About the Song
Waylon Jennings – Can’t You See: Outlaw Soul Meets Southern Rock Grit
When Waylon Jennings lent his legendary voice to “Can’t You See”—the Southern rock anthem originally written and performed by Toy Caldwell of The Marshall Tucker Band—he didn’t just cover it. He owned it. Infused with Jennings’ trademark outlaw country spirit, his rendition brings a deeper, wearier soul to a song already steeped in pain, longing, and backwoods redemption.
First recorded by The Marshall Tucker Band in 1973, “Can’t You See” quickly became a Southern rock staple, with its mournful flute, bluesy guitar riffs, and the unforgettable hook:
“Can’t you see, oh, can’t you see / What that woman, she been doin’ to me?”
The lyrics are raw and direct—a man running from heartache, taking to the train tracks in search of peace or oblivion. It’s the kind of story Waylon Jennings was born to tell.
While there’s no widely released studio version from Waylon in his prime, live recordings and bootlegs of his performance of “Can’t You See” reveal why fans still talk about it with reverence. Waylon strips the song down to its bones, trading the flute for that deep, rumbling Telecaster guitar, and replacing Southern rock swagger with outlaw country grit.
His voice—world-weary, gravelly, yet commanding—turns the song from a cry of frustration into a slow-burning confession. You believe every word. You feel the miles, the whiskey, the betrayal. And unlike the original’s jam-heavy style, Waylon’s take is tighter, more focused, zeroing in on the emotion rather than the solo.
Live, he often performed the song with a steady groove, letting his band roll behind him like a slow train through Texas dust. It was never flashy—it didn’t need to be. Waylon was the mood, the message, and the man in the story.
“Can’t You See” in Waylon’s hands isn’t just about heartache. It’s about escape—from love, from expectation, from whatever chains a man down. It fits perfectly into the Jennings mythos: the rebel, the drifter, the lonesome storyteller with one foot on the stage and the other on the tracks.
Though it remains an unofficial part of his catalog, Waylon Jennings’ version of “Can’t You See” lives on through live tapes, memories, and tribute performances—and it’s a haunting reminder that when the outlaw of country met the soul of Southern rock, the result was something realer than either genre could contain on its own.