THEY CALLED HIM “THE VOICE.” AT 74, AFTER TWO STROKES AND A BYPASS, HE WAS STILL IN HIS DRIVEWAY FIXING THE TOUR BUS. THREE WEEKS LATER, THE BUS HADN’T MOVED — BUT VERN GOSDIN HAD. In the 1970s, Vern Gosdin quit music. Moved to Georgia. Sold glass for a living. Everyone assumed the story was over. But he kept a guitar in his truck — and a man who keeps a guitar in his truck hasn’t quit anything. He came back. 19 top-10 hits. Three number ones. CMA Song of the Year. Tammy Wynette called him “the only singer who can hold a candle to George Jones.” Nashville didn’t call him talented. They called him “The Voice” — because they ran out of smaller words. Then the ’90s changed the sound. Nashville moved on. A stroke in ’98 took his strength. He kept writing. Kept recording. At 73, he released a 101-song box set — then started rebuilding his tour bus for one more summer. Three weeks before the comeback, the final stroke came. April 28, 2009. The bus never left the driveway. People measure legends by their final bow. But Gosdin’s greatness wasn’t in the exit — it was in the fact that at 74, after everything Nashville took from him, he was still packing for the road. He never made it into the Hall of Fame. But “The Voice” never needed a building to echo in. It just needed one more song. And Vern Gosdin always believed there was one more.

They Called Him “The Voice” At 74, Vern Gosdin was still doing the kind of work most people would have…

You Missed