THE SAWMILL TOOK TWO FINGERS FROM HIS RIGHT HAND. THEN BILLY JOE SHAVER TAUGHT THE DAMAGED HAND TO PLAY GUITAR ANYWAY. Before Nashville knew his name, Billy Joe Shaver was not walking around like a man destined to write outlaw country. He was working. Rodeo jobs. Navy at seventeen. Hard labor. Then a sawmill job that changed the shape of his hand before it ever held a songwriter’s future. One day, his right hand got caught in the machinery. He lost most of two fingers. For a man who had not yet made it anywhere, that should have been the kind of injury that narrowed the rest of life down to pain, odd jobs, and whatever work a damaged hand could still do. Billy Joe did something else. He taught himself guitar around the missing fingers. Then he tried to leave Texas. He meant to hitchhike west toward Los Angeles. Couldn’t get a ride. So he crossed the road and started going the other way. Memphis came first. Then Nashville. There, he found a songwriting job for $50 a week. Years later, people heard “I Been to Georgia on a Fast Train” and thought it sounded like a man who had lived every line too hard. Before Billy Joe Shaver wrote outlaw country, the sawmill had already cut the softness out of his hand.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” THE SAWMILL TOOK TWO FINGERS FROM BILLY JOE…