WHEN HAROLD’S BASS WENT SILENT, DON REID STARTED WRITING DOWN THE MUSIC BEFORE TIME COULD TAKE ANY MORE OF IT. Don Reid had been singing beside his brother almost his whole life. Harold’s bass sat underneath him for decades — low, warm, funny, impossible to miss. Don carried the lead. Harold gave the room its floor. Together with Phil Balsley and Lew DeWitt, then Jimmy Fortune, they made The Statler Brothers sound less like a group and more like a family sitting around memory itself. Then the touring stopped in 2002. For the first time in forty years, Don had the one thing the road had never given him enough of: time. He had always wanted to write books, but songs, buses, hotels, shows, and brotherhood had taken the years in long stretches. Then April 24, 2020 came. Harold died at 80, and Don’s words to the public were short. His brother had taken a big piece of their hearts with him. That same year, Don published The Music of The Statler Brothers: An Anthology — not just a book, but a ledger of songs, albums, stories, and names before memory could blur the edges. Since then, he has kept writing novels, histories, and reflections from Staunton, Virginia, the town the Statlers never really left. Some brothers keep singing together. Don Reid found another way after the harmony was gone.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” WHEN HAROLD REID’S BASS WENT SILENT, DON REID…