pplpod Episode 13 sits with Townes Van Zandt—the spare, unflinching poet who turned heartbreak, high plains, and hard-won wisdom into songs that outlived him. We trace the Houston/Colorado years, the Anderson Fair folk circuit, and the Poppy Records albums that set the bar for narrative songwriting. Along the way, we unpack the craft: economy of language, lonesome melodies, and characters drawn with a single perfect line. We follow the friendships and champions (Guy Clark, Emmylou Harris, Blaze Foley), the battles with addiction and illness, the cult-favorite live recordings, and the posthumous rise as generations of artists cover his work. Clear-eyed and tender, this episode explores how Townes made quiet feel colossal—and why his songs keep finding new homes.
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