How Dennis Quaid, Tanya Tucker, and Kris Kristofferson Turned a Long-Finished Song Into a Lasting Goodbye

Sometimes a song lives quietly for years before it finds its real purpose. That was the case with “On My Way to Heaven”, a gospel song Dennis Quaid began writing in the 1990s after making a promise to his mother. He wanted to finish it someday, but one part kept stopping him: the bridge never felt right.

So the song waited. For more than 25 years, it stayed unfinished, tucked away like a family memory that had not yet found its ending.

A Role That Opened the Door

Things changed in 2018 when Dennis Quaid was cast in I Can Only Imagine. While working on the film, something in the story and the emotion around it helped him finally see how the song should move forward. He completed “On My Way to Heaven” in time for his mother’s 91st birthday, making the moment even more meaningful.

What began as a private promise had become a finished song with real weight behind it. But the story did not stop there.

Bringing Friends Into the Studio

In 2019, Dennis Quaid invited Tanya Tucker and Kris Kristofferson into the studio to record a new version of the song. It was not built around a big industry push or a flashy release plan. It was simply friends coming together to make something honest and beautiful.

John Carter Cash directed the music video, giving the project a warm, classic country feel. The session carried a sense of ease and trust, the kind that can only happen when artists know they are creating something from the heart.

“This is one of the last projects he worked on before he went to Heaven.” — Tanya Tucker

When Time Changed the Meaning

Then came the delay nobody expected. COVID pushed everything back, and the release waited while the world changed around it. In the years that followed, the song took on a deeper meaning.

In 2024, Kris Kristofferson passed away. That made the 2019 recording session far more significant than anyone could have realized at the time. It became his final song and his final filmed performance, preserved in a project that began as a simple collaboration between friends.

A Premiere at the Grand Ole Opry

The video premiered last night at the Grand Ole Opry, arriving just two days before what would have been Kris Kristofferson’s birthday on June 22. The timing gave the release a quiet emotional force, turning the moment into both a tribute and a farewell.

For fans, it was a reminder that music does not always reveal its meaning right away. Sometimes a song starts as a promise, becomes a performance, and later turns into a memory that feels bigger than the people who made it.

“On My Way to Heaven” now stands as more than a recording. It is a story about keeping a promise, about friendship in the studio, and about how art can carry someone forward long after the final note fades.

 

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