HE RECORDED IT 6 DAYS AFTER THE DAY THE MUSIC DIED — BRADLEY STUDIOS, NASHVILLE, FEBRUARY 1959. HE WAS DRUNK. IT TOOK 83 TAKES. THE BASS PLAYER’S FINGERS WERE BLEEDING. WHEN IT HIT #1 ON APRIL 13, THE MAN WHO WROTE IT HAD BEEN DEAD FOR 69 DAYS. Nobody expected George Jones to make history that week. The Big Bopper had been gone 6 days — the plane crash outside Clear Lake, Iowa that also took Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens. J.P. Richardson had believed in Jones before most of Nashville did. He’d pushed Jones for months to cut the song. Jones didn’t even want to record it — said it was too strange. Richardson kept pressing: “That thing’s gonna be a hit.” Then the plane went down. Jones walked into Bradley Studios drunk and grieving. Eighty-three takes. Bass player Buddy Killen played the opening so many times his fingers bled through bandages. April 13, 1959 — it hit #1 and stayed there six weeks. Jones later wrote in his memoir: “I have been sorry ever since that Richardson didn’t live to see his song go No. 1.” The only two people who believed in the song — one was gone, and the other couldn’t stop drinking. Who was George Jones really singing for that night?
George Jones, “White Lightning,” and the Song That Arrived Too Late By the first week of February 1959, country music…