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Joe Ely, Staple of Texas’ 1970s Progressive Country Scene, Dies at 78

3 months ago 7 Min Read
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Joe Ely, the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter who helped spearhead Texas’ progressive country movement in the 1970s, has died, his representative confirmed to Rolling Stone. Ely died from complications of Lewy Body Dementia, Parkinson’s, and pneumonia at his home in Taos, New Mexico. He was 78.

As is true of most revered country icons, Ely lived a long and storied life that was ripe with song material. Although his career technically began with the Flatlanders, the country band he formed with fellow Texans Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancock in 1972, Ely truly found an audience through his 1977 self-titled solo debut. With each passing year, Ely’s natural lyricism and ear for rock hooks helped push a new type of progressive country to the forefront of the Texas scene. In the decades that followed, he went on to collaborate with the Clash, Bruce Springsteen, Uncle Tupelo, the Chieftans, and many others.

Born in Amarillo, Texas, on February 9, 1947, Ely and his family soon relocated to Lubbock, where he spent his teenage years attending high school and playing guitar. In his 20s, he crossed paths with Gilmore and Hancock, and they decided to form a band that would utilize their interests in country, folk, and storytelling. The Flatlanders only released one album, 1973’s All American Music, before disbanding the same year. However, once the three musicians found independent success as solo artists, they regrouped to record another handful of albums together and perform live as a band once again, eventually earning their place in the Austin Music Awards Hall of Fame, in 2016.

When he launched his solo career, Ely settled into country music from an open-minded and open-hearted place, churning out songs that welcomed everyone into the fold regardless of how familiar they were with the genre. That accessible approach earned him multiple charting albums, including 1981’s Musta Notta Gotta Lotta hitting No. 135 on the Billboard 200 and No. 12 on the Top Country Albums chart. Yet for all of his beloved originals, one of Ely’s biggest songs was a cover of Robert Earl Keen’s “The Road Goes on Forever,” which he tacked onto his 1992 album Love and Danger. His final album, Love and Freedom, came out in February 2025.

For most rock audiences, Ely came to their attention not through his records, but through his opening gigs. The Rolling Stones brought him out on several dates in 1981, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers tapped him for over a dozen shows, and a number of other classic-rock acts—Stevie Nicks, the Kinks, the Pretenders—asked Ely to join them on stage, introducing him to thousands of new fans and bridging the gap between country and rock in the process.

By 1979, Ely was opening for the Clash. He and his band had crossed paths with the group during their own show in London months earlier and kept in touch; the easygoing rapport the two acts established led the punk rockers to invite Ely to play with them in the United States and join them on their U.K. leg in 1980 in support of London Calling. Just a few years later, the Clash brought Ely into the studio to sing backup vocals on “Should I Stay or Should I Go”

In 1998, Ely joined forces with Freddy Fender, Flaco Jiménez, Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo and Cesar Rosas, Rick Trevino, and Ruben Ramos to form the supergroup Los Super Seven. Together, they put a Latin-rock spin on Chicano and Texan rock, funneling their ideas into a self-titled album that same year. In 1999, the band took home the Grammy Award for Best Mexican/Mexican-American Album.

Ely was always happy to collaborate with other artists, whether it be accepting an invitation to contribute harmonica to Terry Allen’s records and guitar to Uncle Tupelo’s final album, or inviting Bruce Springsteen to sing on his own tracks. When Ely tapped Springsteen to join him on “Odds of the Blues” for his 2024 album Driven to Drive, the country artist reminisced on what an effortless friendship the two musicians had developed over the decades, calling them “long lost friends for a long time.”

Much of Ely’s music focused on escapades, perseverance, and abiding by the truth. “I had teachers tell me I wouldn’t make it to 21 when I was going to high school, so I beat the odds, you know?” Ely told Lone Star Music Magazine in 2011. “I’ve traveled millions of miles, zigging and zagging in every kind of vehicle known to man, trying to get from one place to another to create some more music. And there’s been a lot of times where, you know, I’ve had some dilemmas. There was one tour that we did around Europe, in ’86 or ’87, where everywhere we went, things were just snapping at our heels. Like, we got off a ferry, and the next day that ferry sunk. We checked into the King’s Hotel, and the next day the hotel burned down. The whole tour was like that!”

“But then sometimes, everything is just a breeze,” he continued. “Everything is just so easy: ‘Ah, yeah… we made that light, we found our hotel, we missed the blizzard, the tornadoes came three days later…’ So in the end you kind of add up all the life experiences that you’ve had, from threats to just running into weird coincidences constantly, and then you think, ‘Wow, I made it through all that. So I can take a breath of air, and then go from there.’”

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