THE HIGHEST VOICE, THE LONGEST FIGHT: THE STATLER BROTHERS’ DEBT OF HONOR. In 1972, after eight years of standing in the shadow of the Man in Black, The Statler Brothers made the hardest choice of their lives. They walked away from Johnny Cash’s road show. From the cold cells of Folsom Prison to the bright lights of national TV, they had been Cash’s brothers-in-arms. He gave them a stage, a record deal, and an audience. But in 1974, Lew DeWitt and Don Reid wanted to say something that didn’t belong to a superstar. They wanted to say “Thank You” to the fans who believed in them when Johnny Cash wasn’t standing there to vouch for them. They wrote a song called “Thank You World.” But behind the beautiful four-part harmony was a silent struggle. Lew DeWitt, the man with that angelic high tenor voice, was fighting a brutal war with Crohn’s disease—a battle he had fought since he was a teenager. Every time you hear that high tenor float above the group like a prayer, you’re hearing a man singing through the pain. He knew the world was taking his health, yet he used his remaining strength to say “Thank You” to the people who kept their dream alive. Lew had to leave the group in 1982. He passed away in 1990 at just 52 years old. Jimmy Fortune stepped in and sang beautifully, but that specific, haunting voice on “Thank You World” was gone forever. What does it mean for a man to say “Thank You” to the world, when he already knows the world is about to take him from it? That is the heart of Country music. Which Statler Brothers harmony is your favorite? Let’s remember Lew’s voice together today. 🇺🇸
The Quiet Goodbye Inside “Thank You World” In 1972, The Statler Brothers did something that looked almost impossible from the outside. After eight years beside Johnny Cash, they stepped away…