4 OUTLAWS DIDN’T SING “THE LAST COWBOY SONG” LIKE A COVER. THEY SANG IT LIKE A WARNING. When Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Kris Kristofferson stood together as The Highwaymen, it never felt like just another supergroup. It felt like four men carrying the last dust of an older America on their boots. So when they sang “The Last Cowboy Song,” it didn’t sound like nostalgia for hats, horses, and open plains. It sounded heavier than that. They were singing about a kind of man the modern world no longer knew what to do with — restless, stubborn, half-lonely, half-free, built for roads that were disappearing under pavement and progress. That is why the song lands differently in their voices. They weren’t pretending to understand the cowboy myth. In different ways, they had lived beside it: the drifter, the rebel, the sinner, the survivor. By the time those four voices came together, the cowboy wasn’t just riding away. He was being sung out by the last men who still knew how to sound like him.

Introduction 4 Outlaws Didn’t Sing “The Last Cowboy Song” Like a Cover. They Sang It...