Gene Watson has spent fifty years being one of the most purely gifted honky-tonk voices in the history of country music — the Texas vocalist whose Farewell Party became one of the genre’s most perfect recordings and whose commitment to the traditional country sound through every era that tried to pull Nashville in a different direction has made him one of the most respected and most stubbornly authentic figures the music has ever produced.
He has never chased trends and never compromised the particular brand of deep, aching, completely unadorned country music that his audience has loved him for across five decades — showing up year after year with the same voice and the same conviction and the same absolute certainty that what he was doing was worth doing and worth doing right. Jeannie Seely has occupied a specific and significant place in the story of country music’s traditional wing for nearly as long as Gene Watson has — the Arkansas native whose Don’t Touch Me became one of the genre’s most enduring recordings and who has maintained across sixty years of performing and recording a presence in the Nashville community that the people who know the music’s real history have always recognized as far more significant and far more influential than the mainstream country narrative has typically given her credit for. The relationship between Gene Watson and Jeannie Seely — the mutual regard between two people who have operated at the highest levels of the same traditional country community for decades and who have circled each other’s careers and each other’s lives with the particular attention of people who recognize something genuine when they encounter it — has always suggested to the fans paying closest attention that there was a fuller story to be told than the one that had been told. At 82, Gene Watson has finally decided to tell it — and what he has chosen to say about Jeannie Seely, in his own words and with the directness and the simplicity that have always defined everything about him, is landing on the traditional country music community with the weight of something that was always true and always worth saying and is simply, finally, being said.