FORTY-THREE YEARS LATER, IN THE SAME MONTH THAT BUDDY HOLLY’S MUSIC DIED, WAYLON JENNINGS’ STORY ENDED TOO — CHANDLER, ARIZONA, FEBRUARY 13, 2002. The cruel part was not just that Waylon Jennings died. It was that he had spent most of his life carrying the sound of a death he escaped. In February 1959, Waylon Jennings gave up his seat on a small plane to J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson. Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, The Big Bopper, and pilot Roger Peterson never made it to the next town. Waylon Jennings did. For decades, people called him lucky. But luck can become its own kind of burden when the friend you laughed with does not come home. By the end of 2001, Waylon Jennings was no longer the young bass player who had survived the Winter Dance Party. Diabetes had taken a brutal toll. In December, surgeons in Phoenix amputated his left foot. The body was sending the bill. Still, Waylon Jennings remained Waylon Jennings. Stubborn. Proud. Hard to pity. A man who had built a career out of refusing to bend, even when life kept pushing. On February 13, 2002, Jessi Colter returned to their home in Chandler, Arizona, and found him unresponsive. Waylon Jennings had died in his sleep at sixty-four. Forty-three years after he missed the plane that killed Buddy Holly, the man who survived “the day the music died” was gone too. But maybe the strangest thing about Waylon Jennings was this: He never spent his life acting like a man who escaped death. He sang like a man who knew he had been handed time — and owed the music everything he could give it. Some artists leave behind records. Waylon Jennings left behind the sound of a man who lived with the ghosts, argued with them, and somehow kept singing. So what did Waylon Jennings carry from that frozen February night in 1959 all the way to his final morning in Arizona — and why did survival never sound simple in his voice?
Forty-Three Years After Buddy Holly’s Music Died, Waylon Jennings’ Story Ended Too Chandler, Arizona. February 13, 2002. There was no…