THE GUITAR LICK THAT LEFT CHET ATKINS SPEECHLESS: JERRY REED WALKED INTO A NASHVILLE STUDIO AS A NOBODY — AND MADE THE GREATEST GUITARIST IN COUNTRY MUSIC PUT DOWN HIS PICK. Jerry Reed grew up dirt poor in Atlanta, Georgia. No formal training. No connections. No money. Just a beat-up guitar and fingers that moved like nothing Nashville had ever seen. He taught himself to play by listening to the radio, inventing a fingerpicking style so fast and so strange that nobody could figure out how he did it. In the early 1960s, Jerry scraped together enough gas money to drive to Nashville with one dream: get inside a recording studio. He talked his way into a session at RCA, where the legendary Chet Atkins — the man they called “Mr. Guitar” — happened to be producing. Chet asked the young kid from Georgia to play something. Jerry launched into “The Claw,” a fingerpicking instrumental so impossibly fast and complex that the entire room went silent. Engineers stopped adjusting knobs. Session musicians put down their instruments. And Chet Atkins — the greatest guitarist in Nashville — slowly set his own guitar on the table and just watched. When Jerry finished, Chet reportedly sat quiet for ten seconds. Then he said: “I’m not sure what you just did, but I don’t think anyone else on earth can do it.” “When you’re hot, you’re hot. When you’re not, you’re not.” — Jerry Reed What Chet privately told his wife about Jerry Reed that evening has only surfaced once — in an interview most fans have never seen.
THE GUITAR LICK THAT LEFT CHET ATKINS SPEECHLESS By the early 1960s, Nashville had already heard every kind of guitar…