Did You Know

The Time Willie Nelson Deescalated a Parking Garage Shootout With Two Colt .45s

Willie Nelson might don the nickname โ€œShotgun Willie,โ€ but given the events of a parking garage shootout in the late 1970s, perhaps โ€œColt .45 Willieโ€ wouldโ€™ve been an equally appropriate moniker. (Of course, one notable difference between the two nicknames is that โ€œShotgun Willieโ€ was trying to shoot his daughterโ€™s abusive husband, while โ€œColt .45 Willieโ€ was trying to keep the peace.)ย 

The country iconโ€™s stage manager and bus driver, Randy โ€œPoodieโ€ Locke, recalled the harrowing moment he watched Nelson get in the thick of an Alabama parking garage gunfight in Willie: An Autobiography. And yes, the story is just about as quintessentially โ€œWillie Nelsonโ€ as youโ€™d expect.

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How A Post-Show Loadout Turned Life-Threatening

Getting in the middle of a shootout in the Deep South after performing at the Birmingham Coliseum in Alabamaโ€™s state capital seems like something straight out of a dark comedy film, but for Willie Nelson and his crew, it was just part of life on the road. Locke described the outfit making their way back to their tour bus in a six-story parking garage when, suddenly, gunfire erupted around them.ย 

โ€œWe hear โ€˜Kaboom!โ€™ โ€˜Kaboom!โ€™ Itโ€™s the sound of a .357 magnum going off in the parking garage,โ€ Locke said in Nelsonโ€™s autobiography. โ€œThe echoes sound like howitzer shells exploding. Itโ€™s kind of semi-dark, and this guy comes blowing through this parking deck and jumps in the Franks Brothersโ€™ Suburban. Now, here comes this b**** with a f***ing pistol. โ€˜Kaboom!โ€™ Sheโ€™s chasing this motherf***er. It sounds like a f***ing war.โ€ย 

Locke said it didnโ€™t take long for police to arrive on the scene and for chaos to ensue. Not knowing where the echoing shots were coming from, the officers on the scene were treating everyone like a suspect, demanding the onlookers get on the ground while they frisked them for weapons. And who arrives to de-escalate the tense scene but country icon Willie Nelson.

Willie Nelsonโ€™s Unconventional Method of Deescalation

Randy โ€œPoodieโ€ Lockeโ€™s description of the bandโ€™s frontman is the stuff of American folk legends. Per Locke, Willie Nelson approaches the chaotic scene of frantic police officers and nervous onlookers wearing tennis shoes, denim cutoffs, and two Colt .45 revolvers stuck into his waistband. Apparently, the revolver barrels were so long (or, perhaps, Nelsonโ€™s circa 1979 cutoffs were so short) that they poked out of the bottom of the frayed denim.ย 

โ€œWillie just walks over and says, โ€˜Whatโ€™s the trouble?โ€™โ€ Locke continues. โ€œWell, heโ€™s got some kind of aura to him that just cools everything out. The cops put up their guns, the people climb off the concrete, and pretty soon, Willie is singing autographs. Heโ€™s got those eyes, that smile, itโ€™s magic.โ€ย 

Despite the supernatural air about him, Nelsonโ€™s pacifist attitude is not accidental. From his optimistic demeanor to his medicinal (and recreational) marijuana use, Nelson has made conscious decisions to stay away from the more aggressive temptations of a man of his successโ€”booze, cigarettes, women, bad tempers. Decades after the infamous parking garage shootout, the country icon stopped sticking around in the cities where he played and opted to do his post-show wind-down on his tour bus, partaking in a bit of smoke and relaxing. (Though, if weโ€™re being honest, weโ€™re sure Nelsonโ€™s tour bus still had a trusty firearm somewhereโ€ฆjust in case โ€œShotgun Willieโ€ needed to take care of business.)

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