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The Country Music Legend Who Owns a Legendary Guitar

November 8, 2023 By Richard C. Young

By Robert Kirby @ Shutterstock.com

In The Spectator, Aaron Gwyn tells the story of how country music star Marty Stuart ended up owning one of the most iconic guitars in the world. That guitar is the pull-string telecaster, or B-Bender, as they are more commonly known today, invented by Clarence White and Gene Parsons of The Byrds. Gwyn tells the story of how that guitar came to be owned by Stuart, writing:

He stands five-foot-seven in his stocking feet — five-nine in boots — but with Clarence White’s Telecaster slung around his neck and a thick head of gray hair roostered up, he looks ten feet tall.

John Marty Stuart has plucked the strings of every major figure in country music. Growing up in Philadelphia, Mississippi, his heroes were bluegrass legend Lester Flatt and American prophet Johnny Cash. Before going out on his own, Stuart only had two jobs: he joined Flatt’s band in 1972 as a fourteen-year-old mandolin virtuoso, and after Flatt retired in 1978, he joined Cash’s band as a guitarist. Five years later, he married Cash’s daughter, Cindy, and a decade after that relationship ended, he married Country Music Hall of Famer Connie Smith, fulfilling the plan he’d announced after seeing her perform at the Choctaw Indian Reservation in Neshoba County when he was twelve.

While touring as a teenager with Flatt, he lived with fellow bandmate Roland White, spending his free time going through Roland’s enormous record collection. Stuart was surprised to find that Roland had several records by the Byrds among his shelves of bluegrass albums.

“How come you have so many Byrds records?” Stuart asked.

“My brother Clarence plays guitar in the band,” said Roland.

Listening to the Byrds’s groundbreaking country-rock album, Sweetheart of the Rodeo, Stuart heard Clarence White’s famous Pull-String Telecaster on the opening track, “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere.”

The first of its kind, this Fender Telecaster had been equipped with a device invented by Byrds drummer Gene Parsons and Clarence White himself: the Parsons-White Pull-String. This complex system of springs and levers inside the body of the guitar allowed a player to raise the B-string a whole step by pressing down on the guitar’s neck. The benefit of this contraption is that a guitarist can hold chord shapes and perform bends without having to manipulate the B-string with his fingers. In other words, the Parsons-White Pull-String turned a Fender Telecaster into a pedal steel: a guitar outfitted with this invention could produce those haunting high and lonesome sounds we hear in the opening bars of “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere.”

The Parsons-White Pull-String has been redesigned by world-class luthiers like Joe Glaser; some Telecasters now come factory-equipped with them. For $650, you can send your Telecaster to Glaser in Nashville and he’ll install one of his benders, a process that takes him about half an hour.

When Clarence was hit and killed by a drunk driver in 1973, Marty Stuart felt the loss was equal to that of other prematurely departed musicians of the 1960s.

There went the life of somebody who I have no doubt in my mind could have been revered in the same pantheon as Jimi Hendrix or any of those other guys in that league, because I know Clarence had that much in him.

In 1980, White’s widow, Susie, called Stuart to let him know she was selling some of Clarence’s things. Stuart, a longtime collector of country memorabilia, told her he’d buy anything she was selling.

She led him around her home, showing him a Fender Stratocaster that had belonged to Clarence, a Nudie suit that he’d worn when he was in the Byrds, and various other mementos.

Stuart asked, “Is the Pull-String still here?”

“That’s the guitar you really want, isn’t it?” Susie said.

Stuart was shocked. “I’d like to just hold it,” he said.

Read more here.

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Richard C. Young
Richard C. Young
Richard C. Young is the editor of Young's World Money Forecast, and a contributing editor to both Richardcyoung.com and Youngresearch.com.
Richard C. Young
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