song for years before it dawned on me what it was about--a classic case of betrayal. They gave Lefty a choice: turn in Pancho, or do hard time. He got his 30 pieces of silver and fled to Ohio (" Where he got the bread to go, there ain't nobody knows") So he sits in his cheap hotel, regretting the choice he made. Brilliant, Townes ( and great version, Gillian and David)
@@claudioalcara I’ve always thought this too! I just figured I was wrong because no one else mentioned this theory. Mine differs a little from yours though. I think Pancho faked his own death or killed someone in his place. Then he took the name Lefty and fled to Ohio to get away from the federales and his old life of crime.
I appreciate this interpretation more and more. It glides relaxed without any haste from word to word and from note to note. The listener gets an impression of getting free from the fetters of time.
"The dust that Pancho bit down south, ended up in Lefty's mouth." No one ever doing this song has caught that - the way she says, almost sneers "mouth" - just the way Gillian Welch did. To say this is the best version of this perfectly written, beautifully performed Townes Van Zandt song is somehow an understatement. What a lesson in the fragility of friendship. And the bitter consequences of betrayal.
I’ve always kind of looked at this song as a meditation on mortality. Pancho gets hung and dies young, but he’s remembered through legend. Lefty survives but fades into obscurity. When he dies no one will remember him. I think the question Townes is asking in this song is which is more preferable? It’s like the Neil Young line, “It’s better to burn out than to fade away”. I think the whole story of the song is sort of a big metaphor for that question. I think people get too hung up on the betrayal aspect of the song. Actually, I think people sometimes get too wrapped up in the story the song tells altogether and misses the deeper meaning. Like I said, I think the story is a metaphor. But that’s just my 2 cents. Dave and Gillian did this song better than just about anyone.
This masterfully rendered version lures me into a dream-like state- where I appreciate the complex and unapologetic imperfection of David Rawling's harmonies in counterpart with his impeccable lead guitar- and Gillian's simple and believable down-home vocal style. Not many songs can carry on for 7:13 like this one. Excellent work!
wrong again, Bob. Gee dubs (that's what I call her) and myself are made for each other. Got it, Bobby boy? huh? Good. Have a mediocre day, and a FABULOUS NIGHT!
Wonderful to listen to wile your holding your💓💓!!! ....without any kind of doubt your true love ....relaxing n feeling nothing but love come from his breath
Wow. I always considered the Merle and Willie version to be the definitive take on that song. But I always heard Merle and Willie. With this one, I heard the song. Heartbreaking.
I love the way David Rawlings and Gillian Welch sound together. I would not want it any other way. I think their delivery is right on the money every time.
First time I've heard this version. Holy Smokes(!), this is REALLY RIDICULOUSLY GOOD !!!!! LOVE Townes, Gillian and Dave. The three combined make for something special. Thanks for posting this! ... And Dave's soulful subtle solos here: WOW! And yes, Gillian and Dave really have this gift for doing incredible covers. This might actually be my favorite, even though it's the first time I've heard it. Somewhere Townes is smiling ... and proud and moved. Simply Beautiful !!!!!
their talent is self-evident...they'll play ANY song that tickles their fancy....I especially like this slower tempo version of the Townes van Zandt classic
So very well sayed, JyHiable - "an impression of getting free from the fetters of time." - such a gift of their performance! I LOVE Gillian's tiny sigh at .02 -the very beginning (that is her letting slip the fetters of time, preparing to Join with David in performance) free."
love this. Saw them do this many years ago. Brings back a lot of memories. I've changed a lot since those days but this song remains and it's haunting and lovely. Townes would have loved this
Yes it's quite lovely but in all honesty it isn't a patch on the version Emmylou Harris did on one of her 70's album - I think it was LUXURY LINER but I'm not certain... That is one hell of a version of this great song.
thats very poetic - im a not very talented singer songwriter, but I am so happy to have recently discovered Davis Rawlings, I cannot find anything wrong with his tones, there are a couple of mistakes in live playing, but for christ sake he is human and as musicians, we all hit bum notes. I'v been playing a tiny bit with his style, it's a bloody killer, in truth he is in my mind, brilliant - we could get perfection with computers but god that would be really dull in truth.
Pop quiz: If the earth is spinning at the rate of ~1000 miles per hour, how far have we come in that seven minutes and thirteen seconds? This is one of the greatest things that these two have ever performed, and thank God someone was there to record it.
@mjohnsen7 Wow! I've listened to it for years and never knew that. Thanks so much. This is indeed a great version. And Dave's guitar playing is just exquisite.
hickory ? hell that is right up the road from me, I don't remember what I was doing sept.27 1997, but I know what I should have been doing. I should have been in hickory
About the same Cainen, juust a couple miles for me too. No clue where I was but there I should've been, like too many close-by show since I've had to pass on. The few I have made were always that much more worth it though.
It's definitely a subtle, unique feeling to their version of it. A gentle but powerful solemness they way Rawling's melody on the guitar fits with Welch's voice singing the lyrics. They make it sound like Townes Van Zandt wrote it to be sung with a female voice.
It's a shame 480p isn't very clear on a big screen TV. This version is very good and so is Emmylou Harris's version way back before the turn of the Millennium century where we didn't have the luxury of you tube. Like in the 1970s when broadcast TV disappointed many of us.
People in a recording studios labor for weeks, using 64 tracks, twiddling knobs on compressors and limiters, adjusting this and that, splicing this take into that take, all to try to simulate something close to the sound and the feeling created by Gillian and David in this live recording.
@@pmichaelsummer The info on the video identifies this as a live recording from September 27, 1997 at Hickory, NC. My ears tell me that that info is correct. FWIW an "outtake" is a track which was recorded but not selected to be included on an album, and could be either a live recording or a studio recording.
This is an amazing covering by perfect musicians. This is one of the best songs ever written.
"Townes Van Zandt is the best songwriter in the world, and I'll stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table in my cowboy boots and birthday suit and say that"
What a wonderful rendition of this song. Poignant, heartfelt, sung with mournful sadness. Yes, it's Townes' song, but I feel it is his story, & it's our story. A story of conflict of decision, loneliness, sadness & regret in old age, the acceptance of that which we cannot change. One of the best songs that reveals the soul of a life lived with regrets. A song that never fails to bring tears to my eyes.
@Greg Normal method actor Cortez the killer
David Rawlings' tone is a thing of sheer beauty - great harmonies.
Dave and Gillian both are top end musicians. Love them both. I played clarinet for 8 years in school, there tone and their harmonies are both excellent to my trained ear.
i just cant understand why these two have not gotten more recognition than they have they sure deserve it
Requires good taste.
The general public does not recognise class if it walks up on them on the side walk and grabs them by the balls. Free quote from the movie "The fabulous Baker Boys".
Cause they told the truth
@@g00glyelm0 I'm sorry what does "they told the truth" mean?
Best version ever. Haunting and manages to nail the harmonies that other greats have failed to get.
In your humble opinion of course?
@@tomformanek3312 Townes Van Zandt's songs are challenging for a lot of people, and his vocal delivery is just about impossible to match. Willie and Merle always seemed too polished, and leaned too hard into the sort of surface cowboy story, without really connecting (to my ear) with the addiction aspects of the story. This really feels like it is leaning into the other side of it, and of course these two play and sing together so brilliantly!
@@tomformanek3312 yeah shut up
I have seen them in concert--twice. They are American treasures. Full stop.
With all due respect to Townes and Emmylou and everyone else I think this has become my favorite version
same - that M/F harmony just gives the chorus so much more punch
@@russbrownmusic the harmonies are special, as is the tempo and the guitar
Mine also.
Never heard this version before OUCH
I am American from Brooklyn. In my childhood and tween years pre-1974 I heard this song song by Nora,ostensibly my three little brothers sitter.?I was twelve and a part and heard Nora sing this just once in the courtyard on Clark Street to a young woman’s picking a nylon guitar in 1974 and was fixed in time and place like never again. Never been to Eire but my heart
A powerful and beautiful version of what has to be one of the greatest songs ever written.
An incredible version of one of my personal favorites....Thank You Gillian & David, you guys make everything better!
Gillian's voice has a very calming effect on me. I'd listen to her sing the phone book. She's a beautiful person and it shows through. I had the wonderful opportunity of meeting her once and she was very quiet and unassuming but very polite and friendly.
Mike C I agree 100%
beautiful cover of a great song , Gillian and David are the greatest Americana artists out there , Townes never got recognition when he was alive sadly but he was a great songwriter and a true artist
Wow! I could also listen to them forever....their voices have soft wavering edges and their harmony is gentle like the unexpected breeze, wavering and trembling. This makes for some powerful music.
I do love their picking. AND her voice.
I played and sang this song for years before it dawned on me what it was about--a classic case of betrayal. They gave Lefty a choice: turn in Pancho, or do hard time. He got his 30 pieces of silver and fled to Ohio (" Where he got the bread to go, there ain't nobody knows") So he sits in his cheap hotel, regretting the choice he made. Brilliant, Townes ( and great version, Gillian and David)
Huh? Lefty wasn't around when Pancho was live.
Pancho and Lefty are the same person, which is Townes himself. There’s a cool story about this, check it out 🙂
Cool. I got from the lyrics that they were brothers, but: both Townes? Seems about right.
@@davidgrady1064 try this 😊 th-cam.com/video/bFdGZUsxE-I/w-d-xo.html
@@claudioalcara I’ve always thought this too! I just figured I was wrong because no one else mentioned this theory.
Mine differs a little from yours though. I think Pancho faked his own death or killed someone in his place. Then he took the name Lefty and fled to Ohio to get away from the federales and his old life of crime.
What a reverential elegy. Reverance for the great songwriter, but an elegy that captures sadness, waste and loss. What a gorgeous different take.
I appreciate this interpretation more and more. It glides relaxed without any haste from word to word and from note to note. The listener gets an impression of getting free from the fetters of time.
Well said. I totally agree
Like a long slow tale round a campfire at days end. Pure elegy.
get a grip. it'a song my townes
Phantastic version of a classic!
"The dust that Pancho bit down south, ended up in Lefty's mouth."
No one ever doing this song has caught that - the way she says, almost sneers "mouth" - just the way Gillian Welch did.
To say this is the best version of this perfectly written, beautifully performed Townes Van Zandt song is somehow an understatement. What a lesson in the fragility of friendship. And the bitter consequences of betrayal.
Well said
Well said💯✖️
I’ve always kind of looked at this song as a meditation on mortality. Pancho gets hung and dies young, but he’s remembered through legend. Lefty survives but fades into obscurity. When he dies no one will remember him. I think the question Townes is asking in this song is which is more preferable? It’s like the Neil Young line, “It’s better to burn out than to fade away”. I think the whole story of the song is sort of a big metaphor for that question. I think people get too hung up on the betrayal aspect of the song. Actually, I think people sometimes get too wrapped up in the story the song tells altogether and misses the deeper meaning. Like I said, I think the story is a metaphor. But that’s just my 2 cents. Dave and Gillian did this song better than just about anyone.
@@cdane7 another great version, but I listen to Emmylou over and over and still rate her as the best I've ever heard.
So tender and sweet; almost a lullaby, Betcha Townes would've loved hearing them. Their version makes me weep.
You know I read that she said he'd go their early gigs in Nashville and encouraged her to write sad songs. Made me really happy to know that.
Keep writing sad songs that is.
Sad to think Townes had died only 9 months before this. RIP to one of the true songwriters of our time.
This masterfully rendered version lures me into a dream-like state- where I appreciate the complex and unapologetic imperfection of David Rawling's harmonies in counterpart with his impeccable lead guitar- and Gillian's simple and believable down-home vocal style. Not many songs can carry on for 7:13 like this one. Excellent work!
David Rawlings is a very talented guitarists. I feel that David and Gillian are a match made in heaven.
wrong again, Bob. Gee dubs (that's what I call her) and myself are made for each other. Got it, Bobby boy? huh? Good. Have a mediocre day, and a FABULOUS NIGHT!
Wonderful to listen to wile your holding your💓💓!!! ....without any kind of doubt your true love ....relaxing n feeling nothing but love come from his breath
I agree wholeheartedly Robert. I love playing along with these guys
They sure are
Wow. I always considered the Merle and Willie version to be the definitive take on that song. But I always heard Merle and Willie. With this one, I heard the song. Heartbreaking.
The definitive remains Townes' version, but there are great covers as well (this, and Merle and Willie's).
@@pmichaelsummer Townes's performance in Heartworn Highways is an impossible standard for others to meet.
@@herrrmike Oh my. God has spoken to us!
In my humble opinion of course.
One of my all-time fave songs. What a FANTASTIC version., which I've never heard before. Townes' songs will last forever!
Beautiful guitar by David. A joy to listen to. Sweet and moving.
I love the way David Rawlings and Gillian Welch sound together. I would not want it any other way. I think their delivery is right on the money every time.
Every now and then, something beautiful comes out of heaven...
everything welch & rawlings touch is gold.
Another beautiful rendition of an awesome song; kinda like seeing several vintage cars of the same make and model, but painted differently
My band does this song. We will never do it again until we get somewhere close to this arrangement. SUPER!
keep on playin amigo
This is god-awfully beautiful.
First time I've heard this version. Holy Smokes(!), this is REALLY RIDICULOUSLY GOOD !!!!! LOVE Townes, Gillian and Dave. The three combined make for something special. Thanks for posting this!
... And Dave's soulful subtle solos here: WOW! And yes, Gillian and Dave really have this gift for doing incredible covers. This might actually be my favorite, even though it's the first time I've heard it.
Somewhere Townes is smiling ... and proud and moved.
Simply Beautiful !!!!!
Love her voice. Very distinctive. Good cover of a great song.
Exquisitely beautiful cover.
Thank you.God bless you in all your ways!
Philip
Beautiful version of this great song x
their talent is self-evident...they'll play ANY song that tickles their fancy....I especially like this slower tempo version of the Townes van Zandt classic
I'm so amazed about the way that Gillian and David seems to got their own secret notes that sets them apart from... well... all the rest :)
True!
beautifull voice(s), beautifull guitar playing.
david & gillian are the best.....
thanks for posting
really a fine cover - nice vocal feeling and moody guitar play
Perfect and Beautiful.
wow. Love this song. didn't think it could be covered. I was wrong. But then David Rawlings is a genius.
But the most famous version is a cover?
@@johnanderson1038 Right - I doubt the percentage of people who've heard the TvZ version is a small percentage.
Nobody makes me nostalgic for my old-folkie days as much as Gillian Welch does.
Amazing, soulful interpretation of this famous song. Something special about this version.
my god ,what a beautiful version of this...
Gillian's vocals are pitch-perfect and David's guitar work is exquisite. Townes Van Zandt would have loved this performance.
th-cam.com/video/X7zsr9R_S6o/w-d-xo.html
Hi Friends! Many thanks for this great cover of my love Townes van Zandt. You are wonderful! Many thanks from Rome!. Claudio.
Love it, love it - a beautifully tender version of this song, very subtle, goes right through me. It brings back so many memories....
I guess its a question of taste --- I think they are great --- I've seen them live a few times --- I could listen to them forever :)
Pity, it's only a still. I wish this concert was available somewhere. Great song and performing duo.
I always liked this song . Now I love it
So very well sayed, JyHiable - "an impression of getting free from the fetters of time." - such a gift of their performance!
I LOVE Gillian's tiny sigh at .02 -the very beginning (that is her letting slip the fetters of time, preparing to Join with David in performance) free."
Enough said about this don't you think, dont want the readers to get bored, thank you both.
A great version, more peaceful and accepting than most versions.
Townes would have loved this
you knew him, personally?
Favourite version of this song. Other than the Townes heartworn highways version. They sing it with the conviction of having written it.
Daves guitar style is incredible. Gillian and he match up so well.
love this. Saw them do this many years ago. Brings back a lot of memories. I've changed a lot since those days but this song remains and it's haunting and lovely. Townes would have loved this
Wow, just beautiful.
She's got a great voice and he's a superb guitar player..nice cover.
fh horn
Not a cover - their song - they wrote it!
angliase Townes van zandt
They did not write it. Townes wrote it.
She would have been a big star back when phony looks didn't mean everything. Now it's Carrie Underwood. Give me a break.
I enjoyed this. I don't enjoy many Townes covers.
BEST VERSION OF THIS SONG BY FAR!!!!!!
Absolutely beautiful 😊🎶❤️😊🎶❤️
David Rawlings...fantastic guitar picking....
I love these two. Gillian and David are just about the best
This is just lovely.
Yes it's quite lovely but in all honesty it isn't a patch on the version Emmylou Harris did on one of her 70's album - I think it was LUXURY LINER but I'm not certain... That is one hell of a version of this great song.
True. (and it was Luxury Liner. That was beautiful. So's this though.
I would aspire too this level of talent.
Fabulous...as you would expect.
thanks for posting this. I've been following Gillian and David's work since '97, and have never heard them cover any of Townes' work.
This and Steve Earle's version are the best covers of Towne's song. Haunting.
Best country song Ever
This is a wonderful version of a great TVZ song.
thats very poetic - im a not very talented singer songwriter, but I am so happy to have recently discovered Davis Rawlings, I cannot find anything wrong with his tones, there are a couple of mistakes in live playing, but for christ sake he is human and as musicians, we all hit bum notes. I'v been playing a tiny bit with his style, it's a bloody killer, in truth he is in my mind, brilliant - we could get perfection with computers but god that would be really dull in truth.
Flipping Fantastic !
Pop quiz: If the earth is spinning at the rate of ~1000 miles per hour, how far have we come in that seven minutes and thirteen seconds? This is one of the greatest things that these two have ever performed, and thank God someone was there to record it.
pancho & lefty is golden music
Great musicians, beautiful
Exquisite 💜
Fabulous version.
Very beautiful and peaceful.
My favorite version (cover) of one of the finest song ever I have ever heard. Thankks for posting!!
@mjohnsen7 Wow! I've listened to it for years and never knew that. Thanks so much. This is indeed a great version. And Dave's guitar playing is just exquisite.
David Rawlings guitar is like a soft rippling stream glittering in the sun.
Perfect description!
wonderful!
Thanks!
Musik kann so schön sein
My Favorite cover of this Townes Van Zandt jem.
hickory ? hell that is right up the road from me, I don't remember what I was doing sept.27 1997, but I know what I should have been doing. I should have been in hickory
Excellent, Cainen; right you are.
About the same Cainen, juust a couple miles for me too. No clue where I was but there I should've been, like too many close-by show since I've had to pass on. The few I have made were always that much more worth it though.
Bo,Will. Dirt and Rocky - Never forgotten. When you guys said goodbye my heart was left empty. See you again some day. Green fields and sun I hope.
No one cares what or whom you trust. Just enjoy the unbelievably great music.
amazing!
It's definitely a subtle, unique feeling to their version of it. A gentle but powerful solemness they way Rawling's melody on the guitar fits with Welch's voice singing the lyrics. They make it sound like Townes Van Zandt wrote it to be sung with a female voice.
It's a shame 480p isn't very clear on a big screen TV. This version is very good and so is Emmylou Harris's version way back before the turn of the Millennium century where we didn't have the luxury of you tube. Like in the 1970s when broadcast TV disappointed many of us.
Great cover!
That makes it all the better.
People in a recording studios labor for weeks, using 64 tracks, twiddling knobs on compressors and limiters, adjusting this and that, splicing this take into that take, all to try to simulate something close to the sound and the feeling created by Gillian and David in this live recording.
Is it a live recording, or an out take?
@@pmichaelsummer The info on the video identifies this as a live recording from September 27, 1997 at Hickory, NC. My ears tell me that that info is correct.
FWIW an "outtake" is a track which was recorded but not selected to be included on an album, and could be either a live recording or a studio recording.
Very, very nice.
THIS IS THE BEST VERSION
wow Townes forever