“Lost Highway” was written and first recorded by Leon Payne, the blind Texas-born country singer-songwriter who released it on the Bullet label in October 1948. According to the standard origin story, Payne sketched the song on the side of a road in California while hitchhiking back to Alba, Texas to visit his ailing mother; he was eventually picked up by The Salvation Army.
Hank Williams’s reading the following year is what made the song a country standard. Williams recorded it in 1949 as the B-side of “You’re Gonna Change (Or I’m Gonna Leave),” and despite barely charting on release, the recording became one of the defining sides of his career. The lyric — the gambler-and-rambler narrator on a road that has cost him everything — sits so closely to Williams’s own self-image that he is still widely (and incorrectly) credited with writing it.
The song crossed into the bluegrass canon almost immediately and has been recorded by Bill Monroe, the Stanley Brothers, the Tony Rice Unit, the Grateful Dead, Willie Nelson, and a long list of festival bands. Williams’s 1949 recording is also the album that lent its title to the entire Hank Williams identity: the rambler on the “lost highway,” living rough, paying for old mistakes. It works as a slow vocal feature in G with a tenor harmony on the chorus tag.