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Travis Tritt Honors Waylon Jennings With Cover of “Good Ol’ Boys” Theme From The Dukes of Hazzard

Travis Tritt smiles in a black cowboy hat and shirt while performing "Good Ol' Boys" with a microphone in front of an American flag backdrop.
by
  • Riley is a Senior Country Music Journalist for Country Thang Daily, known for her engaging storytelling and insightful coverage of the genre.
  • Before joining Country Thang Daily, Riley developed her expertise at Billboard and People magazine, focusing on feature stories and music reviews.
  • Riley has a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism from Belmont University, with a minor in Cultural Studies.

Sometimes a song is so tied to a legend that when someone else picks it up, you’re half ready to wince, but then Travis Tritt walks up, tugs his hat down, and reminds you he’s one of the last true outlaws we’ve got left.

Back in 2022, Tritt rolled into Rebel Ranch in Ashland City, Tennessee, to pay tribute to his friend Waylon Jennings on what would have been Waylon’s 85th birthday. Instead of reaching for one of Waylon’s heartbreak ballads or barroom anthems, Tritt went straight for the theme that turned Friday nights into a high-octane joyride for an entire generation with “Good Ol’ Boys.”

If you’re of a certain age, that opening guitar riff hits you like a slap of dust and moonshine right to the face. The moment you hear “Just’a good ol’ boys, never meanin’ no harm,” you’re not sitting in a concert hall anymore. You’re tearing through the Georgia backroads with Bo and Luke Duke, the General Lee airborne, Rosco P. Coltrane cussing your name, and your cousin riding shotgun with a mason jar of trouble. It’s country myth in motion and Waylon made it immortal.

Waylon didn’t just sing that song, he was the Balladeer. He narrated the entire wild ride on The Dukes of Hazzard, giving those outlaw cousins the twinkle-eyed commentary that made you root for them even when they blew up half the county. That’s what made “Good Ol’ Boys” so much more than a TV theme. It was an outlaw’s wink at the rules, a reminder that sometimes the best stories are about folks who don’t mind bending the law if it means doing right by their own.

When Travis Tritt stepped up to play it, you could feel the crowd lean in like they were sliding across the hood of that Charger one more time. This wasn’t a stunt. This was one rebel tipping his hat to another. Travis has always carried that Waylon DNA, the scruffy beard, the don’t-give-a-damn grin, the voice that still sounds like a Harley revving down a back road. He didn’t need to reinvent it. He just needed to pour a shot of his own attitude into it and let the memories do the rest.

That’s the thing about Tritt. He’s never tried to chase trends or shiny country radio gimmicks. He’d rather plug in, stomp the stage, and remind you what real country grit sounds like. And when he’s covering Waylon, you know the spirit of the Outlaw Movement is alive and well, even if half of Nashville has forgotten where it came from.

The lyrics hit just as hard now as they did back then. “Straightenin’ the curves, flatnin’ the hills, someday the mountain might get ’em but the law never will.” It’s a whole life philosophy in three lines, the code of folks who’d rather raise a little hell than sit quietly in the corner. It’s modern-day Robin Hood stuff, and it’s why people still sing it decades after the last Duke boys’ jump.

Waylon’s original cut topped the country charts in 1980 and ended up his biggest pop hit ever, selling a million copies. Not bad for a song born out of a TV show about moonshine runners and small-town hijinks. That’s the magic of Waylon. He could sing a theme song and make it feel like scripture. And if there’s any modern voice who can keep that flame burning, it’s Travis Tritt.

So here’s to two good ol’ boys who never needed permission to color outside the lines. Waylon may be gone, but when Travis Tritt cranks out “Good Ol’ Boys,” you can feel that outlaw spirit rumble right through your boots. Some songs don’t belong locked up in the past. They belong blasting down a dirt road, windows down, while you outrun the law and your troubles for one more mile.

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