Chris Stapleton Delivers Full Throttle Rendition Of The Waylon Jennings Hit “I Ain’t Living Long Like This”

Chris Stapleton country music

Waylon effin’ Jennings, man…

“I Ain’t Living Long Like This” is a country music staple.

Originally written by Rodney Crowell and recorded by Gary Stewart on his 1977, Your Place or Mine, it’s been done time and time again.

Emmylou Harris recorded her version in 1978, as did Crowell on his debut album, but then came Waylon with his own version the following year. It’s also been recorded by Brooks and Dunn, Justin Moore, Chris Janson and more.

During a Waylon Jennings tribute concert a few years back, it was Chris Stapleton’s turn to have a run at the classic country tune, and to literally nobody’s surprise, he blew the roof off the joint.

Joined by his wife Morgane and a backing band featuring some of the best players around, Chris puts on a masterclass in country music, while at the same time, tipping his hat to one of the best to ever play the game.

I mean, if anyone is gonna do Waylon some justice, it’s Chris Stapleton.

Later on that evening, Chris once again took the stage, alongside Sturgill Simpson, Eric Church, Kacey Musgraves, Ryan Bingham, Jamey Johnson, Willie Nelson and more for a performance of Waylon’s “Luckenbach, Texas.”

Good Lord, what a lineup…

Waylon Jennings’ ‘My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys’ Film

Waylon Jenningswas as Texas as they come.

A pioneer in the outlaw country movement, he put out some incredible music over the years, and always had a fascination with cowboys and that lifestyle.

So much so that, back in 1984, he headed to the Kokernot 06 Ranch in the Davis Mountains of West Texas to join the cowboys there for spring roundup. He documented the entire thing for the My Heroes have Always Been Cowboys film, and you can watch the entire thing YouTube.

They spent 10 days roaming the 250 square miles of the ranch, which is one of the largest privately owned ranches in the United States. It’s also one of the few remaining ranches where horses and cowboys still do cattle roundup work just as they did a century ago.

Of course, this being Waylon, he had some great insight and one-liners about his experience and why he was there:

“I always wanted to be a cowboy, I think everybody secretly dreams of being a cowboy, no matter where they’re from.”

But it wasn’t lost on him that it probably wasn’t the smartest thing to be doing, especially because he wasn’t a real cowboy and didn’t have a ton of experience on a wild horse:

“It strikes me that getting on a horse that’s half wild is maybe only half smart.”

Around the 20:30 mark, he plays an incredible fireside acoustic version of “Mammas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys”.

And towards the end, when all the cowboys head to the local dive bar for a drink after a long day of work, he plays “My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys” on a bar stool acoustically, which is absolutely captivating (46 minute mark).

Of course, he shared some final thoughts at the end of it as he loaded up on his tour bus to head back out on the road, saying that he learned a lot there, but the most important thing was this:

“Well, the roundup’s over. And I think I found out a lot of things about what a cowboy is… but most important, I found out what he ain’t. Me. But I still wish I was.”

Classic Waylon…

If you need something good to watch this week, you can’t beat Waylon at cowboy school:

“Mammas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys”

Waylon Jennings Once Asked Alan Jackson “What The Hell Is A Chattahoochee?”

Ol’ Waylon…

You can always count on Waylon Jennings to tell is like it is, so when “Chattahoochee” hit country radio, he couldn’t help but ask Alan Jackson… what the hell is a “Chattahoochee?”

“I think Waylon said one time, Waylon Jennings, ‘what the hell is a Chattahoochee?’”

To be fair, unless you grew up near the Alabama/Georgia line, you’d probably have no idea as well. For those of you that don’t know, it’s actually a river that runs across northern Georgia, along the Georgia/Alabama border, and down into Florida.

And as it turns out, Alan was hesitant to release it as a single for the same reason.

“That’s why it was surprising to me when they decided to put ‘Chattahoochee’ out, I was reluctant because I said, ‘nobody is gonna know what that is.”

But according to Alan Jackson, Chattahoochee isn’t just a river, it’s a state of mind.

“The regular working people, the professional people, just trying to do the same things… make a living, raise a family, enjoy life… I learned that there’s a Chattahoochee everywhere.”

AKA, Chattahoochee isn’t just a river or a song… it’s a lifestyle.

TURN IT UP.

And while we’re on the topic, check out this incredibly weird, downright hilarious “Chattahoochee + Perfect” mashup music video that we made because we’re absolute psychos.

Enjoy.

Get your Chattahoochee River Rider shirt – ONLY from Whiskey Riff Shop.

It’s hotter than a hoochie coochie.

A beer bottle on a dock

STAY ENTERTAINED

A RIFF ON WHAT COUNTRY IS REALLY ABOUT

A beer bottle on a dock