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Bob Woodruff

By Jesse Kornbluth
Published: Jan 26, 2010
Category: Country

Bob Woodruff arrived in Nashville in the ’90s, a New York kid hopped up on country music with a bushel of songs in his pocket. He was the real deal in a fake town — he made country music fit for Saturday night honky-tonk. A major label took a chance and gave him a big debut, with three videos to launch the CD. And it sank. Then he made an even better CD for an obscure label. But the company folded. And then — well, as he told the Houston Press….:

I began to despair of ever making another record for a label, or getting any songs cut by other recording artists and fell into a pretty deep depression.I moved back to New York City to be closer to my mother who was very sick, and I took a job in a warehouse. I began to use heroin regularly, and by the time my mother died I was strung out on the drug. I played the odd show in NYC and also toured in Sweden, but less and less time was devoted to my career in music. As time went on, my addiction proved to be a full-time job. I tried to quit cold turkey many times but to no avail. Eventually I went into detox, some rehabs and even got on methadone maintenance a couple times.

In 2003 I was kicked out of a rehab in Long Island, and I began a series of failed attempts to get clean in the country homes of ex-girlfriends around the nation. I had the ill manners to OD in several of these poor women’s bathrooms, which did not seem to inspire their trust in my sincerity or ability to quit using.

After a particularly harrowing event in Nebraska, when I was forced by paramedics to drink several cups of liquid charcoal — a viscous, foul-tasting mixture which neutralized and flushed the drugs out of my system — I wound up in an intensive care unit in Omaha.

The late and saintly Buddy Arnold from Musicians Assistance Program (MAP) was called, and he agreed to place me in one more rehab, providing it was the same one that he himself had gotten clean at in L.A. back in the ’70’s (Buddy had already placed me in a couple of treatment facilities back east, including the one I was thrown out of).

That’s the how and why I came to L.A. Happily, I’ve been clean now for nearly 4 years.

Clean — and pretty much forgotten. His friend Alice Sebold hooked him up with Peter Jackson, and Woodruff wrote some songs for ‘The Lovely Bones’ — but then Jackson decided to use old classics.

Dreams and Saturday Nights, his first CD, is yours from Amazon.com for as little as $1.50 (used).

Desire Road, his follow-up, can be had from $2.74 (used).

What do you get for your investment?

On “Dreams and Saturday Nights,’ you’ll find fiddles and foot stomps. Songs of youthful folly (“When we got married, we were so much in love/ we were just kids”) and, not long after, the world closing in (“I’ve seen a lot of people die and it looks easy/ it’s getting easier to hate you all the time”). Lots of need and resentment and “the day I walked in on you and Cody.” Simple, stupid life, all of it wry and raw, all of it sounding like old favorites you just happen never to have heard before.

Like “Poisoned at the Well”……

Like “Alright”….