DECEMBER 1982. MARTY ROBBINS WALKED INTO A NASHVILLE STUDIO TO RECORD ONE SONG FOR A CLINT EASTWOOD MOVIE. HE FINISHED THE TAKE, SAT DOWN ON A STOOL, AND SAID SIX WORDS. EIGHT DAYS LATER HE WAS GONE. The song was “Honkytonk Man” — the title track for Eastwood’s film about a dying country singer making one last recording. Marty was 57. He’d already survived two heart attacks and a triple bypass. The engineer that day was a guy named Bob Moore, who’d worked with him since the El Paso sessions in ’59. Bob said Marty sounded tired but pure. One take. That was it. Then Marty sat on the stool for a long moment. Looked at the control room. Said: “That’s the one, boys. I’m done.” Everyone laughed. Figured he meant the song was done. December 8, 1982 — another heart attack. He never woke up. There’s one small thing Marty did before leaving the studio that afternoon, something Bob Moore only told a reporter about thirty years later, and it’s the part that still gives me chills. Marty Robbins recorded a song about a dying singer’s last performance — and then gave his own. Was that the universe writing the ending for him, or a man who knew exactly what he was doing when he said “I’m done”?
Marty Robbins, “Honkytonk Man,” and the Final Take That Still Feels Unfinished December 1982 carried a strange weight in Nashville.…