ALAN JACKSON DIDN’T CALL GEORGE JONES FOR THE LAST 3 YEARS OF HIS LIFE. AT THE FUNERAL, HE SANG “HE STOPPED LOVING HER TODAY” — AND NEVER ONCE LOOKED UP FROM THE FLOOR. George signed a photo for Alan in 1990 with three words: “Keep it country.” That became Alan’s whole career. At the ’99 CMAs, when Nashville cut George’s performance short, Alan stopped his own song mid-verse and sang George’s “Choices” instead. No warning. No permission. That’s how deep it ran. But somewhere after 2010, the calls slowed. No fight. No fallout. Just two proud men who assumed there’d always be more time. On April 26, 2013, George Jones was gone at 81. Alan didn’t give interviews. He walked into the Grand Ole Opry, picked up his guitar, and sang George’s song — the same one he’d sung as a nobody in a TV mailroom in 1986. They say he never lifted his eyes from the stage. His hat came off at the last note and went straight over his heart. Some people said goodbye with words. Alan said it with the only song that ever mattered. But what George wrote in his final letter to Alan — that’s the part most people never heard.
Alan Jackson, George Jones, and the Goodbye That Hurt Too Late Some friendships in country music are loud. They fill…