Marry Me

Album: Decoration Day (2003)
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Songfacts®:

  • Rock bands rarely have official ghost members, but Drive-By Truckers would almost certainly list the late Chris "Monster" Quillen, a musician who never recorded with them but whose shadow looms over their story.

    "Marry Me," written and sung by Truckers guitarist Mike Cooley, is the band's sideways memorial to Quillen. On first listen it sounds like a scruffy Southern rock proposal shouted across a bar at closing time, but the closer you listen, the more the floorboards creak with something heavier. It's a love song, yes, but also a lament for the messy, unglamorous times when rock and roll promises run out of petrol.
  • Mike Cooley and band co-founder Patterson Hood had long imagined a three-guitar lineup with Chris Quillen, their friend from the Muscle Shoals music scene. Instead, tragedy intervened. In the early hours of May 26, 1996 - just weeks before the studio session that would effectively launch the Truckers - Quillen was killed in a car accident after celebrating the debut album of his band The Fiddleworms. The irony was cruel: Quillen was usually the guy who confiscated car keys and talked friends out of driving drunk.

    "He was supposed to be a founding member of DBTs, but was killed in a car accident three weeks before the studio day that marks the beginning of our band," vocalist Patterson Hood told Uncut magazine. "His death had a profound effect on Cooley and I. He was an amazingly talented guy and one of the funniest people I ever knew. People have gotten married to that song, but it is not a wedding song."
  • Hood penned a tribute on the band's website describing Quillen as the rare musician who could play almost anything - guitar, bass, piano, drums, mandolin, sitar, harmonica.

    "He was a musical chameleon," he wrote. "If he joined a metal band, he became a metal guitarist. If he joined a pop band, he became a melodic wizard finding counter-melodies, usually far more interesting than the original."
  • "Marry Me" imagines the sort of life Quillen never got the chance to live. Cooley's narrator is a young man already battered by reality - fatherhood arriving early, dreams shrinking fast - who proposes to the one person who brings stability to his life.
  • Patterson Hood singled out to Uncut the song's opening couplet as the greatest single line in the Drive-By Truckers catalog:

    Well, my daddy didn't pull out, but he never apologized
    Rock 'n' roll means well, but it can't help telling young boys lies


    The lyric punctures the mythology that fuels half the music industry. Rock 'n' roll sells the highway; life often hands you the driveway.
  • "Marry Me" appears on Decoration Day, the 2003 album where the Truckers perfected their signature blend of Southern storytelling and ragged guitar drama. Cooley wrote four songs for the record - one of his most productive bursts in the band. "Marry Me" functions as Cooley's private monument to his friend, a song about a young man making the most of what he's got, set to music loud enough to be heard from wherever Monster ended up.
  • Rock bands have a long tradition of saluting fallen friends, from "All Those Years Ago" by George Harrison remembering John Lennon, to "Wish You Were Here" by Pink Floyd for Syd Barrett, or "Back On The Chain Gang" by The Pretenders after the death of James Honeyman-Scott. The difference is that "Marry Me" doesn't say goodbye directly. Instead, it imagines the ordinary life that might have unfolded if fate hadn't slammed the brakes.
  • A live version recorded at Flicker Bar on June 20, 2002 - nearly a year before the album came out - surfaced on the 2025 Definitive Decoration Day box set. In the two decades between, the song had already developed a strange afterlife as couples got married to the song, even though, according to Hood, it absolutely isn't a wedding song.

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