David Allan Coe died on April 29, 2026 at the age of 86, passing away in intensive care — and the country music world that had spent decades trying to categorize him, contain him, and occasionally distance itself from him is now doing the only thing left to do, which is reckon honestly with the fact that it will never see his like again. He was sent to reform school at nine years old, spent the better part of two decades cycling in and out of correctional facilities, and then moved to Nashville in 1967 with nothing to his name, parking a hearse outside the Ryman Auditorium and busking on the street until someone in the music business was smart enough to pay attention — a beginning so improbable and so completely David Allan Coe that it reads less like a biography and more like the opening verse of one of his own songs.
He wrote “Take This Job and Shove It” and gave it to Johnny Paycheck. He wrote “Would You Lay With Me” and gave it to Tanya Tucker. He wrote the song Steve Goodman called the perfect country and western song and then recorded it himself and made the whole world agree. He did all of it on his own impossible terms, without apology, without compromise, and without once pretending to be anything other than exactly what he was. His widow Kimberly’s words to Rolling Stone — “My husband, my friend, my confidant and my life for many years. I’ll never forget him and I don’t want anyone else to ever forget him either” — are the words of a woman who knew the man behind every myth and loved him completely anyway, and they are haunting everyone who reads them because they are so simple and so final and so completely, achingly true.