Country music, no matter how outlaw-flavored, was still in its own world apart from rock โnโ roll in the mid-1960s. Although the two genres would blend much more tangibly in the years to follow, the fact that Waylon Jennings was covering a Beatles track for his 1966 album, Nashville Rebel, was still a novelty. Jennings later credited the idea to his guitarist, Chet Atkins. But there was an even deeper connection linking Jennings and The Beatlesโone that dated back to the 50s.
In his eponymous autobiography, Jennings recalled Atkins suggesting they cut a version of โNorwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)โ. This was around February 1966, which would have been two months after The Beatles released it on their December 1965, so-called โpotโ album, Rubber Soul. Even before their full-blown LSD phase, The Beatles were taking an obvious turn toward the psychedelic and liberal-minded. These were still faraway, frowned-upon concepts in country music.
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The fact that Atkins would suggest one of the more obviously โhippie dippieโ tracks on Rubber Soul was part of the reason why Jennings enjoyed working with him. โIt was this kind of unpredictability that endeared Chet to me,โ Jennings said.
Blending Country and Psychedelia in This Way Was Unusual
It was technically Chet Atkins who suggested Waylon Jennings cover The Beatlesโ โNorwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)โ. But it wouldnโt have taken much for Jennings to come up with the idea on his own. โ[Chet] loved those Beatles tunes, and I did, too,โ Jennings wrote in his autobiography. โAfter all, The Beatles were indirectly named after Buddy Hollyโs Crickets. I think I had probably done the song a few times at J.D.โs. John Cash remembers me singing it there.โ
The Beatlesโ namesake bit was true. John Lennon famously idolized Buddy Holly, for everything from his music to his glasses. In fact, โThe Cricketsโ was one of the first band names Lennon presented to his bandmates. Paul McCartney vetoed it because of Hollyโs group. The Beatles still referenced Holly with its insect reference. Additionally, the pun of making it โbeatlesโ instead of โbeetlesโ was a testament to the Liverpudliansโ wit and humor. And in this way, The Beatles were connected to Jennings long before the country star covered their Rubber Soul track.
The Beatles and Waylon Jennings Were Linked Long Before 1966
Waylon Jennings began playing guitar in Buddy Hollyโs backing band in the late 1950s. The Crickets had technically disbanded, with Hollyโs two bandmates returning to their hometown of Lubbock, Texas, after Holly moved to New York City to get ahead in his career. Jennings was playing with Holly during the Winter Dance Party Tour, which was abruptly cut short by the plane crash that took the lives of Holly, J.P. โThe Big Bopperโ Richardson, and Ritchie Valens.
In an uncanny twist of fate, Jennings was actually supposed to be on that plane. He gave up his seat to Richardson, who had the flu, and took a bus instead. In Falling Stars: Air Crashes That Filled Rock and Roll Heaven, Jennings recounted a bone-chilling conversation between him and Holly pre-flight. The two men were razzing one another, with Holly joking that he hoped Jenningsโ โolโ bus freezes up.โ Jennings replied, โWell, I hope your olโ plane crashes.โ It was a comment he would always regret after February 3, 1959, became the day the music died.
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