
BLAZE FOLEY WROTE SONGS THAT WILLIE, MERLE, JOHN PRINE, AND LUCINDA WILLIAMS WOULD CARRY. WHEN HE WAS SHOT DEAD IN AUSTIN, HIS FRIENDS HAD TO RAISE MONEY JUST TO BURY HIM.
His real name was Michael David Fuller.
Before he became Blaze Foley, he was a gospel-singing kid who had survived childhood polio and grown into a man who seemed to belong more to songs than to any stable address.
He moved through Georgia, Chicago, Houston, and Austin without ever building the kind of career Nashville could measure. He repaired his clothes with silver duct tape. He slept wherever friends would let him. Sometimes, after the bars closed, he slept under pool tables.
The songs were gentler than the life around them.
That was the strange thing about Blaze Foley.
He could live like a man falling apart and still write like somebody holding a broken heart very carefully.
The Texas Rooms Knew Him Before The World Did
Blaze Foley became part of the Texas songwriter world, the same loose, wounded circle that held men like Townes Van Zandt.
Townes understood him. Or at least he understood the contradiction: a brilliant song living inside a life that refused to become orderly.
Foley drank heavily. He lost relationships. He struggled to protect his own recordings and keep his own career from slipping through his hands.
But he kept writing.
Small songs.
Tender songs.
Songs that did not sound like they were trying to win anything.
They sounded like a man trying to leave behind proof that he had felt something true.
Then Willie And Merle Sang One Of Them
One of those songs was “If I Could Only Fly.”
Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard recorded it together in 1987.
That should have changed everything.
Two of the biggest country legends alive had taken a Blaze Foley song and put their voices on it. But their version did not become another “Pancho and Lefty.” It did not lift Foley into the kind of recognition that could pay bills, protect tapes, or make the road easier.
The song had reached legends.
The writer was still mostly unknown outside the Texas circuit.
That was the hard distance in Blaze Foley’s life.
His work could travel farther than he could.
The Recognition Came Too Late
Other songs waited even longer.
John Prine would eventually record “Clay Pigeons.” Lucinda Williams would write “Drunken Angel” about him. Lyle Lovett, Gurf Morlix, and generations of Texas musicians would help carry the name Blaze Foley forward.
But most of that came after he was gone.
That is the cruel part of this story.
The songs survived.
The songwriter did not get to stand in the middle of what they became.
While he was alive, Blaze was still drifting between rooms, trying to hold together a career with almost no money, no major machine, and no real protection from the life closing in around him.
Then The Austin House Turned Violent
On February 1, 1989, Foley was at the Austin home of his elderly friend Concho January.
Foley believed Concho’s son, Carey January, had been taking his father’s pension and welfare money. The confrontation turned violent.
Carey January shot Blaze Foley in the chest with a small-caliber rifle.
Blaze was thirty-nine years old.
Carey admitted firing the shot but said he had acted in self-defense. A jury later acquitted him.
People who knew Foley continued to dispute the way he was portrayed at trial.
But the verdict did not change.
Blaze Foley was dead.
There Was No Money Waiting To Carry Him Home
Foley left behind almost none of the protections people imagine a songwriter might have.
No major estate.
No long catalog of successful albums.
No industry machine ready to turn grief into tribute.
There was not even enough money sitting there to bury him easily.
His friends had to organize a benefit to cover the cost.
That detail tells the truth more sharply than any legend could.
A man whose songs would later be sung by giants still needed friends to pass the hat after he died.
The Duct Tape Followed Him To The Grave
At the funeral, his friends reportedly covered his coffin with duct tape.
It was the same cheap material Blaze had used to hold together his boots and decorate his clothes.
For anyone else, it might have looked like a joke.
For Blaze, it felt almost like a signature.
The duct tape had been part costume, part survival, part stubborn refusal to pretend he was better held together than he was.
Even in death, his friends gave him back the material he had used to patch himself through life.
A poor man’s silver.
A songwriter’s armor.
The thing that held when almost nothing else did.
Even The Grave Became A Story
Afterward, the stories kept growing.
Townes Van Zandt later told a wild tale about going to Foley’s grave because Blaze had died carrying the pawn ticket for one of Townes’s guitars.
Whether every piece of that story happened exactly as told almost became less important than what it revealed.
In that world, even the dead might still be holding something the living needed back.
A guitar.
A pawn ticket.
A debt.
A piece of the road not yet settled.
Among men who owned almost nothing, songs and instruments could still matter enough to send somebody back to a grave.
What Blaze Foley Really Left Behind
The deepest part of this story is not only that Blaze Foley died before the world understood his songs.
It is that his songs escaped a life that could barely hold itself together.
A gospel childhood.
A body marked by polio.
Silver duct tape on his clothes.
Texas rooms.
Townes Van Zandt nearby.
A gunshot in Austin.
Then friends raising money just to put him in the ground.
Blaze Foley never became a country star.
He became something harder to manufacture.
A songwriter whose work outlived the wreckage around him.
Years after his friends had to hold a benefit for his burial, the songs were still moving — in the voices of people who had survived long enough to sing what he left behind.
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