FORGET “GOOD HEARTED WOMAN.” FORGET “MAMMAS DON’T LET YOUR BABIES.” THE SONG THAT TRULY DEFINED WAYLON JENNINGS WAS THE ONE THAT MADE NASHVILLE FURIOUS. Everyone knows Waylon for “Good Hearted Woman” with Willie. Many remember “Luckenbach, Texas.” But neither of those captured the real fire inside the man from Littlefield, Texas. The phrase came from Ernest Tubb’s band. After sweating through shows in rhinestone suits, Tubb’s musicians would escape to the air-conditioned tour bus, peel off their shiny jackets, and ask each other the same question: “Did Hank really do it this way?” Waylon heard it — and wrote the whole song on the back of an envelope on the way to the studio. Rolling Stone later called it the closest thing outlaw country ever had to an official mission statement. Nashville in the ’70s wanted polished production and pop crossovers. Waylon wanted the truth. So he looked at the rhinestone suits, the shiny cars, the same old formula — and asked one question that burned the whole system down. It hit number one in 1975. The B-side? “Bob Wills Is Still the King.” Just in case anyone missed the point. Some artists follow the rules. Waylon Jennings asked who made them — and why.
The Song That Truly Defined Waylon Jennings When people talk about Waylon Jennings, the same songs usually come first. There is “Good Hearted Woman,” the rough-edged duet with Willie Nelson…