NEW YORK (AP) — Some people, the songs just come out of them. For nearly half a century, they tumbled out of John Prine like nothing.
His songs — compassionate, funny, sage — make up an American songbook that would be staggeringly intimidating if it wasn't so warm and welcoming. He began — with a dare at an infamous open mic — a fully formed songwriter who through calamity and cancer never once wavered in his wry, homespun humanism. He was, anyone would say, as good as they come.
Prine was raised in the blue-color suburbs of Chicago by parents from Western Kentucky. He learned guitar from his brother. He was a mailman for a time, writing lyrics as he delivered letters. The first song he performed — when coaxed onto that Chicago open-mic stage — was "Sam Stone." It remains one of Prine's most heartbreaking songs. In it, he sings with a deadpan hopelessness about the fate of a drug-addicted veteran: "There's a hole in daddy's arm where all the money goes/ Jesus Christ died for nothin', I suppose."
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In songs that straddled Nashville country and Appalachia folk and fell somewhere in between Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan, Prine sang about characters like Sam Stone. The lonely housewife of "Angel From Montgomery." The elderly couple of "Hello in There." He did so with humor and understanding, and a keen Mark Twain eye that saw us all for what we are -- and loved us anyways. On "Far From Home," Prine, who grew up next to a junkyard, sang: "Ain't it funny how an old broken bottle/ Looks just like a diamond ring?"
Picking only a handful of songs by Prine is an errand that even a fool wouldn't dare. But here's trying. Scroll farther to listen to all 7 songs.
- "Angel From Montgomery": A masterpiece that will be sung for as long as songs are sung. Recorded on Prine's absurdly packed self-titled 1971 debut album, it gained far greater renown when Bonnie Raitt covered it. It has one of the great opening lines: "I am an old woman, named after my mother/ My old man is another child that's grown old." Songs this good don't belong to anyone. They belong to everyone.
- "Spanish Pipedream": In this bouncy anthem about dreaming of a more pastoral life, the advice of a "level-headed dancer" rings as true today as it did in the early '70s: "Blow up your TV/ Throw away your paper/ Go to the country/ Build you a home."
- "Paradise": Prine wrote this one for his father, about a town in Kentucky. When Prine was serving in the Army in Germany, his father sent him a newspaper article about how a coal company had bought out the town, named Paradise. After Prine recorded it, he played a tape of it for his dad. "When the song came on, he went to the next room and sat in the dark while it was on," Prine recalled. "I asked him why and he said he wanted to pretend it was on the jukebox."
- "The Late John Garfield Blues": A lot of Prine's songs are so vividly told that they can seem like little movies. In this one off 1972's "Diamonds in the Rough," Prine uses the 1940s matinee star -- a brooding, working-class actor who died young but was a forerunner to Marlon Brando -- as a symbol of a sadness that "leaks through tear-stained cheeks."
- "Souvenirs": Prine said he wrote this on the way to an early gig on a Thursday night after a day of delivering mail. For a song that sprung from such a songwriting sprint, it holds incredible, elegiac beauty. It's about memory and death. Prine sings: "I hate graveyards and old pawn shops/ For they always bring me tears/ I can't forgive the way they rob me/Of my childhood souvenirs."
- "Summer's End": Prine released his first album of original material in 13 years in 2017, "The Tree of Forgiveness." By then, surgeries had changed his throat, leaving Prine with a more gravely, weathered voice. He liked it more because he thought it made him sound friendlier. In the achingly tender "Summer's End" -- a kind of bookend to "Sam Stone" -- Prine sings about a parent's opioid addiction from the perspective of a child.
- "Lake Marie": This song, off 1995's "Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings," was often the rousing finale to Prine's live show. With its oft-repeated chorus — "We were standing, standing by peaceful waters/ Whoa, wah, oh wah, oh" — "Lake Marie" is Prine's great goodbye song. In disparate tales that span decades, through love and death, it builds into a stirring, even cleansing jam and Prine's farewell: "Awww baby!/ We gotta go now."
See also: "Sweet Revenge," "Illegal Smile," "Bruised Orange (Chain of Sorrow)," "Mexican Home" and all the others.
Listen: 7 of John Prine's greatest songs
Photos: John Prine through the years
Photos: John Prine through the years
2019 Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival - Day 3
John Prine performs at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival on Saturday, June 15, 2019, in Manchester, Tenn. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)
Music Americana Awards
Bonnie Raitt, left, and John Prine perform during the Americana Honors & Awards show Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2019, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)
John Prine
FILE - This Oct. 27, 2013 file photo shows country singer John Prine before singing "Ballad of a Teenage Queen" while honoring Country Music Hall of Fame inductee the late "Cowboy Jack Clement" at the ceremony for the 2013 inductions into the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn. Prine says he’s been diagnosed with an operable form of lung cancer. A note on the 67-year-old website says he will undergo surgery next month, forcing the postponement two dates in Louisville, Ky. Prine says in the note that doctors found the cancer early and “see no reason why I won’t fully recover.” (AP Photo/Mark Zaleski, File)
Music John Prine
In this June 20, 2017, photo, John Prine poses in his offices in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
Music John Prine
In this June 20, 2017, photo, John Prine poses in his office in Nashville, Tenn. The former Chicago mailman has become an affable songwriting guru for many of Nashville’s talented young artists and his songbook, “Beyond Words,” released in April, features guitar chords, family photos, handwritten lyrics and witty stories alongside some of his best known songs, such as “Sam Stone.” (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
Music Americana Awards
John Prine performs during the Americana Honors and Awards show, Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Zaleski)
APTOPIX Music Americana Awards
John Prine accepts the artist of the year award during the Americana Honors and Awards show Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Zaleski)
61st Annual Grammy Awards - Arrivals
John Prine arrives at the 61st annual Grammy Awards at the Staples Center on Sunday, Feb. 10, 2019, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)
2019 Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival - Day 3
John Prine performs at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival on Saturday, June 15, 2019, in Manchester, Tenn. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)

