THE GHOST OF HANK WAS IN THE ROOM. SAM WILLIAMS JUST MADE HISTORY. At 76, Hank Williams Jr. doesn’t have to prove anything, but last night, he let his son, Sam Williams, take the lead in a way that left Nashville breathless. Standing before a towering image of the “Lovesick Blues” legend, Sam began to sing—and for a moment, the 72-year gap since Hank Sr.’s passing simply vanished. The atmosphere wasn’t just heavy; it was electric. With 11 No. 1 hits between the father and son on stage, the weight of the “Family Tradition” felt brand new. “Some legacies aren’t just inherited; they are exorcised.” As the final chord of ‘I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry’ faded into the rafters, Hank Jr. did something he almost never does in public. The cameras caught a glimpse of a Williams man finally letting the mask slip.
THE GHOST OF HANK WAS IN THE ROOM. SAM WILLIAMS JUST MADE HISTORY. There are nights in country music when a performance feels bigger than the stage holding it. Not…