HE WROTE THE LAST #1 OF HIS LIFE ABOUT THE WIFE WHO LEFT HIM — AND ASKED THEIR SON TO HELP HIM FINISH IT. He didn’t get there alone. He never could have. And by the time he understood that, she was already gone. He was Vern Gosdin, 55 years old, the man Tammy Wynette called the only singer who could hold a candle to George Jones — and a husband whose third marriage was bleeding out in real time. Then there was Beverly. His third wife. The woman who sang backup on his records, booked his tours, and stood beside him at every show he ever played in the eighties. She left in 1989. Friends told him to take time off. He walked into the studio instead. He recorded an entire concept album about the collapse — and called it Alone. He sat down with his son Steve to write the song that hurt the most. And he never asked Steve how he felt about putting his mother on tape. That song was “I’m Still Crazy.” It hit #1 in 1989. It was the last #1 of Vern Gosdin’s life. He once said it out loud: “I got 10 hits out of my last divorce.” Some debts get paid in money. The ones that matter get paid in songs you can never sing the same way twice. So why did Vern keep singing about Beverly for the next twenty years — and what did he understand the day she walked out that he couldn’t see while she stayed?
Vern Gosdin, Beverly, and the Song He Could Never Sing the Same Way Twice Vern Gosdin did not write heartbreak…