The Ride (David Allan Coe song)


"The Ride" is a song recorded by American country singer-songwriter David Allan Coe. Written by Gary Gentry and J.B. Detterline Jr., it was released in February 1983 as the lead single from the album, Castles in the Sand. The song spent 19 weeks on the Billboard country singles charts, reaching a peak of number four and peaked at number two on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart.

Background and writing

Writer Gary Gentry told Billboard magazine, "there's a mysterious magic connected with this song that spells cold chills, leading me to believe that it was meant to be and that David Allan Coe was meant to record it." He goes on to say that when he was looking up the date of Williams' death in his autobiography, he opened the book to the exact page. Later, when he was performing the song at the Opry House for a television show, the lights and power in the Opryland complex went out when performing the last verse when it says, 'Hank'.

Content

The ballad tells the first-person story of a hitchhiker's encounter with the ghost of Hank Williams, Sr. in a ride from Montgomery, Alabama to Nashville, Tennessee. The mysterious driver, "dressed like 1950, half drunk and hollow-eyed" and driving an "antique Cadillac", questions the narrator whether he has the musical talent and dedication to become a star in the country music industry. The song's lyrics place the events on U.S. Route 31 or the largely parallel Interstate 65.

History

The song first appeared on Coe's Castles in the Sand album. It was first covered by Hank Williams, Jr. and later by Tim McGraw.

Alternate version

An alternate 1983 studio version exists that is still heard occasionally on country radio and Sirius XM. Where the album version leaves off after the final verse, the alternate cut contains the additional lyrics performed in spoken word:
"You know you got a lot of competition out there now son,
It's not like it was in the fifties when I was here.
Then you got Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson,
Guy Clark and Billy Joe Shaver, David Allan Coe,
And you even got my son."

Chart performance