THEY LAID VERN GOSDIN TO REST SEVENTEEN YEARS AGO THIS WEEK. THEY NEVER FOUND ANOTHER VOICE LIKE HIS. His baritone still drifts out of kitchens at suppertime, out of pickup trucks on county roads, out of barrooms where a man nurses one drink longer than he should. A Vern Gosdin song doesn’t just come on. It walks in, sits down beside you, and says the thing you’ve been carrying around for thirty years. He sang heartache the way people actually live it — the empty side of the bed, the wedding ring that won’t come off, the porch light left on a little too long. And when he sang “Chiseled in Stone,” he didn’t perform it. He confessed. What most folks don’t know is that the song was born from a real conversation — an old man in a cemetery told Vern something that night that broke him wide open. The story behind those words is unlike anything in country music. Nashville forgot a lot of singers. The kitchens never forgot The Voice. Which Vern Gosdin song takes you straight back?
Seventeen Years Later, Vern Gosdin’s Voice Still Finds Its Way Home They laid Vern Gosdin to rest seventeen years ago…