HE HASN’T SPOKEN IN THIRTEEN YEARS. AT ALAN JACKSON’S FINAL CONCERT HE SANG EVERY WORD.On the evening of June 27, 2026, at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium, Randy Travis sat among the crowd — no microphone, no stage, no spotlight. Jon Pardi was up there performing “She’s Got the Rhythm (And I Got the Blues).” Travis bobbed his head, mouthed the lyrics, and sang along like any other fan in the stands.Except he wasn’t any other fan. He co-wrote that song.In 1991, Travis and Jackson pieced it together on a tour bus in Columbus, Ohio, during their High Lonesome Tour. They originally intended to pitch it to B.B. King. Jackson kept it instead — and rode it to number one in 1992.Thirty-five years later, both men are fighting the limits of their own bodies. A massive stroke in 2013 left Travis with aphasia, a condition that stripped away his ability to form sentences. Jackson was forced to retire from touring by Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, which has progressively stolen his balance. The concert last Friday was his farewell.Two men. One can no longer speak. The other can no longer stand steady on a stage. And yet when that familiar melody filled the stadium, Travis still sang.Disease can strip away speech and steal steadiness. But it cannot reach the place where a song lives inside someone who helped write it. That wasn’t nostalgia. That was proof that music exists somewhere deeper than language.
He Hasn’t Spoken in Thirteen Years: At Alan Jackson’s Final Concert, Randy Travis Sang Every Word On the evening of…