“I LEFT A FISH BITING TO GO PLAY WITH ELVIS PRESLEY!” It was 1967, and Elvis Presley had heard something on the radio that wouldn’t leave him alone — a wild, swampy little record called “Guitar Man” by Jerry Reed. The song had attitude, but the guitar was the real problem. Those licks didn’t just sit behind the vocal. They snapped, twisted, teased the beat, and made the whole record feel alive. So when Elvis decided to cut it himself, Nashville’s best players tried to recreate that sound. They couldn’t. They could play the notes, but they couldn’t catch Jerry Reed. By then, Jerry was nowhere near a studio. He was out on the Cumberland River, fishing, when the call came. Elvis wanted the man who played that guitar. Not a copy. Not a clean version. The real thing. Jerry laughed later and said he left a fish biting to go play with Elvis Presley. That was Jerry Reed in one sentence — talented enough for the King to need him, country enough to be fishing when the call came, and wild enough to bring a sound nobody else could fake. Elvis could sing “Guitar Man.” But Jerry Reed was the reason it growled.
I Left a Fish Biting to Go Play with Elvis Presley! It was 1967, and Elvis Presley had heard something…