THE SONG BELONGED TO A BROKE TEXAS POET. ELEVEN YEARS LATER, TWO OUTLAWS TOOK IT TO NO. 1. Townes Van Zandt wrote it first — a dusty, mysterious ballad about loyalty, betrayal, and two men whose names sounded like they had already become ghosts. He recorded it in 1972. It was admired, but not massive. The kind of song songwriters whispered about more than radio celebrated. Too strange. Too literary. Too full of shadows. Then Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard got hold of it. By 1983, both men had lived enough highway, loss, trouble, and legend to understand what the song was really carrying. They did not sing it like a story from the past. They sang it like a confession neither man wanted to explain. It went to No. 1. But the power was never just the chart. It was the feeling that a forgotten Texas song had waited years for two outlaw voices old enough to make betrayal sound beautiful.
The Texas Song That Waited 11 Years for Its Perfect Voices Some songs do not arrive with a loud entrance.…