THREE GENERATIONS. ONE SMALL TOWN. ONE LAST NAME. THE REID FAMILY OF STAUNTON, VIRGINIA REFUSES TO LET COUNTRY MUSIC’S GREATEST HARMONY DIE. In 1955, Harold and Don Reid started singing gospel in a small church in Staunton, Virginia — a town of barely 25,000 people. They became The Statler Brothers, toured with Johnny Cash, won three Grammys, and entered the Country Music Hall of Fame. They never left Staunton. Their sons, Wil and Langdon Reid, formed Wilson Fairchild and kept the harmony alive. Now the third generation has arrived. Jack Reid — Harold’s grandson — sings lead and plays guitar. Cousin Davis Reid — Don’s grandson — plays keyboard and sings harmony. “The music has always been something special to us. They always encouraged us to do whatever we wanted. We’ve always been pulled toward it.” In 2026, all three generations united for The Statler Experience tour — fathers and sons sharing a stage, singing songs their grandfathers made timeless. Same town. Same bloodline. Same harmony that started in a church seven decades ago. Most dynasties scatter to Nashville. The Reids stayed home. But what Jack recently said about his late grandfather Harold might be the most heartbreaking thing a grandson has ever admitted on stage…
Three Generations, One Promise: How the Reid Family Keeps a Country Legacy Alive in Staunton Some music careers begin in bright cities, inside studios built for ambition. This one began…