“THE OUTLAW WHO TAUGHT COUNTRY MUSIC HOW TO LOVE”On February 13, 2002, country music lost more than a singer. It lost the voice that taught heartbreak how to walk tall. Waylon Jennings was only 64 when diabetes and years of hard living finally silenced the man who never learned how to sing small.He wasn’t hiding from the world. He wasn’t forgotten. His records were still spinning in truck radios and lonely kitchens. His songs still sounded like roads with no end and love with no safety net.When the news spread, fans didn’t talk much. They just pressed play.“Good Hearted Woman.”“Luckenbach, Texas.”“Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys.”Some say those outlaw songs didn’t feel like old music anymore. They felt like a warning… and a farewell.Was the rebel voice trying to tell us goodbye all along?
THE OUTLAW WHO SANG LOVE LIKE A LAST CONFESSION In the long, dust-colored story of American country music, few names…