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

Some songs hit you in the heart before they ever reach your ears. “Drive (For Daddy Gene)” is one of those songs.

At first listen, it might sound like a simple country tune about cars and childhood. But listen closer, and you’ll realize—it’s really about legacy. It’s about a quiet father, a rusty old truck, and a son who’s finally old enough to understand what those moments really meant.

Alan Jackson wrote this after his dad, Eugene “Daddy Gene” Jackson, passed away. But it’s not a sad song. It’s a love letter. A tribute. A thank-you note wrapped in chords and memory.

“It was just an old half-ton, short bed Ford / My uncle bought new in ’64…”

The beauty of this song is in its details. The smell of the lake. The feel of the wheel in young hands. The steady presence of a father who didn’t need to say much—he just showed up, day after day. It’s everything we remember long after the big moments fade.

What makes it even more special? By the end, Alan’s not just remembering the past. He’s passing it on. Now he’s the dad in the driver’s seat, watching his daughters feel the same wind in their hair. It’s full-circle storytelling at its best.

And if you’ve ever looked at your dad—or your own kids—and thought, “These are the moments I’ll keep forever,” this song? It’s for you.

Video

Lyrics

It’s painted red, the stripe was white
It was eighteen feet, from the bow to stern light
Secondhand, from a dealer in Atlanta
I rode up with daddy, when he went there to get her
Put on a shine, put on a motor
Built out of love, made for the water
Ran her for years, ’til the transom got rotten
A piece of my childhood, will never be forgoten
It was, just an old plywood boat
A ’75 Johnson with electric choke
A young boy two hands on the wheel
I can’t replace the way it made me feel
And I would turn her sharp
And I would make it whine
He’d say, You can’t beat the way an old wood boat rides
Just a little lake across the Alabama line
But I was king of the ocean
When daddy let me
Drive
Just an old half-ton shortbed Ford
My uncle bought new, in ’64
Daddy got it right, ’cause the engine was smoking
A couple of burnt valves, and he had it going
He’d let me drive her when we haul off a load
Down a dirt strip where we’d dump trash off of Thigpen Road
I’d sit up in the seat and stretch my feet out to the pedels
Smiling like a hero that just received his medal
It was just an old hand-me-down Ford
With three-speed on the column and a dent in the door
A young boy, two hands on the wheel
I can’t replace the way it made me feel and
And I would press that clutch
And I would, keep it right
He’d say, “a little slower son; you’re doing just fine”
Just a dirt road with trash on each side
But I was Mario Andretti
When daddy let me
Drive
I’m grown up now
Three daughters of my own
I let them drive my old jeep
Across the pasture at our home
Maybe one day they’ll reach back in their file
And pull out that old memory
And think of me and smile
And say
It was just an old worn out jeep
Rusty old floor boards
Hot on my feet
A young girl, two hands on the wheel
I can’t replace the way it, made me feel
And he’d say turn it left
And steer it right
Straighten up girl now, you’re doing just fine
Just a little valley by the river where we’d ride
But I was high on a mountain
When daddy let me
Drive
Daddy let me drive
Oh he let me, drive
It’s just an old plywood boat
With a ’75 Johnson
With electric choke

Related Post

You Missed