Outlaw country singer Glaser dies
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Tompall Glaser, a country music singer, publisher and studio owner best known for his association with the outlaw movement against record labels, died Tuesday. He was 79.
Louis Glaser, Tompall Glaser’s nephew, said the singer died in Nashville, Tenn., after a long illness.
Thomas Paul Glaser, a Spalding, Neb., native, began performing with his brothers, Jim and Chuck, as The Glaser Brothers in the 1950s and eventually moved to Nashville after meeting Marty Robbins, who tapped them to sing backup.
Glaser and his brothers immediately chafed under the label system in place in the 1960s and ’70s – just like contemporaries Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson.
Though he would never achieve the success of those friends, he was nonetheless a key player in the rebellion they started against Music Row in the early 1970s that would come to be known as the outlaw movement. He circumvented the label system by opening with his brothers their own music publishing company and recording studio – soon known as “Hillbilly Central.”
Glaser appeared on “Wanted! The Outlaws,” a 1976 compilation that also included Nelson and Jennings. The album, which included his version of Shel Silverstein’s “Put Another Log on the Fire,” became country music’s first platinum-selling album and served as a Rosetta Stone for those looking for something raw and original out of the genre.