SOME SONGS WAIT 20 YEARS FOR SOMEONE BRAVE ENOUGH TO FINISH THEM. Waylon Jennings left behind boxes of tapes when he died in 2002. Half-written melodies, scratch vocals, lyrics on hotel stationery. One demo had his son’s name on the case. Shooter Jennings didn’t open it for years. He just couldn’t. When he finally pressed play, his father’s voice filled the room — rough, tired, unmistakable. Waylon was working through a melody, stopped midway, mumbled about returning to it later. He never did. So Shooter sat down in the same key, picked up the same guitar, and finished what his father started. Two voices on one track, separated by two decades of silence.
“Daddy Didn’t Get to Finish the Song. So I Did.” There are some things a son can inherit easily: a guitar, a last name, a few stories that get repeated…