HE WORE DUCT TAPE LIKE ARMOR — BUT THE WOUND WAS UNDERNEATH. Blaze Foley never looked like Nashville’s idea of a star. He came out of Arkansas, drifted through Texas, sang in rooms where the beer signs glowed louder than the applause, and somehow left behind songs that sounded like they had been written after midnight by a man who had already forgiven the world. His real name was Michael David Fuller. But the people who found him in the smoke and neon of Austin knew him as Blaze — the duct-taped poet, the beautiful wreck, the friend of Townes Van Zandt who carried sorrow like a second guitar. In “If I Could Only Fly,” you can hear the loneliness of motel rooms, pay phones, and love that almost made it home. In “Clay Pigeons,” you hear a man trying to leave town, start over, and still bring his broken heart with him. He was never rich. Never polished. Never safely packaged for radio. And then, in 1989, at just 39 years old, Blaze was shot and killed in Austin. At his funeral, friends covered his casket in duct tape — one last strange, tender salute to a man the world barely noticed while he was breathing. But songs know how to survive. Long after the room went quiet, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, John Prine, and countless wounded hearts kept finding Blaze Foley in the dark. Some voices don’t echo because they were loud. They echo because they were true.

HE WORE DUCT TAPE LIKE ARMOR — BUT THE WOUND WAS UNDERNEATH… Blaze Foley never looked like the kind of man Nashville would know how to sell. He looked like…