Todd Snider, country-folk troubadour, dies at 59
Todd Snider, a singer and songwriter beloved in the Americana music scene for his funny yet empathetic portraits of people struggling to survive an uncaring world, died Friday. He was 59.
His death was announced in a post on his Instagram account, which didnβt state a cause or say where he died. An earlier post signed by βToddβs Friends & Familyβ said that heβd been admitted to a hospital in Hendersonville, Tenn., after experiencing breathing problems and that heβd been diagnosed with pneumonia; before that, he called off a tour this month after telling fans that heβd been injured in a βviolent assaultβ outside a hotel in Salt Lake City.
Frequently compared to the likes of John Prine and Kris Kristofferson β both of whom mentored him at various points β Snider wrote about βhow poor people sometimes cope with pain and hardship,β he told the New York Times in 2009. βA little drugs here, a little sex here, a little denial there.β
In a prolific recording career that stretched three decades, Snider made albums for labels owned by Prine and by Jimmy Buffett and for his own company, Aimless Records. Yet to many he was best experienced onstage, where heβd thread his songs into a kind of running monologue about his rough-and-tumble life.
Among his best-known tunes were the rollicking βBeer Runβ; βCanβt Complain,β about a guy with βnothing to lose βcause there is nothing to gainβ; and βAlright Guy,β which opens with a scene in which a friend catches him leafing through βthat new book with pictures of Madonna naked.β
βSaid sheβd never pegged me for a scumbag before,β he sings, βShe said she didnβt ever want to see me anymore / And I still donβt know why.β
In his 2014 memoir, Snider told a shaggy-dog story about the time Garth Brooks summoned him to a studio to help him record a cover of βAlright Guyβ in the guise of his alter ego, Chris Gaines.
βI was already starstruck before Garth walked up and introduced himself,β Snider wrote. βHe said, βI thought you had red hair,β because heβd seen me on the βAustin City Limitsβ television show, and Iβd dyed my hair red for that show. It wasnβt supposed to be red. It was supposed to be dark brown. My plan was to look like John Fogerty, but instead I ended up looking like the guy from the movie βDumb and Dumber.ββ (Brooks didnβt release the cover, though Snider said the country superstar sent him a check for $10,000 anyway.)
Todd Daniel Snider was born Oct. 11, 1966, and grew up in Oregon before making his way to Texas and then Nashville. His debut album, βSongs for the Daily Planet,β came out in 1994 via Buffettβs Margaritaville label; it closed with a motor-mouthed acoustic ditty called βTalkinβ Seattle Grunge Rock Bluesβ in which he lovingly lampooned the eraβs alternative rock boom:
Now, to fit in fast, we wear flannel shirts
We turn our amps up until it hurts
We got bad attitudes, and whatβs more
When we play, we stare straight down at the floor
A criticsβ fave from the get-go, Snider earned rave reviews with 2004βs βEast Nashville Skyline,β whose highlights include a characteristically wordy depiction of the culture wars then roiling America in the wake of 9/11 β βConservative, Christian, Right Wing Republican, Straight, White, American Males,β itβs called β and βThe Ballad of the Kingsmen,β in which he contemplates the meaning of the lyrics to βLouie Louie.β
Among the many other LPs he went on to release were 2009βs βThe Excitement Plan,β which was produced by Don Was, and a 2012 collection of songs by Jerry Jeff Walker, the country-folk songwriter whoβd served as a crucial influence on him. Sniderβs most recent record, βHigh, Lonesome and Then Some,β came out in October.
Snider spoke openly throughout his life about his struggles with drugs and with chronic pain related to spinal stenosis. βI do a lot of things to try to help it, but I have to make peace with it, too,β he said of the condition in an interview last month with Rolling Stone. βWhich hasnβt been easy.β Information about Sniderβs survivors wasnβt immediately available.