Songwriter
Larry Cordle has numerous hits to his credit, including three that went to the top of the charts. His awards include the 1992 Song of the Year, which
Cordle received from the International Bluegrass Music Association for his "Lonesome Standard Time." The song also garnered a Grammy nomination. Despite these high points that mark a successful career in the music business,
Cordle later made news with a song that some listeners thought might be biting the hand that fed the songwriter. "Murder on Music Row," a song
Cordle co-wrote with
Larry Shell, makes no bones about criticizing Nashville for drifting away from the roots of
country music. Plenty of people in the industry were aghast and angry over the song's condemnation of the town and of the turn
country music had taken in recent years. Probably just as many cheered it. The song wasn't released to radio as a single, at least not officially, and there wasn't even any real promotion to speak of. But the duet by
George Strait and
Alan Jackson raised the song's profile. It hit a nerve and it hit deep. The song made it onto the airwaves, landed in the Top 40, and made a lot of people sit up and take notice of the things
Cordle had to say about the state of
country music. The ripples that spread from the song's impact even led the very industry that the song condemns to acknowledge and honor its honesty. The Country Music Association bestowed a pair of nominations in 2000, one for Vocal Event of the Year and another for Song of the Year. Other artists who have recorded
Cordle's songs include
Diamond Rio,
Ricky Skaggs,
Garth Brooks,
Trisha Yearwood,
George Jones,
Loretta Lynn,
Alison Krauss,
John Michael Montgomery, and
John Anderson, among others. Shell Point Records of Nashville issued the album Murder on Music Row, while Sugar Hill Records released three other
Cordle albums. His band,
Lonesome Standard Time, includes
Terry Eldredge on upright bass, lead acoustic guitarist Booie Beech, fiddler
Fred Carpenter, mandolinist
David Harvey, and banjo player
David Talbot. ~ Linda Seida, All Music Guide