IN 1990, JERRY REED WALKED AWAY FROM THE SPOTLIGHT. NO FAREWELL TOUR. NO PRESS CONFERENCE. JUST JERRY — AND 18 QUIET YEARS NOBODY TALKED ABOUT. “He was still recording right up until he couldn’t anymore.” At the time, Jerry was country’s brightest wild card — two Grammys, Chet Atkins’s favorite picker, the Snowman himself, a voice that made Elvis buy his songs and Burt Reynolds call him brother. Then, quietly, he stopped chasing the charts. No more Top 10 hits. No more sitcoms. No more big film roles. Priscilla noticed the silence in the house first. Jerry would sit with his guitar for hours and barely make it sing the way he used to. The cigarettes he’d been chasing since the ’50s had finally caught him. Friends said Jerry never complained. Not once. In 1998, he showed up in Adam Sandler’s “The Waterboy” to make the kids laugh. That same year he joined Waylon Jennings, Bobby Bare, and Mel Tillis in Old Dogs — four aging cowboys singing Shel Silverstein songs about getting old. His last project was an album to raise money for wounded veterans. He never saw the profits. September 1st, 2008. Emphysema finally won. But there’s something Burt Reynolds said at Jerry’s quiet Nashville funeral — about a promise the two of them made on the set of Smokey and the Bandit back in ’77 — that Burt only spoke about once, and never again…

Jerry Reed’s Quiet Exit: The 18 Years After the Spotlight Faded In 1990, Jerry Reed seemed to do something almost…

HE WAS INDUCTED INTO THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME. HE DIDN’T SHOW UP. FOUR MONTHS LATER, HE WAS GONE. October 2001. Nashville’s most important night. The Country Music Hall of Fame was inducting Waylon Jennings — the rebel, the outlaw, the man who spent thirty years fighting the very city that was now trying to honor him. It was supposed to be the crowning moment of his career. He didn’t come. Some said he was too sick. Others said it was something deeper — that the man who had spent his entire life refusing to bow to Nashville wasn’t about to start just because they’d finally put his name on a wall. Either way, the message was unmistakable. Even dying, Waylon Jennings didn’t show up for anyone he didn’t feel like showing up for. Two months later, in December 2001, doctors amputated his left foot. Diabetes had been destroying his body for years — the aftermath of a life that included too many cigarettes, too much cocaine, too many nights on the road, and not enough quiet mornings. And yet even from that hospital bed, he was planning a new album. He still had tour dates on the calendar. On February 13, 2002, he died peacefully in his sleep in Chandler, Arizona. He was 64. But the real reason Waylon refused to attend that Hall of Fame ceremony — the reason only a handful of people truly understand — is something that tells you everything about who he was…

Waylon Jennings Was Finally Welcomed by Nashville — But He Never Walked Through the Door In October 2001, the Country…

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