In 1983, six years after Emmylou Harris had first popularized it, Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard covered his song "Pancho and Lefty", reaching number one on the Billboard country music chart. Much of Van Zandt’s life was spent touring various dive bars, often living in cheap motel rooms and backwoods cabins. For much of the 1970s, he lived in a simple shack without electricity or a phone.
His influence has been cited by countless artists across multiple genres, and his music has been recorded or performed by numerous artists, including Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Norah Jones, Emmylou Harris, The Counting Crows, Steve Earle, Robert Earl Keen Jr., Nanci Griffith, Guy Clark, Wade Bowen, Gillian Welch, Pat Green and Natalie Maines.
He suffered from a series of drug addictions, alcoholism, and was given a psychiatric diagnosis of bipolar disorder. When he was young, the now-discredited insulin shock therapy erased much of his long-term memory.
Van Zandt died on New Years Day 1997 from cardiac arrythmia caused by health problems stemming from years of substance abuse. A revival of interest in Van Zandt occurred in the 2000s. During the decade, two books, a documentary film (Be Here to Love Me), and numerous magazine articles about the singer were written.
Born in Fort Worth into a wealthy family, Van Zandt was a third-great-grandson of Isaac Van Zandt (a prominent leader of the Republic of Texas) and a second great-nephew of Khleber Miller Van Zandt (a major in the Confederate army and one of the founders of Fort Worth). Van Zandt County in east Texas was named after his family in 1848.
Townes's parents were Harris Williams Van Zandt (1913–1966) and Dorothy Townes (1919–1983). He had two siblings, Bill and Donna (1941–2011). Harris was a corporate lawyer, and his career required the family to move several times during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1952, the family transplanted from Fort Worth to Midland, Texas, for six months before moving to Billings, Montana.
At Christmas in 1956, Townes's father gave him a guitar, which he practiced while wandering the countryside. He would later tell an interviewer that "watching Elvis Presley's October 28, 1956, performance on The Ed Sullivan Show was the starting point for me becoming a guitar player... I just thought that Elvis had all the money in the world, all the Cadillacs and all the girls, and all he did was play the guitar and sing. That made a big impression on me." In 1958 the family moved to Boulder, Colorado. Van Zandt would remember his time in Colorado fondly and would often visit it as an adult. He would later refer to Colorado in "My Proud Mountains", "Colorado Girl", and "Snowin' on Raton". Townes was a good student and active in team sports. In grade school, he received a high IQ score, and his parents began grooming him to become a lawyer or senator. Fearing that his family would move again, he willingly decided to attend the Shattuck School, in Faribault, Minnesota. He received a score of 1170 when he took the SAT in January 1962. His family soon moved to Houston, Texas.
The University of Colorado at Boulder accepted Van Zandt as a student in 1962. In the spring of his second year, his parents flew to Boulder to bring Townes back to Houston, apparently worried about his binge drinking and episodes of depression. They admitted him to the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, where he was diagnosed with manic depression. He received three months of insulin shock therapy, which erased much of his long-term memory. Afterwards, his mother claimed her "biggest regret in life was that she had allowed that treatment to occur". In 1965, he was accepted into the University of Houston's pre-law program. Soon after he attempted to join the Air Force, but was rejected because of a doctor's diagnosis that labelled him "an acute manic-depressive who has made minimal adjustments to life". He quit school around 1967, having been inspired by his singer-songwriter heroes to pursue a career in playing music.
Van Zandt was addicted to heroin and alcohol throughout his adult life. At times he would become drunk on stage and forget the lyrics to his songs. At one point, his heroin habit was so intense that he offered Kevin Eggers the publishing rights to all of the songs on each of his first four albums for $20. At various points, his friends saw him shoot up not just heroin, but also cocaine, vodka, as well as a mixture of rum and Coke. On at least one occasion, he shot up heroin in the presence of his son J.T., who was only eight years old at the time.
As a result of Van Zandt's constant drinking, Harold Eggers, Kevin's brother, was hired on as his tour manager and 24-hour caretaker in 1976, a partnership that would last for the rest of the singer's life. Although the musician was many years older than he was, Eggers would later say that Van Zandt was his "first child." His battles with addiction led him to be admitted to rehab almost a dozen times throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Medical records from his time in recovery centers show that he believed his drinking had become a problem around 1973, and by 1982 he was drinking at least a pint of vodka daily. Doctors' notes reported: "He admits to hearing voices, mostly musical voices", and "Affect is blunted and mood is sad. Judgment and insight is impaired." At various points in his life, he was prescribed to take the antidepressant Zoloft and the mood stabilizer lithium. His final and longest period of sobriety during his adult life was a period of about a year in 1989 and 1990.
Van Zandt has been referred to as a cult musician and "a songwriter's songwriter." Musician Steve Earle, who met him in 1978 and considered Van Zandt a mentor, once called Van Zandt "the best songwriter in the whole world and I'll stand on Bob Dylan's coffee table in my cowboy boots and say that." The quote was printed on a sticker featured on the packing of At My Window, much to Van Zandt's displeasure. In the years following, the quote was often cited by the press, much to Van Zandt and Earle's embarrassment; in 2009, Earle told the New York Times, "Did I ever believe that Townes was better than Bob Dylan? No." But he concluded at the end of the same article that, "As a songwriter, you won't find anybody better." Earle has championed the songwriter on a number of occasions: his eldest son, Justin Townes Earle, also a musician, is named after Van Zandt. Earle wrote the song "Fort Worth Blues" as a tribute to the singer in the late 1990s, and in 2009 released an album titled Townes, which featured all covers of Van Zandt songs.
His Texas-grounded impact stretched farther than country. He has been cited as a source of inspiration by such notable artists as Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Willie Nelson, Guthrie Thomas, John Prine, Lyle Lovett, Chelsea Wolfe, Scott Avett of The Avett Brothers, Emmylou Harris, Nanci Griffith, Cowboy Junkies, Vetiver, Guy Clark, Devendra Banhart, Norah Jones, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, The Be Good Tanyas and Jolie Holland, Rowland S. Howard, Michael Weston King, Josh Ritter, Gillian Welch, Garth Brooks, Simon Joyner, Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes, Caleb Followill of Kings of Leon, Laura Marling, Andrew Adkins and Frank Turner. Folk musician Shakey Graves has credited his fast-paced, rhythmic style of finger picked guitar playing partially to Van Zandt's influence.
In 1994, Israeli singer David Broza performed with Van Zandt during a Writers in the Round concert in Houston. When Van Zandt died, he left a shoe box full of unreleased poems and lyrics with a request that Broza set them to music. The resulting album was Night Dawn: The Unpublished Poetry of Townes Van Zandt.
In 2012, Van Zandt was inducted into the Texas Heritage Songwriters Hall of Fame.
In July 2012, Neurot Recordings released a three-way split album in tribute to Van Zandt, featuring Neurosis singer/guitarists Scott Kelly, Steve Von Till and doom/stoner metal legend Scott "Wino" Weinrich.
On June 18, 2015, Van Zandt was inducted into the second year's ceremony of the Austin City Limits Hall of Fame, along with Asleep at the Wheel, Loretta Lynn, Guy Clark and Flaco Jimenez. Gillian Welch inducted Van Zandt by telling stories about how he had come to her early gigs in Nashville and how he had bolstered her confidence in writing sad songs.
Sixteen Summers Fifteen Falls
Townes Van Zandt Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Fairest skin with eyes of blue
I swear to the Lord that I loved her true
It's a year now she's been gone
Her spirit was as bright as the soft sunshine
Lips the color of strawberry wine
I wish to God she still was mine
After first we lay in love's sweet bed
With one look at her eyes I might have read
All the pain that was flying through her head
Through my guilt I could not see
I turned to her when the morning came
Hungry thoughts racing through my brain
But the knife in her heart screamed herself she'd slain
And a note whispered love too soon
Her old man screamed and her mother cried
All I could do was to wonder why
A girl in her youth was forced to die
Is loving such a crime?
She died (few in the years) with breasts still small
Seeing sixteens summers and fifteen falls
Me and my blindness never realized all
The fear she kept inside
Let me tell you a story 'bout a girl I knew
Fairest skin with eyes of blue
I swear to the Lord that I loved her true
The lyrics of Townes Van Zandt's song "Sixteen Summers Fifteen Falls" tell a tragic story about a girl with fair skin and blue eyes whom the singer dearly loved. The singer regrets not recognizing the pain she was going through even as they lay in love's sweet bed together. They had shared a fleeting moment where their love might have saved her, but it was not enough to prevent her from committing suicide. The girl's youth and forced death leave the singer wondering whether loving someone is a crime.
The lyrics portray the emotions of guilt, regret, and love, and highlight the theme of missed opportunities. The singer lost the girl he loved due to his blindness and selfish thoughts, unable to help the fear she kept inside. The song's somber melody and the depth of its lyrics provide a realistic portrayal of the trauma of suicide and its aftermath.
"Sixteen Summers Fifteen Falls" has been covered by several other artists, including Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, and Willie Nelson. This song, as well as other songs by Townes Van Zandt, have influenced many musicians, including Bob Dylan, Neil Young, and Steve Earle, among others. The lyrics of this song also inspired the title of a graphic novel by Belgian cartoonist Dirk Lambrechts.
Line by Line Meaning
Let me tell you a story 'bout a girl I knew
The songwriter narrates a story about a girl whom he used to know.
Fairest skin with eyes of blue
The girl had beautiful blue eyes and fair skin.
I swear to the Lord that I loved her true
The songwriter claims that he truly loved the girl with all his heart.
It's a year now she's been gone
The girl has been dead for a year.
Her spirit was as bright as the soft sunshine
The girl had a vibrant and lively spirit like soft sunshine.
Lips the color of strawberry wine
The girl had lips that looked like the color of strawberry wine.
I wish to God she still was mine
The songwriter wishes that he still had the girl with him.
The chance won't come again
The opportunity to be with the girl again is unlikely to happen.
After first we lay in love's sweet bed
After their first intimate experience, they shared a bed filled with love.
With one look at her eyes I might have read
The songwriter might have noticed the pain that was in the girl's eyes.
All the pain that was flying through her head
The girl was in pain and the songwriter may have failed to notice it.
Through my guilt I could not see
The songwriter's guilt made it impossible to see the pain the girl was experiencing.
I turned to her when the morning came
The songwriter faced the girl in the morning.
Hungry thoughts racing through my brain
The songwriter had lustful thoughts going through his mind.
But the knife in her heart screamed herself she'd slain
The girl killed herself and the knife in her heart was evidence of it.
And a note whispered love too soon
The girl may have left a note, saying that love had come too soon and caused her death.
Her old man screamed and her mother cried
The girl's father screamed, and her mother cried after learning about her death.
All I could do was to wonder why
The songwriter is left with unanswered questions as to why the girl had to die.
A girl in her youth was forced to die
The girl was made to die even though she was still young.
Is loving such a crime?
The songwriter questions if loving someone could lead to such a tragedy.
She died (few in the years) with breasts still small
The girl was still young, having only experienced sixteen summers and fifteen falls when she died, and her breasts were still small.
Seeing sixteens summers and fifteen falls
The girl had lived through sixteen summers and fifteen falls before her untimely death.
Me and my blindness never realized all
The songwriter was blind to the girl's internal struggles, and he never understood what she was going through.
The fear she kept inside
The girl had been dealing with internal fears that she didn't share with anyone.
Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing
Written by: Townes Van Zandt
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
wheelmanstan
I LOVE the whole "the good the bad the ugly" type sound. Man this is awesome. The man was and is the best of the best, period.
TheEndKing
Wow! Always good to hear some van Zandt that I haven't heard before...
Deimoshunter
My dad had this album. Some great songs on it.
Brandon Floyd
The Ennio Morricone vibe is strong with this one.
Filip Galen
What a gem...
Alexandre Lauret
WOW! Epic western film playing in my head!
Bandit4Pabst
Great Song, Great Songwriter, "And i'll stand on Bob Dylans Coffee Table And Say That"
james gilliland
On one of early albums he credits Townes as an inspiration.
Shawn Wilson
Bandit4Pabst in my cowboy boots
MissNOLA55
If it's not...Should have been in one of the westerns of the time