HE DIED ON A FRIDAY. THEY COULDN’T EVEN HOLD A FUNERAL. BUT A WHOLE TOWN STILL FOUND A WAY TO SAY GOODBYE Harold Reid sang bass for the Statler Brothers for nearly 40 years. Three Grammys. Country Music Hall of Fame. Gospel Music Hall of Fame. 33 Top 10 hits. He never left Staunton, Virginia — the same small town where he was born, where he raised his family, where he and three childhood friends started singing gospel in 1948. On April 24, 2020, he lost his battle with kidney failure at 80. And because the world was locked down, nobody could gather to mourn him. No service. No crowd. No goodbye. So Staunton did what it could. The mayor placed a wreath at the Statler Brothers monument downtown — family and city council standing six feet apart, masks on, trying to honor a man who spent his whole life bringing people together. Within 24 hours, Toby Keith — quarantining in Mexico with a guitar he bought from a furniture store — posted a video singing “Flowers on the Wall.” No production. No crew. Just a man on a porch who couldn’t let the moment pass in silence. Reba McEntire, Crystal Gayle, the Oak Ridge Boys — they all said goodbye the only way they could: through a screen. A congressman entered his name into the Congressional Record. He never chased fame out of Nashville or LA. He stayed home. And when he died, home couldn’t even hug his wife. What Statler Brothers song are you playing tonight?

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