HE WROTE A SONG IN 1972 ABOUT A MAN WHO COULDN’T QUIT SMOKING. THIRTY-SIX YEARS LATER, EMPHYSEMA TOOK HIM TOO. The song was called “Another Puff.” Back then, it sounded like Jerry Reed being Jerry — bouncy, clever, almost funny. A man swears he is done with cigarettes, then reaches for the pack again. One more puff. It was not the song most people remembered him for. They remembered the guitar on “Guitar Man.” The grin beside Burt Reynolds in *Smokey and the Bandit*. The swagger of “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot.” But “Another Puff” stayed there in the background, waiting to sound different with time. Jerry never fully outran the thing he sang about. The years passed. The recording sessions kept coming. The movie sets. The road. The smoke. By the end, emphysema had taken his breath. His booking agent said he was still recording “right up until he couldn’t anymore.” On September 1, 2008, Jerry Reed died at home outside Nashville. He was 71. Some songs age. This one turned into a warning.
Jerry Reed’s “Another Puff”: The Song That Changed Meaning After Time Caught Up In 1972, Jerry Reed recorded a song…