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  • American Songwriter

    The Story Behind the Final Song Toby Keith Recorded, Joe Diffie’s 1992 Ballad “Ships That Don’t Come In”

    By Tina Benitez-Eves,

    12 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4UFuC8_0vDHQ29p00

    By the time Joe Diffie released his second album Regular Joe in 1992, he already had two No. 1 singles —”Home” and “If the Devil Danced (In Empty Pockets)”—with more to come, including “Third Rock from the Sun”, “Pickup Man,” and “Bigger Than the Beatles.” Regular Joe gave Diffie two more hit singles, “Is It Cold in Here” and “Ships That Don’t Come In,” which both went to No. 5 on the Country chart.

    ‘There’s those who never have’

    Written by Dave Gibson and Paul Nelson, “Ships That Don’t Come In” follows a heart-to-heart conversation between two men talking about their hardships while celebrating the lives they’ve been fortunate to live so far.

    I could tell he’d had a tough life

    By the way he sat and stared

    And me, I’d come to push and shove

    So I pulled up a chair

    We talked of roads untraveled

    We talked of love untrue

    Of strings that come unraveled

    We were kings and kindred fools

    And just when I’d hit bottom

    That old man raised his glass

    Said at least we’ve had our chances

    There’s those who never have

    The men also raise a glass to all the soldiers, homeless, and others who never had a chance to live much.

    So here’s to all the soldiers

    Who have ever died in vain

    The insane locked up in themselves

    And the homeless down on Main

    To those who stand on empty shores

    And spit against the wind

    And those who wait forever

    For ships that don’t come in

    He said it’s only life’s illusions

    That bring us to this bar

    To pick up these old crutches

    And compare each other’s scars

    ‘Cause the things we’re calling heartaches

    Hell, they’re hardly worth our time

    We bitch about a dollar

    When there’s those without a dime

    As he ordered one last round

    He said, I guess we can’t complain

    ‘Cause God made life a gamble

    And we’re still in the game

    “That is definitely one of my favorites,” said Diffie of the ballad. “It is a very pointed song, it has a

    lot of deep meaning to it and it means a lot of different things to different people. I really love singing that song.”

    Toby Keith’s Tribute to Diffie

    Shortly before Toby Keith‘s death on February 5, 2024, at 64, he collaborated with Hardy on a cover of Diffie’s “Ships That Don’t Come In,” also featuring Luke Combs. The song was released on Hardy’s tribute album to Diffie Hixtape: Vol. 3: Difftape in March of 2024 and a video of Keith recording it in the studio was released later in the year.

    Hardy’s tribute to Diffie, who died March 29, 2020, at 61, due to complications of the coronavirus, also features renditions of his songs interpreted by Reba McEntire, Post Malone, Lainey Wilson, Jon Pardi, Morgan Wallen, Old Dominion, Luke Bryan, Clint Black, Darius Rucker, and more.

    Photo: Joe Diffie at the 12th Annual ACM Honors, Show, Nashville, USA, August 22, 2018, by imageSPACE/Shutterstock

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