
Zac Brown Reveals the Hilarious Thing Willie Nelson Does With Young Artists Before Shows
Only Willie Nelson could turn a pre-show ritual into a legendary prank on the next generation of country stars.
Zac Brown recently sat down on The Rich Eisen Show and shared a story that instantly joined the growing library of Willie lore. While promoting his new album Love & Fear and talking about his upcoming Las Vegas Sphere residency, Brown was asked to spill his favorite Willie Nelson memory. He did not hesitate.
Years ago, the Zac Brown Band opened for Willie. Brown recalled stepping onto the tour bus, expecting a friendly handshake and maybe some small talk. Instead, he was greeted by a scene straight out of a stoner comedy. “I come on the bus and I walk through two or three elderly gentlemen that work with him that are halfway passed out, kinda stoned sitting there,” Brown said. From there, he slid into a booth that curved like the ones at a Waffle House, and that is where the fun began.
According to Brown, Willie has a mischievous habit of rolling one up and offering it to younger artists before they hit the stage. It is not just a gesture of hospitality, but more of an experiment. “He’s rolling one, and he’s trying to get you to partake before you go on and play, which he loves to do. He loves to try to get people smashed, and then he likes to watch what happens,” Brown explained.
Imagine it. You are minutes away from playing in front of thousands, and the Red Headed Stranger himself is handing you a joint with that sly grin. For some, it might sound like a dream. For Zac Brown, it was a test he politely turned down. “I couldn’t do it. I had to turn down smoking with Willie because I had to work,” he admitted.
Even while saying no, Brown made sure to highlight his respect. “What an incredible guy, man. What an incredible legacy,” he said. And that right there is the balance of Willie’s world. He is a living legend with decades of country history behind him, and yet he still gets a kick out of seeing if a rookie can handle a haze-filled curveball.
Of course, this story fits perfectly into the long-running mythology of Willie Nelson. This is the same man who once smoked on the White House roof with President Jimmy Carter’s son, got Toby Keith so high he missed Charles Barkley’s birthday party, and famously out-smoked Snoop Dogg on 4/20. At 92 years old, Willie is still piling up stories that will be told for decades.
Brown was quick to remind fans that Willie belongs in rare air alongside Dolly Parton. “There will never be another one of either of them,” he said, and he is right. Willie helped shape the outlaw movement of the 1970s, wrote songs that became the foundation of country music, and somehow built a second identity as the genre’s most beloved trickster.
The way Zac tells it, Willie’s antics are less about causing chaos and more about curiosity. He wants to see how artists handle themselves when the unexpected comes calling. It is a sly mentorship wrapped in smoke, and it reflects how Willie has always lived, on his own terms and never by Nashville’s rulebook.
So add this one to the endless catalog of Willie Nelson stories. He is still out there, rolling joints on the bus, testing the nerves of young artists, and reminding the world that even seven decades into his career, he is not finished having fun.
Because only Willie Nelson could turn backstage nerves into a punchline, and make legends out of the stories that follow.