IN 1989, VERN GOSDIN’S THIRD WIFE WALKED OUT. HE DIDN’T DRINK. HE DIDN’T DISAPPEAR. HE WALKED INTO A NASHVILLE STUDIO AND BLED INTO A MICROPHONE FOR FORTY MINUTES STRAIGHT. “It really hurt. I guess being in the condition I was in, it was an ideal position to write songs.” At the time, Vern was country’s best-kept secret — a glass-company owner from Georgia who’d already quit music once, the only voice Tammy Wynette ever said could hold a candle to George Jones. Most of Nashville couldn’t pick him out of a lineup. Then she left. He recorded an entire concept album about the divorce. Called it Alone. “Chiseled in Stone” came out of those sessions. CMA Song of the Year, 1989. “I’m Still Crazy” went to No. 1. His last one. Friends said he never quite came back the same. The hell-raising glass-company guy who used to laugh in the studio was gone. What stood at the microphone after 1989 was someone who’d seen the bottom of something and decided to sing from there. Vern never talked much about those nights after she left. About what he wrote down at 3 a.m. that never made it onto the album. About what he saw in that empty house before the songs started coming. But those closest to him always wondered what it cost him to make a record that honest…
Vern Gosdin, Alone, and the Cost of Singing the Truth In 1989, Vern Gosdin was not chasing a polished Nashville…