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Daniel W. "Danny" Flowers (born 1948) is an American songwriter, recording artist, and multi-instrumentalist based in Nashville. He is known for creating songs that became hits for other artists. His best-known song is "Tulsa Time" recorded by Don Williams which became the number one Billboard Country song of 1979. It was later recorded by Eric Clapton to reach number 30 on Pop charts. Flowers' other songs written for Don Williams include "Back in My Younger Days", "Señorita", and "To Be Your Man". He co-wrote "Gulf Coast Highway", recorded by Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson, and Nanci Griffith. Emmylou Harris' 1975 album, Pieces of the Sky derives its title from a Flowers lyric in his included song, "Before Believing". His music has roots in the blues genre. His skill as a session musician guitarist distinguishes him from most of Nashville's other songwriters.[1]

Danny Flowers
Danny Flowers, April, 2022
Background information
Birth nameDaniel Wayne Flowers
Born (1948-08-16) August 16, 1948 (age 73)
Henderson, North Carolina
Genres
  • Blues
  • country
Occupation(s)Songwriter, musician, producer
InstrumentsGuitar, vocals, slide guitar, harmonica, dobro
Years active1970–present

Early life


Flowers was born and raised in Henderson, North Carolina.[2] His father was a mortician who owned the Flowers Funeral Home in Henderson; the family lived in an apartment above the business.[2] Flowers played high school football and was in a band that played after the games.[3] He got his first guitar at age 17 and it became his primary inspiration for songwriting.[2] He said, "Hardly anyone in my family supported me wanting to be a musician".[4] His musical roots were in blues music. Flowers moved to Virginia Beach in 1968 after dropping out of school to perform on the blues and folk circuit, primarily as a harmonica player.[5] He became proficient on slide guitar, dobro, and harmonica.[2]

He moved to Nashville in the early 1970s and was signed by Wesley Rose to a publishing deal with Acuff-Rose.[5] One of his first road tours was performing with Dobie Gray when Gray's song "Drift Away" was a hit single.[5] He worked for producer Jack Clement and made demos for another writer, Don Williams.[5] As Williams' commercial success took off, he hired Flowers to tour with him. Flowers said, “It was a wonderful experience. For five years, it was just a three-piece band. Don played guitar, we had a bass player, and I played electric guitar".[5] The result was Flowers/Williams' successful 13 year musical association.[3]

Flowers was living on Nashville's Blakemore Avenue, sharing the rent with singer Rodney Crowell and Chis Leuzinger.[6]:59 In her book, They Came to Nashville, Marshall Chapman recalled spending time with Flowers in that house listening to records and analyzing songs by various artists.[6] The two were both performing separately in local clubs at the time. Chapman became a fan of Emmylou Harris' songs sung with Gram Parsons and was then surprised to learn that Flowers had had one of his songs, "Before Believing" recorded by Harris and that one of his lyrics became the album's title ("Pieces of the Sky ").[6] She credited Flowers with telling her that she must learn to write songs to be successful in music.[7]


Writing "Tulsa Time"


In September, 1978, Flowers and the Don Williams band members were staying at a Sheraton Hotel in Tulsa, Oklahoma. A snowstorm had caused an interruption of their schedule.[4] Flowers said, "We were all snowed in, and there was absolutely nothing to do. I was sitting there in my room, watching The Rockford Files with some hotel stationery beside me, just bored, and I started writing out some verses”.[8] He spent only a half-hour on it and the song had only two chords. Flowers said said he intended to add another chord later, "but Don heard it and liked it the way it was."[3]

About two months later, Flowers was performing with Don Williams in Nashville as the opening act for an Eric Clapton concert.[4] After the performance, Flowers and Williams went to Clapton's hotel room where the three men took turns playing songs. Flowers sang and played guitar on his new song, "Tulsa Time" with Williams singing harmony and Clapton playing slide guitar on a dobro.[4] Clapton said, "I love that song and I want to record it right away".[4] Williams said, "You can't record it— I'm going to record it".[4] Both artists recorded the song, but Williams was first.

Don Williams' recording of "Tulsa Time" was the first song on his album, "Expressions", released in August, 1978; by October the song was number one on the country singles chart.[8] It became the number one Billboard Country song of 1979.[9]:142 The song was named single record of the year in 1979 by the Academy of Country Music[10]:539 and Don Williams won CMA Male Vocalist of the Year. Eric Clapton released two versions of the song: first his 1979 album Backless and second in 1980 on a live album, Just One Night.[9]:142 The latter album was more successful and reached number 30 on the Billboard rock chart.[8][9]:142


Other projects


Flowers has been a session musician for Williams, Griffith, Vince Gill, Marshall Chapman, George Hamilton IV and Dobie Gray, as well as having toured with Williams, Gill, the Sweethearts of the Rodeo, the McCrary Sisters and others. In 1982, he recorded an album for MCA as a lead vocalist, recording with Don Williams' band members whom they called the "Scratch Band". Williams arranged for his band members to make an album of their own. It was entitled "The Scratch Band featuring Danny Flowers ". Flowers wrote or co-wrote all the tracks.[5] It included Pat McInerney, Biff Watson and Dave Pomeroy.[11]:132 Flowers' demonstrated his skill on the harmonica in this band.[12]:156 He left Williams in 1985 and later played with Nanci Griffith, Aaron Tippin, and Russell Smith.[3] While with Griffith, he created the "Blue Moon Orchestra" as her backing band.[2]

Flowers' album, Forbidden Fruits and Vegetables was released in 2000; it included some rocking blues and many of his songs that had been covered by other artists including "Tulsa Time", "Before Believing" and his version of "Pacific Coast Highway" which he co-wrote with Nancy Griffith and James Hooker.[2]

Music reviewer Dennis Reed pointed out that Flowers' physical appearance on the album cover of the "Forbidden" album was quite different from that on his next album in 2007,Tools for the Soul .[2] The Forbidden album showed a much thinner Flowers with short hair, wearing a dark suit with a business look. The later Food for the Soul album cover revealed long hippie hair, some added pounds, and a full beard.[2] In a 2014 documentary by The Songwriter(Nashville), Flowers was forthright in discussing that had suffered from chemical dependency but now had decades of sobriety.[4] From his Tools for the Soul album, "I Was a Burden" was a story of how dependency can be turned around.[2] The song was recorded by the Blind Boys of Alabama featuring Lee Ann Womack.

In late 2014, Flowers began work on a new record at RCA Studio A titled "Anytime, Anywhere, Everywhere" for release later in 2015. As of 2021, he is involved in making an R & B Gospel album called "The Truth Don't Lie" with his wife, Gospel artist Mabel Pleasure Flowers who plays a Hammond B-3. The two met in 2018 at a party at the home of fellow musician, Keb' Mo.[13]


Discography




Songs written



Albums




References


  1. Cooper, Peter (May 28, 2001). "Today's Hot Spots: Our Picks". The Tennessean (Nashville). 97:148: 5D. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  2. Reed, Dennis Roger. "CD Reviews: Danny Flowers—Tools for the Soul". folkworks.org. Shapiro. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  3. "Danny Flowers song Blossoms". The Tennessean (Nashville). 86:249: 38. October 14, 1990. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  4. Pedraza, Esteban; Pryka, Aaron. "Episode 3: The Songwriter (Nashville), Season 1". youtube.com. Movie Time Picture Company and HouseKopp Management. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
  5. "Danny Flowers – Vine ripened". nodepression.com. The Journal of Roots Music. January 1, 2001. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  6. Chapman, Marshall (2010). They Came To Nashville. Nashville: Country Music Foundation Press. p. 59. ISBN 9780826517357. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  7. Chapman, Marshall (2012). Goodbye, little rock and roller (2nd ed.). Nashville, Tenn.: Tallgirl.com. p. ebook, Chapter 3. ISBN 9780984809004. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  8. Smith, Michael (September 8, 2020). "'Tulsa Time': A classic song 30 minutes in the making turns 40 years old". Tulsa World. e–edition. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  9. Lindblad, Elven (2019). Tulsa Sounds: Celebrating the City's Musical Heritage. p. 142. ISBN 9780999122334. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  10. Stambler, Irwin; Landon, Grelun (2000). Country music : the encyclopedia (3rd ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 539. ISBN 9780312264871. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  11. Tuber, Keith (July 1982). "The Gentle Giant of Country—Don Williams". Orange Coast Magazine (July, 1982): 132–133. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
  12. Krampert, Peter (2000). The Encyclopedia of the Harmonica. Pacific, Missouri: MelBay. pp. 60, 156. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
  13. Havighurst, Craig (February 13, 2020). "On The String: The Good News From Marcus Finnie And Mabel Pleasure". WMOT.org. WMOT American Roots Public Radio. Retrieved May 3, 2022.





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