THEY CALLED HIM “THE VOICE” — 19 TOP 10 HITS, A CMA SONG OF THE YEAR — AND COUNTRY MUSIC STILL FORGOT HIM. Before a TV show stole the name, “The Voice” meant one man in country music — Vern Gosdin. Not George Jones. Not Merle Haggard. Gosdin. He quit music in the ’70s and sold glass door-to-door. Then came back and stacked 19 Top 10 hits like he’d never left. “Chiseled in Stone” won CMA Song of the Year. “Set ‘Em Up Joe” became a honky-tonk anthem. George Strait recorded his songs. Brad Paisley covered him. Randy Travis called him an influence. But Nashville never gave him a Hall of Fame ring. Never gave him Entertainer of the Year. Never gave him much of anything except a nickname and a bar stool. Luke Bryan once said he played Gosdin songs in honky-tonks at nineteen — and nothing ever felt more like real country. So why does the genre worship voices that sold more, but forget the one they literally named “The Voice”?
They Called Him “The Voice” — And Country Music Still Let Vern Gosdin Slip Through the Cracks Long before a…