It is fitting that you can't find an Internet photo of Craig Fuller from his glory days with Pure Prairie League. Back in the day (and we're talking the early '70s here) he had hair down to the middle of his back, and he was writing songs that pretty much defined what came to be known as Country Rock (yes, before there was alt-country, y'allternative, and Americana, there was just Country Rock). For what it's worth, it's hard to find his old music these days, too. And now he looks like the guy who sold you life insurance last month. It's okay. Some of us remember.
Pure Prairie League's music came along at a time when I was discovering the wonders of Athens, Ohio, home to Ohio University. Athens was a picturesque little college town nestled in the foothills of the Appalachians, and Woodstock had hit hard, and the long-haired hippie freaks had found a home amongst those hills. The homes -- student ghetto specials, but nobody really cared -- didn't have back porches. They had front porches. And on warm fall or spring days, long-haired musicians could invariably be found on them, picking acoustic guitars and banjos and mandolins, sawing fiddles, strumming dulcimers. It was the hollers of academe, and there was a hoedown on every street corner.
Well, you can have your Eagles and your Pocos. I was happiest with the Flying Burrito Brothers and Pure Prairie League, the latter a bunch of hippie-freak Ohio natives who seemed launched from those front porches. The first PPL album was solid enough, drenched in electric guitars and pedal steel and soaring harmonies, but it was the second album, Bustin' Out, that sealed the stoner cowpoke deal. The whole album was a flat-out masterpiece, but it was the single called "Amie" that turned heads, an FM radio staple that so perfectly captured a time and a sound that I still can't hear it without thinking about those Athens front porches. Soon every would-be stoner cowpoke was playing it -- in local bars, in dormitory stairwells -- and Craig Fuller, who wrote and sang the tune, was the patron saint of every kid who ever wanted to write a pretty, plaintive love song, string together a sweet acoustic guitar riff, and get the girl. Which was pretty much every buckaroo I ever encountered.
A couple years later a new Pure Prairie League album came out, and I bought it the day it was released. There was no Craig Fuller. Where the hell was Craig Fuller? It turned out that Craig Fuller was trying to avoid the draft (yes, it was that time, too), and that fronting one of the better known rock bands of the era wasn't the way to do that. So the rest of the guys carried on without him. There was still the basic country rock template, but it wasn't the same. And although the lineups changed almost every album after that, and at one time took in a young Vince Gill, the magic just wasn't there anymore. It turned out that I wasn't a Pure Prairie League fan as much as I was a Craig Fuller fan. And I couldn't wait for Craig Fuller to resurface from the bunker, or wherever he was hiding, and get on with the business of crafting great country rock tunes.
I had to wait another couple years. This time Craig Fuller had a new band who called themselves American Flyer, after the sled. A supergroup of sorts (other members had played in The Blues Magoos, Blood, Sweat & Tears, and The Velvet Underground), they seemed poised for greatness, the next Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young ... and they sank like a (country) rock. Don't ask me why. The two albums (American Flyer and Spirit of a Woman, if or when you can actually find them) are just fine. Better than fine, actually. But they simply didn't sell. Here's what I know: while ten million people were buying The Eagles' Hotel California, Craig Fuller was quietly writing better songs and releasing better albums. It didn't matter. "You can check out anytime you like/But you can never leave" Don Henley told us, but he was wrong. Craig Fuller left. After a dispirited but decent wrap-up album with former American Flyer mate Eric Kaz (Fuller/Kaz), Fuller cashed in his chips and walked away from the music business. He was gone for more than a decade.
He re-emerged in the late '80s as the lead singer with Little Feat. By that point I didn't care. Lowell George was long gone, and I didn't want to hear my one-time musical hero covering songs I associated with another musical hero. So I stopped paying attention.
For me, Craig Fuller's music will always be associated with the 1970s. I hear he's re-formed Pure Prairie League. And no, I won't be checking out that reunion of old geezers, either. These things just depress me. But those five albums from the '70s (Pure Prairie League, Bustin' Out, American Flyer, Spirit of a Woman, Fuller/Kaz) retain a timeless excellence for me. Yeah, nostalgia probably plays a role. But these were great songs in 1972, and I think they're great songs in 2008. I don't have a front porch, and I long ago got the girl, but I'll still sing along with "Amie" every time I hear it.

Where Have All The Weird Girls Gone?…

You are certainly entitled to stay stuck in the 70s and not recognize that the real Craig Fuller has grown and changed over the past thirty-five years (just as you and I have, as well), but he has moved beyond Little Feat while still finding time to stand on the stage and perform with them whenever fate crosses their paths. Next stop: Grand Lido Negril, Jamaica, January 24-27. Little Feat, too, is not the 70s tribute band you seem to think they are. Oh sure, they honor their roots and welcome Lowell (and his memory) to join them every night on stage ... but they have grown so far beyond the band they were back then as to make most bands only dream of what could be. I am alive. I listen to live bands. Oh sure, they often play stuff from the past ... but in the past decade that I have been watching and listening to Little Feat ... with and without Craig Fuller in the band ... they have never played the same song two times exactly the same. And when Craig performs with them, he covers the Lowell songs just fine, but he does his own songs equally well. Old Geezers, as you put them, are guys (and gals) who are constantly trying to recapture their past ... Craig Fuller, the members of PPL, and the magical seven performers in Little Feat all use the past to see where it can take them today. Wake up and smell the coffee.
I don't know much about this Hays dude, but he seems to be on point. I've heard Mr. Fuller's work live since the PPL days and thru the Little Feat "Craig Era". He is an amazing vocalist, as well as being a genuine nice guy all-around; I had the pleasure of conversing with him several times in Jamaica and he is a straight-up individual. Just my 2 cents.
"Schlocko"
Love coffee. And I've probably heard 1,000 or so new albums this year, so I do my best to keep up with the kids.
I saw Little Feat a couple years back. Craig Fuller wasn't with them, and perhaps the concert might have been better if he had been there. But the concert I witnessed pretty much defined the notion of old geezers going through the motions and playing the hits from the '70s.
Andy;
I have been a Craig Fuller fan from the time we went to his house after school in third grade and as an 8 year old he pulled out a guitar and sang and played like a pro. Follow this link to my collection of PPL and Craig Fuller photos from their earliest days.
http://picasaweb.google.com/wdmathewsphd/PurePrairieLeague#
Yes, that's the Craig Fuller I remember. Wonderful photos. Thanks for sharing them.
Andy,
I, too, have been a Craig Fuller fan since the first PPL album came out. And I agree that PPL just wasn't the same without him.
He left PPL to avoid the draft, but he did it by working for two years in a military hospital under "conscientious objector" status.
Thankfully, Craig and Mike Reilly remained close friends and you are losing big time by not tuning in to the resurrected PPL. Their latest CD, ALL in GOOD TIME, is Craig Fuller at his best. I certainly miss John Call on steel and Michael Connor on keyboard, but the other musicians backing Craig and Mike are excellent in their own right.
Do yourself a favor and get plugged back in while you can.
Cheers!
--A Prairiedog in Texas
I'm in full agreement about Craig's talent as a song writer. But I wouldn't disregard the songs he wrote with Little Feat. Along with the colaborative songs he wrote with the Feat, Don't Try So Hard and Feelin's All Gone are some of the best stuff Craig's done. They stand so well on their own, respective of the Feat. And the fact that such songs would be considered obscure is a crime of the music market.
DEAR ANDY, I WOULD LIKE TO TRY AND CONVINCE YOU TO LISTEN TO THE LATEST PPL ALBUM CALLED "ALL IN GOOD TIME" IT IS A MASTERPIECE OF CRAIG FULLER, IT SOUNDS MUCH MORE LIKE A CRAIG FULLER SOLO ALBUM THEN A PPL ALBUM ALTHOUGH, WITH THE HELP OF MIKE RIELLY, IT ALSO COMES ACROSS AS A GREAT PPL ALBUM. AS STEVE JOBE SAID IN ANOTHER COMMENT, YOU ARE MISSING OUT BIG TIME BY NOT PURCHASING AND LISTENING TO THIS ALBUM, IT WILL BECOME YOUR FAVORITE CRAIG FULLER ALBUM IF YOU DECIDE TO GIVE IT A CHANCE. I JUST SAW PPL AT THE CALIFORNIA STAGECOACH COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL, ALONG WITH POCO AND THE REUNION OF RICHIE FURAY, TIMOTHY B. SCHMIDT, JIMMY MESSINA, PAUL COTTON AND OF COURSE RUSTY YOUNG. AND IT WAS INCREDIBLE, I HAD THE GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO MEET AND TALK WITH BOTH MIKE R. AND OF COURSE MY HERO CRAIG FULLER.