HE HADN’T STOOD ON THE OPRY STAGE IN OVER 20 YEARS. IT TOOK WAYLON JENNINGS DYING TO BRING HANK JR. BACK. Waylon Jennings spent his life refusing to be handled. Nashville wanted rules. Waylon wanted room. He skipped his own Country Music Hall of Fame induction, fought the polish, and made stubbornness sound like a form of truth. By the end, even Waylon’s body had started taking pieces back. Diabetes had already cost him his left foot. On February 13, 2002, Jessi Colter found him unresponsive at home in Chandler, Arizona. He was 64. Three days later, the Ryman Auditorium saw something country fans never expected. Hank Williams Jr. walked back onto the Grand Ole Opry stage for the first time in more than 20 years. Not for a comeback. Not for a record. For Waylon. Travis Tritt and Marty Stuart were there beside him. For more than an hour, they sang Waylon’s songs into the room. A fourth stool sat empty on the stage. Then Hank Jr. sang “Eyes of Waylon,” the song he had written years earlier after meeting Waylon on an airplane. He once said Waylon had tears in his eyes when he first heard it. The man who broke every rule Nashville wrote got his goodbye inside Nashville’s most sacred room — from a friend who had stayed away until grief gave him a reason to return.
He Hadn’t Stood on the Opry Stage in Over 20 Years. It Took Waylon Jennings Dying to Bring Hank Jr.…