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Willie Nelson Told Ozzy Osbourne “Real Music Is Just One Man and One Guitar” — Here’s Ozzy’s Answer

October 14th, 2017, Nashville, Tennessee. It was past 11:00 at night and no more than seven or eight people remained in the restaurant, but none of them could have possibly predicted what would happen in this room in exactly 21 minutes because two aging kings from two entirely different musical universes were sitting under the same roof, completely unaware of each other.

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And the conversation that would pass between them tonight would change the way both of them looked at music forever, but first it would nearly ruin everything. Ozzy Osbourne had come down to the restaurant alone. Sharon was asleep in the suite upstairs because they had a meeting with a television production company the following morning.

When he sat down at a corner table, the waiter came over immediately, a young man in his mid-20s with a Southern accent. “Good evening, sir. The kitchen’s about to close, but we can put something together for you.” Ozzy glanced at the menu without removing his sunglasses. “Just a tea, mate, and maybe a slice of cheesecake if you’ve got one.

” The waiter nodded and walked away. Ozzy’s eyes swept the room. Two tables over, a young couple was whispering while holding hands. A businessman sat alone at the far end of the bar staring at his phone. And in the farthest corner of the restaurant, in the shadow of the wall, a man was sitting. The man was old, perhaps in his 80s, with long white braided hair falling past his shoulders.

In front of him sat a half-eaten plate of steak and a glass beside it. But that wasn’t what caught Ozzy’s attention. On the chair next to the man, carefully propped up, was a worn black guitar case. The case was so old that the leather had cracked and the edges had frayed, but its owner had placed it beside him the way you’d settle a child.

The moment Ozzy saw that guitar case, he felt something. That silent recognition between musicians, that wordless communication, but he couldn’t make out who the man was. The light was too dim and the distance too great. The man wasn’t looking at Aussie either, seemingly lost in thought as he cut into the last pieces on his plate.

The waiter brought Aussie his tea with a small slice of cheesecake beside it. Just then, the man in the far corner called his waiter over. His voice was low, but the restaurant was so quiet that every word carried. Young man, could you do me a favor? Is the lid on that piano open? Near the entrance of the restaurant, tucked against a wall, stood a small grand piano used for Capital Grille’s live music evenings, now silent and dark.

The waiter looked at the piano and said, “Yes, sir, it’s open, but we don’t usually let anyone play at this hour.” The old man smiled and in that smile there was both weariness and something childlike. “I just want to have a look. Won’t even touch it.” The waiter shrugged and walked away. The old man rose slowly, picked up the guitar case, and walked toward the piano with heavy steps.

There was no limp in his walk, but there was a weight to it. An 84-year-old man still trying to stand tall, but whose battle with gravity was now plain to see. He sat down in the chair beside the piano, leaned the guitar case between his knees, and looked at the keys. He didn’t touch them.

He just looked the way you’d look at the face of an old friend. Aussie watched this movement and felt a curiosity stir inside him. He picked up his tea and moved a few tables closer to the table directly across from the piano. He was nearer to the old man now and could see his face better in the dim light. There was something familiar among the wrinkles.

Could he have seen him on television, at a concert, in a magazine? But it wouldn’t quite come into focus. The old man noticed Aussie approaching and lifted his head. Two pairs of eyes met. The old man’s eyes were light blue, clear and calm with the vastness of the Texas plains in them. A moment of silence passed.

That strange silence when two strangers size each other up, wondering whether to speak. Then the old man spoke. “Another sleepless night.” he said, his voice like wind drifting over a dry creek, slow and thoughtful. “Same here, mate.” said Aussie, setting his tea on the table. “Nashville won’t let me sleep for some reason.” The old man chuckled softly.

“Nashville doesn’t let anyone sleep. There’s music in the soil of this city, and music keeps a man awake.” That line caught Aussie’s attention. “Are you a musician?” he asked, nodding towards the guitar case. The old man looked at the case, then back at Aussie. “In a way.” he said. “I mean, I sing, play a bit of guitar, been doing it a long time.

” There was a humility in his voice, but also a confidence. That natural confidence of people who are genuinely good and don’t feel the need to sell themselves short. Aussie took another step and looked at the chair across from him as if to ask whether he could sit. The old man gestured towards the chair with his hand.

Aussie sat down. From this close, despite the dim light, the old man’s face became clearer. The braided hair, the deep lines in his face, that distinctive curve around his eyes, and suddenly, like a bolt of lightning, Aussie understood. The man sitting across from him was Willie Nelson, the living legend of country music, the man behind “On the Road Again”, “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain”, “Always on My Mind”.

Aussie’s heart beat quickened for a moment, but he didn’t let it show. He just took a sip of his tea and said, “I’m Aussie.” without giving his last name. Willie didn’t give his last name, either. “I’m Willie.” he said. And that was all. Two legends who may or may not have recognized each other.

In that moment, both chose not to let on. Maybe both of them just wanted to talk as two old men tonight without the titles, the labels, the legends. And for a while, that’s exactly what they did. The conversation flowed naturally. The weather, Nashville’s changing face, the hotel food. Willie said the steak was good, but couldn’t compare to any restaurant in Texas.

Ozzy countered that you couldn’t find a decent steak anywhere in England. They both laughed. The waiter came by, picked up Ozzy’s empty cup, and asked if they’d like anything else. Ozzy ordered another tea, Willie water. The first 10 minutes of conversation were light and harmless. They spoke like two strangers, careful, polite, staying on the surface.

But then, Willie reached for the guitar case, unzipped it, and pulled out a guitar. When Ozzy saw that guitar, his breath caught. The thousands of scratches across the nylon, the gaping hole in the body, the worn wood beneath the strings. This was one of the most famous guitars in the history of music. Trigger.

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