David Letterman Offers a Full Sandwich of a Speech Inducting Warren Zevon Into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
- - David Letterman Offers a Full Sandwich of a Speech Inducting Warren Zevon Into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
Chris WillmanNovember 10, 2025 at 12:33 AM
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David Letterman, who in 2002 hosted Warren Zevonâs final television appearance before his death, paid tribute to his friend Saturday night with a lengthy induction speech at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame that lasted several times as long as the musical salute by the Killers that followed. The former late-night host mixed werewolf jokes with a recollection of breaking down in tears at the end of his final encounter with Zevon.
Letterman told the story of having Zevon on his program shortly after the rocker was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and given only months to live. It was there that Zevon issued his famous âEnjoy every sandwichâ advice, and Letterman spoke of following the singer-songwriter to his dressing room. There, he said, Zevon handed him the electric guitar he had used in his many appearances on the show, saying, âTake care of this for me.â âI know whatâs supposed to happen now,â Letterman said, âand sure as hell, it did happen. I started to sob uncontrollably.â
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Letterman stood beside the guitar in question and said, âFor 22 years, I have taken care of the guitar. ⊠By God, tonight itâs going back to work.â To Dave Keuning, lead guitarist of the Killers, he said, âItâs all yours, sir.â And at that point, it was left to the Killers â with special guest Waddy Wachtel, who played guitar on most of Zevonâs most famous records â to close the tribute out with their version of one of the honoreeâs signature songs, âLawyers, Guns and Money.â
While inducting his longtime friend @OfficialWZevon into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, @Letterman reflects on his legacy and delivers Zevonâs immortal reminder to âenjoy every sandwich.â#RockHall2025 pic.twitter.com/nFkM8KvPwV
â Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (@rockhall) November 9, 2025
It was only a one-song tribute, and his most famous song, âWerewolves of London,â did not factor into it â save for a couple of âAh-oooh!â phrasings that Brandon Flowers worked in near the end of âLawyersâ as a semi-subtle interpolation.
Check out @thekillers' amazing rendition of 2025 Inductee @OfficialWZevon's "Lawyers, Guns and Money."đș Tune in NOW on @DisneyPlus to watch the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony.#RockHall2025 pic.twitter.com/gzfQyYYV4J
â Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (@rockhall) November 9, 2025
Read the entire text of Lettermanâs speech, following:
âIâm Dave âThey Call Me the Breezeâ Letterman. I mean, honest to God. How cool is this, folks? How can you not feel a little let down after Salt-N-Pepa? I donât blame you. Letâs wrap the show up and go home. Now, I canât tell you how much fun this is for me, one, to just be out of the house, but two, to be here. And I want to thank the people who invited me to be part of this, to represent Warren Zevon, to represent his family, and to represent the people who love Warrenâs music.Thank you very much for that.
âAbout a week ago, I talked to Warrenâs son, Jordan, and I said, âJordan, first of all, Iâm honored beyond belief to be part of this, and thank you again. Are there things you would like me to mention that particular night?â And Jordan said, âYes. There are three things I want you to mention: When Warren was a kid he studied with Igor Stravinsky, the classical composer.â âOkay,â I said, âIâll do that.â I said, âBy the way, when I was a kid, I had a paper route,â and we kept going. He said, âAlso, I want you to mention Stumpy the gangster.â I said, âOkay, got it. Stumpy the Gangster.â He said, âNext, I want you to mention Bev the Mormon.â âOkay. Stumpy the gangster, Bev the Mormon. Got that.â And I said, âBy the way, Jordan, those are my two favorite songs.â He said, âThose were his parents, dumbass.â
âOh, by the way, Igor Stravinsky is still waiting for his nomination.
âI first knew of Warren Zevonâs music when there was an article in Rolling Stone, a big front-page feature on Warren Zevon. It was called âThe Crack Up and Resurrection of Warren Zevon.â That was the title of the article of the story; the subtitle was âHow he saved himself from a cowardâs death.â Well, then, by God, this got my attention, and so I read the article because I enjoyed the manâs music, and at one point in the article we realized that Warren is having some trouble with addiction. Heâs tortured. He has emotional difficulties and heâs addicted and heâs struggling, and we all know that these stories sometimes donât end well. It turned out at one point, he got very drunk, took a gun and started shooting up his own record albums. Now, at the time I had been a TV weatherman, so this was completely out of my league of experience. But because of that, Warren was able to struggle through with the help of his family, with the help of his friends, and he did save his own life. And I just wonder, is it more difficult to save your own life or save the life of somebody else? Or is that equal? But by God, the fact that Warren existed through this, tortured as he was, and saved his own life, to me, listening to the manâs music, I found it to be even more valuable.
âWhen I then got to know Warren in person. I used to have a TV show on NBC. Hands if you remember NBC. Warren would be a guest on the program and he often would fill in for our musical director, Paul Shaffer. And it was a delight for me to have these two around, listening to Warren and talking to and getting to know Warren. And I was taken by an album that Warren had done in the â70s. It was called âStand in the Fire.â It was recorded at the Roxy on Sunset Blvd., and it was a live album, and the energy of that album would come off the record in those days and jump on you and knock you down. It was amazing. And I was talking to Warren on the show about that album and I said, âWarren, that was so great, âStand in the Fire.â The music on that live album, I couldnât get enough of that. It was tremendously dynamic.â Warren looked at me and he said, âWell, you know, honestly, Dave, when it comes to the â70s, thereâs really not much I can remember,â kind of explaining his struggle. But then the music that we listened to, Warren playing with our band⊠and forgive me for this, but being right there in that studio, it was my own version of â20 Feet From Stardom.â It was delightful,
âYou know, in music, many pretend, but Warren is a poet leaving few of lifeâs vagaries unaddressed. Warrenâs music is dense with historic illusion, love and sadness, tinted with unexpected whimsy. Delivered with third-rail voltage rock ânâ roll, or sweet, heartbreaking, lush, symphonic melodies, either version of the manâs music is classic.
âRock ânâ roll⊠Ask any of Warrenâs peers â Bruce Springsteen, Don Henley, Jackson Browne, Bob Dylan. Hell, ask Igor Stravinsky. Warren Zevon is in my Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, actually his own wing.
âI had an idea; youâre gonna have to bear with me on this. I am so consumed with the work of Warren Zevon that when I was coming over here tonight in the Way-mo, I decided I better make a list of Warren Zevon songs and explain some of these to this audience⊠And keep in mind, thank you, Iâm not a musicologist, Iâm not the professor of rock. Iâm just Dave. Are you ready for this? Here we go. Now this is not a complete list. And Iâve divided âem into three categories.
âThe first category: Warren Zevon, global and personal strife. âRoland, the Headless Thompson Gunnerâ â we all know that this is about a Norwegian mercenary and Patty Hearst. We know âExcitable Boyâ â this is about a boy who gets very excited about pot roast. âIâll Sleep When Iâm Deadâ â and boy, if this doesnât get you in the Hall of Fame, stop trying.
âCategory number two: love songs. âMutineer.â Oh my God, this makes people cry. âReconsider Me.â This also makes people cry. âSearching for a Heart.â Whenever I listen to this song, itâs always like the first time Iâve heard it and then I start to cry.
âOkay, the third category of Warren Zevon songs: Songs about werewolves. Thatâs right. This is about a werewolf in London, and I donât know if this is a true story, but there you have it.â
A tribute reel followed that featured Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne, Don Henley and Jorge Calderon, among other friends and contemporaries, talking about Zevonâs impact, interspersed with performance clips that included Linda Ronstadt doing one of her many covers of his work. Then Letterman returned.
âThe thing about âEnjoy every sandwichâ â you know that thatâs easy, but itâs deeply meaningful. And thereâs not a person in this room who hasnât considered that, but nobody can hang on to that on a daily basis. But by God, isnât that true of life around the planet? Enjoy every sandwich.
âI have a joke here I want to try: Oh my God, Iâm surrounded by Killers and theyâve captured Waddy Wachtel. Oh, brother.
âSo that night, with Warren on the show, that was 22 years ago, the last time I saw Warren after the show, Warren goes up to his dressing room and I follow Warren to the dressing room myself. And Iâve been warned never to follow people to the dressing room, but I go up to Warren and weâre in the dressing room and heâs changed his clothes and heâs taking his stuff and heâs putting it away. And heâs got a guitar there that heâs used every time heâs appeared on our show. And as weâre chatting, he picks up the guitar and he puts it in the guitar case. And then he flips up those two little guitar clippies on a guitar case. How long do I need to do this? He closes the guitar case, he hands it to me and he says, âTake care of this for me.â So in my head, I think Iâve seen this movie. I know whatâs supposed to happen now, and sure as hell, it did happen. I started to sob uncontrollably. Warren and I hugged and I said, âWarren, I just love your music.â
âSo for 22 years, I have taken care of the guitar. This is the guitar right here⊠You know, in a way Iâm glad the guitar gets a bigger reaction than the âIâm surrounded by Killersâ joke. This is the guitar, and by God, um, tonight itâs going back to work. Dave [Keuning, lead guitarist of the Killers], itâs all yours, sir. So now to put Warren right in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, itâs gonna be the Killers. Congratulations, Warren. Thank you for everything. Enjoy every sandwich.â
The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction followed by two weeks a far longer tribute to Zevon, the four-hour concert âJoin Me in L.A.: The Songs of Warren Zevonâ produced as a benefit by the Wild Honey organization at the United Theatre on Broadway in downtown Los Angeles. Among the performers at that show were his original producer Jackson Browne and longtime co-writer, Calderon, veteran session musicians Rick Marotta, Bob Glaub and Leland Sklar, and admirers such as Dwight Yoakam, Shooter Jennings and Fountains of Wayne. (See a review of that show here and read interviews with Jordan Zevon, Calderon and some of the other participants here.)
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