THE STROKE TOOK MOST OF HIS VOICE. BUT RANDY TRAVIS STILL HAD THE ONE WORD SILENCE COULDN’T TAKE. Randy Travis was never the loudest man in country music. He did not need to be. When he opened his mouth in the 1980s, Nashville suddenly remembered what country was supposed to sound like — plain, deep, honest, and rooted in something older than trend. Then, in 2013, a massive stroke nearly took everything. The voice that carried “Forever and Ever, Amen,” “Deeper Than the Holler,” and “Three Wooden Crosses” was almost gone. Randy had to learn how to walk again. How to speak again. How to live inside a body that no longer obeyed him. But he kept showing up. In 2016, when he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, Randy stood beside his wife Mary and did what many thought he might never do again. He sang the final “Amen” of “Amazing Grace.” One word. That was all. And somehow, it was enough to break the room. The stroke took most of Randy Travis’s voice. But it could not take the part of it country music had already memorized.
The Stroke Took Most of His Voice. But Randy Travis Still Had the One Word Silence Couldn’t Take Randy Travis…