FOUR BULLETS HIT TRACY LAWRENCE BEFORE HIS FIRST ALBUM CAME OUT. SIX MONTHS LATER, “STICKS AND STONES” WENT TO NO. 1. By 1991, Tracy Lawrence had only just arrived in Nashville. He had come from Arkansas with a deep country voice, a record deal with Atlantic, and the kind of first chance singers spend years chasing. He had finished the vocal tracks for his debut album, Sticks and Stones. The songs were done. The studio work was behind him. All that was left was to wait for country radio to decide whether a new singer had a future. Then, on May 31, he walked a female friend back to her hotel near Music Row. Three men approached them in the parking lot. The robbery turned violent. Tracy tried to protect her long enough for her to get away. He was shot four times — in the hand, arm, hip, and knee. Two of the wounds required surgery. One bullet remained in his body. The singer who had just finished his first record was suddenly facing hospital rooms, rehabilitation, and the possibility that the career might end before the album even reached the shelves. The release was delayed while he recovered. But the record still came out later that year. Its first single was “Sticks and Stones,” a song about a man trying to sound tougher than the heartbreak tearing through him. “You can take the house, the car, the clothes,” he sings in effect. Just do not expect the damage to disappear because you walked away. By January 1992, “Sticks and Stones” had gone to No. 1. The title sounded almost cruelly fitting. Tracy Lawrence had already learned that sticks and stones could do more than hurt feelings. They could change the shape of a body, delay a dream, and leave a young singer wondering whether he would ever walk normally again. But country radio heard the record. And the man who had been shot in a Nashville parking lot before his debut album was released became one of the defining voices of 1990s country. The bullet stayed in his hip. The song stayed at No. 1.

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FOUR BULLETS HIT TRACY LAWRENCE BEFORE HIS FIRST ALBUM CAME OUT. SIX MONTHS LATER, “STICKS AND STONES” WENT TO NO. 1.

By 1991, Tracy Lawrence had only just arrived in Nashville.

He came from Arkansas with a deep country voice, a deal with Atlantic Records, and the kind of first chance singers spend years trying to reach.

His debut album, Sticks and Stones, was already finished.

The vocals were done.

The studio work was behind him.

All that remained was the wait.

Would country radio hear something in a new singer with no proven hit and no guarantee of a second shot?

Then, on May 31, the future nearly stopped in a parking lot near Music Row.

He Was Walking A Friend To Her Hotel

Tracy had walked a female friend back to her hotel.

Three men approached them.

The robbery turned violent.

Tracy tried to protect her long enough for her to get away.

He was shot four times.

In the hand.

The arm.

The hip.

The knee.

Two wounds required surgery.

One bullet stayed in his body.

The young singer who had just finished his first album was suddenly facing hospital rooms, rehabilitation, and the possibility that the career might end before the record ever reached the shelves.

The Album Had To Wait

The release was delayed while Tracy recovered.

That was the cruel part.

He had done the work.

He had made the record.

He had finally reached Nashville.

And before anyone had a chance to hear him, he had to learn how much of his life could change in one night.

The dream was no longer only about radio.

It was about healing.

About walking again.

About finding out whether the body and the future would give him another chance.

Then Country Radio Heard “Sticks And Stones”

When the record finally came out, its first single was “Sticks and Stones.”

A song about a man trying to sound tougher than the heartbreak tearing through him.

A man saying, in effect, take the house.

Take the car.

Take the clothes.

Just do not expect the damage to disappear because you walked away.

By January 1992, “Sticks and Stones” had gone to No. 1.

The title sounded almost too fitting.

Tracy Lawrence had already learned that sticks and stones could do more than hurt feelings.

They could change the shape of a body.

Delay a dream.

Leave a young singer wondering whether he would ever move normally again.

The Song Did What The Bullets Could Not Stop

Country radio heard the record.

And the man who had been shot in a Nashville parking lot before his debut album was released became one of the defining voices of 1990s country.

The success did not erase the night.

It did not erase the surgeries, the recovery, or the bullet that remained in his hip.

But it proved the story had not ended where the ambulance lights began.

What “Sticks And Stones” Really Carried

The deepest part of this story is not only that Tracy Lawrence scored a No. 1 hit.

It is what had happened before listeners ever heard the song.

A first album.

A hotel parking lot.

A friend trying to get away.

Four gunshots.

A hospital room.

A delayed release.

And a young singer waiting to see whether country music would still meet him on the other side.

The bullet stayed in his hip.

The song stayed at No. 1.

And Tracy Lawrence kept going.

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FOUR BULLETS HIT TRACY LAWRENCE BEFORE HIS FIRST ALBUM CAME OUT. SIX MONTHS LATER, “STICKS AND STONES” WENT TO NO. 1. By 1991, Tracy Lawrence had only just arrived in Nashville. He had come from Arkansas with a deep country voice, a record deal with Atlantic, and the kind of first chance singers spend years chasing. He had finished the vocal tracks for his debut album, Sticks and Stones. The songs were done. The studio work was behind him. All that was left was to wait for country radio to decide whether a new singer had a future. Then, on May 31, he walked a female friend back to her hotel near Music Row. Three men approached them in the parking lot. The robbery turned violent. Tracy tried to protect her long enough for her to get away. He was shot four times — in the hand, arm, hip, and knee. Two of the wounds required surgery. One bullet remained in his body. The singer who had just finished his first record was suddenly facing hospital rooms, rehabilitation, and the possibility that the career might end before the album even reached the shelves. The release was delayed while he recovered. But the record still came out later that year. Its first single was “Sticks and Stones,” a song about a man trying to sound tougher than the heartbreak tearing through him. “You can take the house, the car, the clothes,” he sings in effect. Just do not expect the damage to disappear because you walked away. By January 1992, “Sticks and Stones” had gone to No. 1. The title sounded almost cruelly fitting. Tracy Lawrence had already learned that sticks and stones could do more than hurt feelings. They could change the shape of a body, delay a dream, and leave a young singer wondering whether he would ever walk normally again. But country radio heard the record. And the man who had been shot in a Nashville parking lot before his debut album was released became one of the defining voices of 1990s country. The bullet stayed in his hip. The song stayed at No. 1.

55,000 SEATS WERE NOT ENOUGH. SO LOWER BROADWAY OFFERED A FREE LIVESTREAM FOR FANS WHO COULDN’T GET INTO THE STADIUM. By the time Alan Jackson’s final full-length concert reached Nissan Stadium, not everyone who wanted to be there could get inside. The show had sold out. George Strait was coming. Carrie Underwood, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Lee Ann Womack, Eric Church, Lainey Wilson, and a long line of country stars were on the bill. For people who had spent decades with Alan’s records in their trucks, kitchens, fishing boats, and living rooms, one night in Nashville had become the last chance to see him carry a full concert on his own terms. But a stadium has walls. Lower Broadway did not. So downtown Nashville built another room for the farewell. They called it Keepin’ It Country on Broadway. A stage and large screen went up on Lower Broadway. Gates opened at 4 p.m. The livestream was free. James Carothers performed before the broadcast, and then the people who had not found a seat at Nissan Stadium could still stand together in the city Alan Jackson had made his own and watch the final show unfold in real time. His songs belonged to the people who heard “Chattahoochee” on the radio after work. The people who played “Drive” after losing a parent. The people who had a copy of Don’t Rock the Jukebox worn thin from years in the truck. At Nissan Stadium, Alan sang the last full-length show of his touring life. A few miles away, on Lower Broadway, strangers stood shoulder to shoulder beneath the Nashville lights and listened anyway. The stadium had sold the seats. The city gave the goodbye back to everyone else.

MORE THAN 10 COUNTRY STARS SANG ALAN JACKSON’S SONGS BEFORE HE WALKED ONSTAGE TO SING THEM ONE LAST TIME HIMSELF. Alan Jackson’s final full-length concert was never built like a normal goodbye. By the time Last Call: One More for the Road — The Finale reached Nissan Stadium on June 27, 2026, Alan had already spent more than three decades carrying country music through a period when the sound around him kept changing. He had made 35 No. 1 records. He had sold the songs about rivers, pickup trucks, fathers, weddings, broken hearts, church, memory, and ordinary people who never expected their lives to become country lyrics. But before Alan sang a note that night, other people sang his life back to him. Luke Combs. Carrie Underwood. Miranda Lambert. Eric Church. Lainey Wilson. Luke Bryan. Keith Urban. Thomas Rhett. Lee Ann Womack. George Strait. A generation of artists who came after Alan Jackson stepped onto the Nissan Stadium stage and took turns singing the songs he had spent years making famous. Some had grown up hearing him on the radio. Some had built careers in a country world Alan had helped keep open. The fiddle-and-steel side of Nashville. The part of country music where a song could still be about a truck, a marriage, a dead father, a river, or a man trying to hold on to the one thing he should have protected. Then the weather stopped everything. Lightning pushed fans out of the seats and into the concourses. The stadium waited. The singers waited. Alan waited. When the storm passed, the crowd came back. And after all those artists had sung his songs, Alan Jackson walked out to sing his own. “Gone Country.” “Livin’ on Love.” “Drive.” “Where Were You.” “Chattahoochee.” The younger stars had opened the night by proving how far Alan Jackson’s music had traveled. Then Alan stepped into the same stadium and reminded everyone where it started.