“HE HEARD A STRING THAT MADE HIM RAGE — HE HAD TO FIND THAT GUITAR MAN!” It was 1967, and Elvis Presley was restless again. He’d heard a song crackling through the radio — “Guitar Man” by a wild Southern picker named Jerry Reed. The sound was raw, greasy, alive… unlike anything the polished studios of Nashville had ever produced. Those guitar licks didn’t just play — they danced, they taunted, they burned. So when Elvis decided to record the song himself, he brought in the best players in town. But something was missing. No one — not even Nashville’s top session men — could recreate that swampy, finger-picking madness. Elvis slammed his fist and said, “Find me that man! I want the man who played that guitar!” By then, Jerry Reed was miles away, waist-deep in the Cumberland River, fishing rod in hand. When the call came, he laughed and said, “I left a fish biting to go play with Elvis Presley!” That’s how two Southern rebels — one a King, one a restless guitarist — met under the studio lights. And what happened next turned a simple recording into a piece of rock-and-country legend.
“HE HEARD A STRING THAT MADE HIM RAGE — HE HAD TO FIND THAT GUITAR MAN!” It was 1967, and…