IN APRIL 2009, A MAN IN A WHEELCHAIR WROTE FOUR SONGS HE’D NEVER GET TO SING. He was Vern Gosdin. They called him The Voice. Tammy Wynette said he was the only singer who could hold a candle to George Jones. Nashville called him a legend, then forgot him. Twice. He’d survived a heart attack. Two strokes. Two labels collapsing under him. Years cutting glass in Georgia while his guitar sat in the truck. He came back anyway. Nineteen top-ten hits. CMA Song of the Year. Then Nashville forgot him again. In December 2008, at seventy-four, barely able to speak, he released a 101-song box set. Started rebuilding his tour bus. Booked a spot at CMA Festival that June. Sat down with a young songwriter named Joe Sins and finished four new songs at a kitchen table. Three weeks later, the final stroke came. The four songs were never recorded. The bus sat in the driveway — engine ready, seats cleaned, going nowhere. Some men retire when the body says stop. Vern Gosdin kept writing. The road just stopped first.
Vern Gosdin’s Final Songs: The Road That Stopped First In April 2009, Vern Gosdin was sitting in a wheelchair, writing…