ONE SONG TOLD A WIFE SHE WAS THE BEST THING HE’D EVER KNOWN. THE OTHER ADMITTED HIS FATHER READ THE BIBLE WITH GIN ON HIS BREATH. BOTH BELONGED TO DON WILLIAMS. By 1980, Williams was country music’s calmest voice — they called him “The Gentle Giant.” In 1975, he sang “You’re My Best Friend” — so steady it felt like a vow renewed every morning. No drama. No begging. Just a man telling his wife: you are enough. It went to No. 1. Then came “Good Ole Boys Like Me” — a song where the narrator was raised by a father who swayed between scripture and liquor, in a South that mixed honor with failure. One song made him the voice of perfect love. The other showed that kind of love doesn’t come free — it comes from a man who watched it break first. Williams’ parents divorced. His brother Kenneth died from electrocution at 29. Yet Williams married Joy Bucher in 1960 and stayed 57 years — through chronic back pain, multiple retirements, and a world that wanted him simpler than he was. He died of emphysema in 2017. Country music called him “The Gentle Giant.” His songs knew gentleness always has a cost. Which Don Williams song carries more weight — the one about love, or the one about where love comes from?
Don Williams: The Gentle Giant Behind Two Very Different Country Songs By 1980, Don Williams had become one of country…