35 NUMBER-ONES. 75 MILLION ALBUMS SOLD. BUT ASK ALAN JACKSON WHICH SONG MEANS THE MOST — AND HE WON’T HESITATE. Everyone knows Alan Jackson for “Chattahoochee.” Many remember him for “Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)” — the song that made an entire nation cry after 9/11. But neither of those defined the man behind the music. The song that did was “Drive (For Daddy Gene)” — a song about an old plywood boat, a beat-up ’64 Ford truck, and a dirt road called Thigpen Road in Newnan, Georgia. Alan’s father Eugene — a quiet man who never said much — taught his boy to drive on that road. When Eugene passed away in 2000 from an aortic aneurysm, Alan tried to write something for him. Twice he tried. Twice it came out too sad. Then he stopped writing about death — and started writing about driving. His wife Denise told him to add their three daughters into the final verse. That changed everything. The song hit number one and stayed there for four weeks. But Alan never wrote it for the charts. He wrote it for a man who let a little boy put two hands on the wheel and feel like king of the ocean. Some songs make you famous. “Drive (For Daddy Gene)” made Alan Jackson real.
35 Number-Ones, 75 Million Albums Sold — But One Song Meant More Than Any Other Alan Jackson built one of…