John Denver did NOT write the
original draft of “Country Roads,” the official song of West Virginia and one I
sing with a song in my heart in Mountaineer Field after WVU wins the football
game.
That was a night club doorman, Bill
Danoff, who wrote “Country Roads” first draft. And the original title was
“Rhododendron,” for the official state flower of West Virginia, but it provided
to be too cumbersome to rhyme.
Danoff
was a doorman at the tiny Cellar Door nightclub in Washington, D.C., later the
lighting and sound technician for years before he ever performed at the club at
the corner of 34th and M streets NW with Danoff’s then-wife Mary Catherine “Taffy”
Nivert Danoff as performers in Fat City, a Georgetown-based folk music band.
Taffy
got her nickname because her older brother as
a young child mispronounced her name as Mary Tafferine.
Later
the couple joined with Jon Carroll and
Margot Chapman to form the Grammy-winning Starland Vocal Band that signed with
Denver’s Windsong Records and record their most famous song, “Afternoon
Delight.”
Danoff
and Taffy had hoped to show their “Country Roads” to Johnny Cash, who they
didn’t know personally, because they liked the Man in Black’s opening chords.
They reversed the chords for “Country Roads.”
Danoff
showed his “Country Roads” draft to John Denver. Then Danoff and Denver, with
Taffy holding the sheet music, altered it to its present form. They stayed up
all night polishing the song.
These
are the lyrics that Danoff thought would be too colorful for 1970s radio so he
dropped them:
In
the foothills,
Hidin’ from the clouds,
Pink and purple,
West Virginia farm house,
Naked ladies,
Men who look like Christ,
And a dog named Poncho nibbling on the rice,
Country roads
The
next night at the Cellar Door on December 30, 1970, Denver called Bill and
Taffy to the stage for an encore, where they performed the finished version of
"Take Me Home, Country Roads" in public for the first time.
A few
days later they were in the studio recording the song. Danoff had to play the
lead guitar because of Denver’s broken thumb from an auto accident.
And
“Country Roads” took off into music history!
Danoff
was picking at his guitar while Taffy drove on a country road in Maryland to
her family reunion when the germ of a song idea came into his head. Let him
explain how “West Virgina” entered the music:
“I’m a
songwriter. I was looking for words. The words that I loved in that song were
Blue Ridge Mountains, Shenandoah River. They’re songwriter words, so that got
me to West Virginia.”
It was
Taffy who worked on “Rhododendron,” the song’s original title because that is
the state flower of West Virginia. When coming up with words that rhymed with
“rhododendron” became too tough, Taffy checked the encyclopedia for West
Virginia further and came up with “Blue Ridge Mountains” and “Shenandoah River”
even though they are mostly in Virginia, but also in Jefferson County, West
Virginia.
Danoff
had never been to West Virginia. The state’s words just spoke to him.
Since,
Danoff has visited West Virginia several times and even waded into the
Shenandoah River that he made re-famous. He was named an honorary West
Virginian.
And
John Denver is his favorite singer of “Country Roads”? Nope. “Ray Charles,”
Danoff said, as his voice cracks as if to hold back a tear. “That broke my
heart. Ray Charles is incredible, he’s an idol – he sings one of your songs,
it's pretty good.”
“Country
Roads” did good, too, to speak a West Virginia term.
The
song soared to #1 on the Record
World pop singles chart and the Cash Box Top 100 and number 2 on Billboard,
behind "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart" by The Bee Gees. “Country Road” went gold
in sales in 1971 and got a second shot to go platinum in 2017. More than 1.6
million copies have been sold in America.
Denver
sang “Country Roads” at the opening of new Mountaineer Field before the first
WVU game there in 1980. WVU fans sing it after every Mountaineer victory, in
Morgantown or on the road. The West Virginia Legislature made it one of four
official state songs in 2014. And “Almost Heaven” from the song has become a
state slogan slapped on everything handed to tourists.
“Country Roads” was played at the funeral
for legendary and influential West Virginia Senator Robert Byard at the State
Capitol in Charleston on July 2, 2010.
I have
instructed my family to play it as my farewell song at my funeral before I am
laid to rest at Northlawn Memorial Gardens alongside my personal Mona Lisa (as
I called my wife, a play on her name of Monia Elizabeth, for decades) under a
double grave marker with “WV” under Monnie’s name and my name.
For me
it will be a permanent “Take Me Home, Country Roads”! Joining my Mountain Mama
for all time.
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