FOSTER HOMES TOOK HIS CHILDHOOD. ORPHANAGES TOOK HIS FAMILY. SEVEN YEARS BOUNCING BETWEEN STRANGERS’ HOUSES — AND THE ONLY THING THAT STAYED WAS A GUITAR. Jerry Reed was four months old when his parents split. Cotton mill workers in Atlanta who couldn’t afford to keep their own kids. He and his sister disappeared into the system for seven years. The boy made one promise: I’m gonna go to Nashville and be a star. Nobody believed him. He dropped out of school to tour with Ernest Tubb. Proposed to his wife by saying, “If anyone has a day job in this home, it’ll be you.” She said yes anyway. Nashville ignored him for a decade. Ten years of nothing. Then he invented a guitar technique so savage they called it “The Claw.” His picking hand looked like something unhuman — fingers attacking strings from angles nobody had tried. Chet Atkins called him the greatest fingerstyle player alive. Elvis tried to record “Guitar Man.” Couldn’t. His whole band couldn’t make it sound right. They had to call Jerry in from a fishing trip to play it himself. An orphan’s hands. Playing on the King’s records. Nobody gave Jerry Reed a thing. He clawed it all back.
Jerry Reed: The Boy Who Clawed His Way Back Jerry Reed’s story did not begin with comfort, applause, or opportunity.…