DAVID OLNEY STOPPED DURING HIS THIRD SONG, SAID, “I’M SORRY,” AND CLOSED HIS EYES. THE OTHER SONGWRITERS THOUGHT HE WAS PAUSING. HE HAD DIED ONSTAGE. David Olney spent nearly five decades writing from places most songwriters never entered. He could tell the Titanic story from the iceberg’s point of view, write history through forgotten witnesses, or build a love song around someone other writers would have treated as a villain. The method kept him outside mainstream country, but earned deep respect among Nashville writers. Born in Rhode Island, Olney moved to Nashville in 1973 and entered the same loose community as Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt and Rodney Crowell. He later fronted the X-Rays, appeared on Austin City Limits and released more than twenty albums across folk, rock, country and Americana. His songs often traveled farther in other voices. Emmylou Harris recorded “Deeper Well.” Linda Ronstadt, Steve Earle, Del McCoury and Tim O’Brien also drew from his catalog. Townes Van Zandt performed “Illegal Cargo.” Olney kept working without waiting for wider recognition. Beginning in 2008, he posted a weekly video series, You Never Know, performing songs, explaining how they were built and sometimes reciting poetry. He continued until January 2020. On January 18, 2020, Olney appeared at Florida’s 30A Songwriters Festival, seated beside Amy Rigby and Scott Miller. During his third song, he stopped, apologized, lowered his head and closed his eyes. There was no dramatic fall. For several moments, the musicians beside him believed he was holding the silence before continuing. He had suffered an apparent heart attack. David Olney was 71. The manner of his death became the headline, but his work had always moved attention away from himself and into the lives of strangers, criminals, objects and people history had overlooked. In 2024, fellow musicians released Can’t Steal My Fire: The Songs of David Olney, carrying his catalog into new voices. That became the more fitting continuation. A writer who had spent his life entering other people’s stories was gone. The people he influenced stepped forward and kept the characters alive.

“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.”

DAVID OLNEY STOPPED IN THE MIDDLE OF HIS THIRD SONG, SAID “I’M SORRY,” AND CLOSED HIS EYES. THE OTHER WRITERS THOUGHT HE WAS HOLDING THE SILENCE. HE WAS GONE.

David Olney spent nearly five decades writing from angles most songwriters would never think to enter.

He could tell the story of the Titanic from the iceberg’s point of view. He could write history through forgotten witnesses. He could build a love song around someone another writer might have turned into a villain.

That gift kept him mostly outside mainstream country.

But inside Nashville’s deeper songwriting circles, it made him one of the writers other writers listened to closely.

Nashville Gave Him A Harder Room

Olney was born in Rhode Island and moved to Nashville in 1973.

He entered a town where the cleanest path was not always the most interesting one. Around him were writers like Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt, and Rodney Crowell — people who were stretching country music toward literature, folk, history, and darker human corners.

Olney fit that room without sounding like anybody else in it.

He later fronted the X-Rays, appeared on Austin City Limits, and released more than twenty albums across folk, rock, country, and Americana.

The records did not turn him into a household name.

But they built something quieter and more durable.

A reputation.

His Songs Traveled Through Other Voices

Like many of the best songwriters, Olney often reached a wider audience when someone else carried the song.

Emmylou Harris recorded “Deeper Well.”

Linda Ronstadt, Steve Earle, Del McCoury, and Tim O’Brien all drew from his catalog.

Townes Van Zandt performed “Illegal Cargo.”

Those names mattered because they showed where Olney belonged.

Not at the center of commercial country radio.

But inside the bloodstream of serious American songwriting, where artists borrow from one another because the song has already proven it can survive outside its first voice.

David Olney’s work traveled that way.

Quietly.

Respectfully.

Farther than fame sometimes admits.

He Kept Working Without Waiting For Permission

Olney did not stop because the industry failed to make him simple.

He kept writing.

He kept touring.

Beginning in 2008, he posted a weekly video series called You Never Know, where he performed songs, talked about how they were made, and sometimes recited poetry.

That series said something about him.

He did not treat songs as product alone. He treated them as living things with trapdoors, histories, jokes, shadows, and ghosts hiding underneath.

Week after week, he kept opening those doors.

He continued almost until the end.

The Last Stage Was In Florida

On January 18, 2020, David Olney appeared at Florida’s 30A Songwriters Festival.

He was seated beside Amy Rigby and Scott Miller.

It was the kind of setting that suited him: songwriters sitting close, trading songs, letting the audience hear the work without much distance between the people onstage and the people listening.

During his third song, Olney stopped.

He said, “I’m sorry.”

Then he lowered his head and closed his eyes.

There was no dramatic collapse.

No final gesture big enough to announce what had happened.

For several moments, the songwriters beside him thought he was pausing — holding the silence before returning to the line.

But David Olney had suffered an apparent heart attack.

He was 71.

The Headline Was Not The Whole Man

The manner of his death became the story many people heard first.

A songwriter dying onstage.

A final apology.

A silence mistaken for performance.

But David Olney’s life cannot be reduced to the way it ended.

His work had always moved attention away from himself and toward other lives. Strangers. Criminals. Witnesses. Objects. People history had stepped around. Characters who would have stayed voiceless if a writer had not stopped long enough to imagine them fully.

That was his art.

He did not simply confess himself in song.

He entered other people’s rooms.

Then Other Voices Carried Him Forward

In 2024, fellow musicians released Can’t Steal My Fire: The Songs of David Olney.

That tribute carried his catalog into new voices.

It was a fitting continuation because Olney had always understood that songs did not have to end with the person who first sang them. They could move. They could change hands. They could let another singer find a new door into the same story.

For a writer like him, that mattered more than a monument.

The songs kept breathing.

The characters kept speaking.

The fire moved to other hands.

What David Olney’s Last Silence Really Leaves Behind

The deepest part of this story is not only that David Olney died onstage.

It is that the silence at the end looked, for a few seconds, like part of the song.

A songwriter seated beside other songwriters.

A third song.

A soft apology.

A lowered head.

Then the awful realization that the pause was not performance.

David Olney spent his life stepping into stories that were not his own.

After he was gone, the people who loved his work stepped into his.

And they kept singing.

Video

Related Post

TOMMY COLLINS HELPED BUILD THE BAKERSFIELD SOUND, THEN WALKED AWAY TO BECOME A PREACHER. YEARS LATER, MERLE HAGGARD PUT HIS REAL NAME INTO A SONG AND BROUGHT HIM BACK INTO COUNTRY MUSIC. Before Buck Owens became the face of Bakersfield and before Merle Haggard carried its sound nationwide, Tommy Collins was already making records that sounded nothing like polished Nashville country. Born Leonard Raymond Sipes in Oklahoma, he moved to California in 1952 after leaving the Army. Ferlin Husky helped connect him with producer Cliffie Stone, and Capitol Records soon recognized both his voice and his songwriting. Collins broke through in 1954 with “You Better Not Do That.” His records were lean, funny and driven by the sharp guitar of a young Buck Owens. Songs such as “Whatcha Gonna Do Now” and “It Tickles” helped establish the hard, uncluttered style later known as the Bakersfield Sound. Other singers were already using his material. Faron Young turned “If You Ain’t Lovin’ (You Ain’t Livin’)” into a hit in 1954. Decades later, George Strait took the same song to No. 1. Then Collins stepped away. After a religious conversion, he began recording sacred music and enrolled at Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary in 1957. By the end of the decade, he was serving as a pastor while the California sound he helped create was becoming a national force. Buck Owens kept the songs alive. In 1963, he released Buck Owens Sings Tommy Collins. The album reached No. 1 on the country chart, even as Collins remained largely outside the business. Collins eventually returned and scored another hit with “If You Can’t Bite, Don’t Growl” in 1965, but his career never regained its earlier momentum. His larger second act came through Merle Haggard, who recorded Collins songs including “Carolyn” and “The Roots of My Raising.” Both reached No. 1. Then Merle wrote about the man himself. In 1980, Haggard recorded “Leonard,” a biographical song tracing Collins’s journey from Oklahoma to California, through success, religion and disappointment. He did not use the stage name printed on the old Capitol records. He used Leonard. The song became a hit in 1981 and brought Collins renewed attention. He moved to Nashville, worked with Mel Tillis’s publishing company and continued writing. Tillis later charted with Collins’s “New Patches.” Collins was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1999 and died the following year at 69. By then, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Faron Young and George Strait had all carried his songs into different eras. The records said Tommy Collins. Merle’s song preserved the man beneath them.

HE WROTE “SEVEN BRIDGES ROAD” FOR THE EAGLES AND GAVE WAYLON JENNINGS “LONESOME, ON’RY AND MEAN.” BUT STEVE YOUNG REMAINED FAR LESS FAMOUS THAN THE SONGS THAT HELPED DEFINE COUNTRY ROCK AND OUTLAW COUNTRY. Steve Young never fit comfortably inside one branch of American music. Born in Georgia and raised across the South, he absorbed gospel, country, blues, folk and rock. He later called the mixture “Southern music,” but record companies preferred categories they could place on a shelf. Young moved through the folk scenes in New York and California before joining the country-rock group Stone Country. By 1969, he had released his first solo album, Rock Salt & Nails. That record contained “Seven Bridges Road.” The song came from a road near Montgomery, Alabama, but Young turned the place into something half remembered and half imagined. Other artists began carrying it forward. Dolly Parton recorded it. Joan Baez recorded it. The Eagles eventually made it one of their best-known harmony performances. Young’s own name never traveled as far as the song. The same thing happened again with “Lonesome, On’ry and Mean.” Young wrote and recorded the song before Waylon Jennings used it as the title track of his 1973 album. Waylon was fighting RCA for control over his sessions, musicians and sound. With his own band finally allowed into the studio, he delivered Young’s song with the frustration of a man who had spent years being told how country music should be made. The album became a turning point in Waylon’s transformation from Nashville recording artist into outlaw-country figure. Young had supplied the words that named the new identity. Other songs followed similar paths. Hank Williams Jr. recorded “Montgomery in the Rain.” Willie Nelson charted with “It’s Not Supposed to Be That Way.” Young’s catalog moved through the voices of artists with larger audiences, while his own albums earned admiration without producing lasting commercial security. Part of the problem was Young himself. He resisted being reshaped into a conventional Nashville performer. His records moved too freely among country, folk, gospel and rock, and he repeatedly protected the music even when compromise might have brought a wider career. Admirers later described him as a country-rock pioneer and an early outlaw before the term became a profitable Nashville brand. Young continued recording through the 1970s, including Honky Tonk Man, Renegade Picker and No Place to Fall. Townes Van Zandt, Guy Clark, Lucinda Williams and Steve Earle were among the songwriters and musicians who respected his work. But he remained a songwriter’s songwriter: influential inside the room, rarely recognized outside it. That distance widened as the songs took on lives detached from their author. “Seven Bridges Road” became associated with the Eagles’ stacked harmonies. “Lonesome, On’ry and Mean” became inseparable from Waylon’s beard, leather vest and newly liberated sound. Young kept performing them in smaller rooms. He died in Nashville on March 17, 2016, at 73, after suffering a head injury in a fall. The obituaries called him a pioneer, but the recognition arrived after decades in which audiences had often known his songs better than his voice. By then, one composition had become part of the Eagles’ live legacy, and another had helped give outlaw country its name. Steve Young left behind no single public image large enough to compete with either record. What remained was his handwriting beneath both titles

You Missed

DAVID OLNEY STOPPED DURING HIS THIRD SONG, SAID, “I’M SORRY,” AND CLOSED HIS EYES. THE OTHER SONGWRITERS THOUGHT HE WAS PAUSING. HE HAD DIED ONSTAGE. David Olney spent nearly five decades writing from places most songwriters never entered. He could tell the Titanic story from the iceberg’s point of view, write history through forgotten witnesses, or build a love song around someone other writers would have treated as a villain. The method kept him outside mainstream country, but earned deep respect among Nashville writers. Born in Rhode Island, Olney moved to Nashville in 1973 and entered the same loose community as Guy Clark, Townes Van Zandt and Rodney Crowell. He later fronted the X-Rays, appeared on Austin City Limits and released more than twenty albums across folk, rock, country and Americana. His songs often traveled farther in other voices. Emmylou Harris recorded “Deeper Well.” Linda Ronstadt, Steve Earle, Del McCoury and Tim O’Brien also drew from his catalog. Townes Van Zandt performed “Illegal Cargo.” Olney kept working without waiting for wider recognition. Beginning in 2008, he posted a weekly video series, You Never Know, performing songs, explaining how they were built and sometimes reciting poetry. He continued until January 2020. On January 18, 2020, Olney appeared at Florida’s 30A Songwriters Festival, seated beside Amy Rigby and Scott Miller. During his third song, he stopped, apologized, lowered his head and closed his eyes. There was no dramatic fall. For several moments, the musicians beside him believed he was holding the silence before continuing. He had suffered an apparent heart attack. David Olney was 71. The manner of his death became the headline, but his work had always moved attention away from himself and into the lives of strangers, criminals, objects and people history had overlooked. In 2024, fellow musicians released Can’t Steal My Fire: The Songs of David Olney, carrying his catalog into new voices. That became the more fitting continuation. A writer who had spent his life entering other people’s stories was gone. The people he influenced stepped forward and kept the characters alive.

THE ALBUM WAS SUPPOSED TO BE RECORDED IN A STUDIO. JERRY JEFF WALKER TOOK THE BAND TO LUCKENBACH INSTEAD. By 1973, Jerry Jeff Walker could have tried to become a normal Nashville success story. “Mr. Bojangles” had already carried his name far beyond Texas. MCA wanted another album. He had moved to Austin, fallen in with the musicians who would become the Lost Gonzo Band, and found a scene that did not care much for polished edges. The songs were loose. The nights were long. The line between the stage and the audience was never very clean. Then came Luckenbach. Jerry Jeff and the band did not go there to make a careful studio record. They set up in the old dance hall in August 1973, with people in the room, beer in the air, and the kind of Texas noise that would have been edited out anywhere else. Gary P. Nunn was there. Bob Livingston was there. Hondo Crouch’s little town was there too, half real place, half running joke, and just strange enough to hold the whole thing. They recorded ¡Viva Terlingua! live. The album did not sound like a man trying to behave for a label. “London Homesick Blues” came out of it. “Gettin’ By” came out of it. So did the rough, communal feeling that made Austin’s progressive-country scene sound less like an industry plan and more like a room nobody wanted to leave. It became Jerry Jeff’s signature record. It also helped turn Luckenbach from a tiny Hill Country town into one of the holy places of Texas music. Four years later, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson would make the name even bigger with “Luckenbach, Texas,” but Jerry Jeff had already put the room on tape. Some records are made to clean up a singer. ¡Viva Terlingua! caught Jerry Jeff Walker before anybody could.

IN 1953, GOLDIE HILL BECAME ONE OF COUNTRY MUSIC’S FIRST WOMEN TO REACH NO. 1. FOUR YEARS LATER, SHE MARRIED CARL SMITH AND LARGELY WALKED AWAY FROM THE ROAD TO RAISE THEIR FAMILY. Goldie Hill came from a cotton farm outside Karnes City, Texas. Born Argolda Voncile Hill, she picked cotton with her brothers before the family began performing around San Antonio as the Texas Hillbillies. By her late teens, she was singing on radio and working with established country acts including Red River Dave and Big Bill Lister. In 1952, Decca Records signed her. Her first release failed, but the next one changed her place in country history. “I Let the Stars Get in My Eyes,” written by her brother Tommy Hill and Slim Willet, answered the hit “Don’t Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes.” Released late in 1952, Goldie’s record reached No. 1 on Billboard’s country jukebox chart in 1953. At a time when Kitty Wells had only recently broken country radio’s resistance to female solo performers, Goldie became one of the first women to reach the top of the country charts under her own name. She was soon known as the “Golden Hillbilly.” Goldie appeared on the Louisiana Hayride, the Grand Ole Opry and the Ozark Jubilee. She also recorded successful duets with Justin Tubb and Red Sovine. Alongside Kitty Wells and Jean Shepard, she was helping establish that women could carry country records without being attached to a male bandleader. Then, in 1957, she married Carl Smith. Smith was already one of country music’s biggest male stars, with a long string of Top 10 records. He had recently divorced June Carter. Goldie entered the marriage with her own hit career, her own stage name and a No. 1 record behind her. After the wedding, she virtually stopped touring. There were later recordings and occasional returns, including a brief comeback during the 1960s, but the momentum of her early career was gone. Goldie and Carl settled on a 500-acre Tennessee ranch, raised two sons and a daughter, and remained married for 47 years. The decision made her difficult to place in the usual country story. She was not a forgotten singer who had failed to break through. She had already broken through. Nor was she pushed aside before radio heard her. The record had reached No. 1, the major stages had opened, and the industry had given her a nickname built for stardom. She simply stopped organizing her life around it. Goldie occasionally returned to the microphone, but she never tried to reclaim the position she had held in 1953. By the time later generations of women became major country stars, one of the singers who had helped clear the path was living mostly outside Nashville’s public memory. Goldie Hill died of cancer in 2005. Carl remained on the ranch until his own death five years later. Inside the house were nearly five decades of marriage and a family that had grown during the years when Goldie might otherwise have been chasing another chart record. Her largest hit lasted two minutes and thirty-five seconds. The life she chose afterward lasted 47 years

TOMMY COLLINS HELPED BUILD THE BAKERSFIELD SOUND, THEN WALKED AWAY TO BECOME A PREACHER. YEARS LATER, MERLE HAGGARD PUT HIS REAL NAME INTO A SONG AND BROUGHT HIM BACK INTO COUNTRY MUSIC. Before Buck Owens became the face of Bakersfield and before Merle Haggard carried its sound nationwide, Tommy Collins was already making records that sounded nothing like polished Nashville country. Born Leonard Raymond Sipes in Oklahoma, he moved to California in 1952 after leaving the Army. Ferlin Husky helped connect him with producer Cliffie Stone, and Capitol Records soon recognized both his voice and his songwriting. Collins broke through in 1954 with “You Better Not Do That.” His records were lean, funny and driven by the sharp guitar of a young Buck Owens. Songs such as “Whatcha Gonna Do Now” and “It Tickles” helped establish the hard, uncluttered style later known as the Bakersfield Sound. Other singers were already using his material. Faron Young turned “If You Ain’t Lovin’ (You Ain’t Livin’)” into a hit in 1954. Decades later, George Strait took the same song to No. 1. Then Collins stepped away. After a religious conversion, he began recording sacred music and enrolled at Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary in 1957. By the end of the decade, he was serving as a pastor while the California sound he helped create was becoming a national force. Buck Owens kept the songs alive. In 1963, he released Buck Owens Sings Tommy Collins. The album reached No. 1 on the country chart, even as Collins remained largely outside the business. Collins eventually returned and scored another hit with “If You Can’t Bite, Don’t Growl” in 1965, but his career never regained its earlier momentum. His larger second act came through Merle Haggard, who recorded Collins songs including “Carolyn” and “The Roots of My Raising.” Both reached No. 1. Then Merle wrote about the man himself. In 1980, Haggard recorded “Leonard,” a biographical song tracing Collins’s journey from Oklahoma to California, through success, religion and disappointment. He did not use the stage name printed on the old Capitol records. He used Leonard. The song became a hit in 1981 and brought Collins renewed attention. He moved to Nashville, worked with Mel Tillis’s publishing company and continued writing. Tillis later charted with Collins’s “New Patches.” Collins was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1999 and died the following year at 69. By then, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Faron Young and George Strait had all carried his songs into different eras. The records said Tommy Collins. Merle’s song preserved the man beneath them.