CHET ATKINS ONCE CALLED JERRY REED THE MOST BRILLIANT GUITAR PLAYER HE HAD EVER HEARD — THEN WATCHED THE WORLD TURN HIM INTO A JOKE. Jerry Reed could do things on a guitar that even Nashville’s best players could not explain. Chet Atkins treated him like a genius. Other musicians copied him for years and still could not quite sound like him. Then came the laugh. The grin. The movies. By the time America knew Jerry Reed from Smokey and the Bandit, millions of people thought he was just the funny guy. Jerry Reed knew it too. The more famous Jerry Reed became, the less seriously people seemed to take him. Yet behind the laugh and the movies was one of the greatest guitar players country music ever produced: a Grammy winner, a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, the writer of Guitar Man for Elvis Presley, and the man whose picking style changed Nashville forever. Even the best musicians in town stood backstage just to watch his hands. And what Jerry Reed quietly did in the final years of his life — when the cameras were gone and the jokes had stopped — may have been the closest he ever came to showing the world who he really was.
Chet Atkins Knew the Truth About Jerry Reed Long Before the Rest of the World When Chet Atkins first heard…