JERRY REED DIED IN 2008 — BUT REAL GUITAR PLAYERS STILL TALK ABOUT HIM LIKE HE WAS A NATURAL DISASTER WITH A GRIN. Jerry Reed did not just play guitar. He had a conversation with it — and the guitar always talked back. Fast fingers, sly grin, a voice that sounded like it was already laughing at the punchline before the joke was finished. To casual fans, he was the funny guy from Smokey and the Bandit. To musicians, he was something much more dangerous: a man who made impossible picking sound like he had just thought of it five seconds ago. That was the trick. Jerry made genius look loose. He could walk into a song grinning, joking, half-talking, half-singing — and then his right hand would do something so clean and strange that every guitarist in the room suddenly got quiet. In “Guitar Man,” he was not pretending to be a musician chasing the road. He was telling the truth with a laugh in his mouth. He died at 71, but the laugh stayed, and so did the warning hidden inside it: never mistake joy for simplicity. Some musicians make you want to play. Jerry Reed made you want to be the kind of person who could — loose, fearless, completely alive inside a song that had no interest in slowing down for anybody.
Jerry Reed Died in 2008, but Real Guitar Players Still Talk About Him Like He Was a Natural Disaster with…