Waylon's Way Back machine Just Planted Me In 1974 Tonight

Bob Boyer

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#1
She Who Must Be Obeyed and I spent a great day in Nashville today, touring the Country Music Hall of Fame and actually enjoying a gift shop for once. Found a Sundazed LP release of Waylon Jennings' Goin' Down Rockin' - The Last Recordings in a record bin in the gift shop. That and the new Guy Clark record. Still have to listen to that one, but I pulled the plastic cover off ol' Waymore's last effort before his death in 2002 (has it been that long?) and was forcefully reminded why I am such a huge fan of Waylon Jennings. This album is recorded honesty. In that regard, it's in the same category as Johnny Cash's last four "American" recordings.

Waylon was the first country artist I found I could listen to - not just play - as a 20 year old college disc jockey working at a 1000 watt daytime country music station 20 miles north of Chattanooga in the summer of 1974. Slow Rollin' Low; Lonesome, O'nry & Mean; and Slow Movin' Outlaw are still burned into my mind. This was country that wasn't "country". These were real stories, told in as musically honest a fashion as any I'd heard before, or have heard since. And tonight, I heard that magic again.

There are two versions of this album. The analog multi-track recording was released on CD in 2012 and features full instrumentation, added by Waylon's long-standing backup band - the Waylors - after he recorded the initial tracks in Robby Young's Nashville studio between 1999 and 2002. Robby waited ten years to finish the production, with the full support of Waylon's wife Jessi Colter and his son, Shooter. But this album, which got Sundazed's full 180 gram quiet vinyl treatment in 2013 is nothing but the original 3 tracks mixed to stereo with very tasteful reverb: Waylon's vocals, his acoustic guitar, and Robby's very subdued bass. This recording is absolutely magnificent in its intimacy. While not all of the songs are "great", there are a number of true gems on this 12-song album, and the presentation conveys as honest a look at a man's mind as he contemplates his mortality as any I've ever heard.

A truly bad-ass album, in every good way possible. If you like country music at all, snag a copy of this one.
 

Elite-ist

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#2
Bob: This has sure piqued my interest in the particular Waylon Jennings album you just bought and critiqued. I am a fan of Johnny Cash, but I haven't got Waylon in my collection.

It's nostalgic to hear of the flashback to your early days as a DJ. Some members might not be aware of your start in the radio business.

Nando.
 

Bob Boyer

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Nando, if you're looking in used stores as well, I'd suggest what's considered his finest album - Dreamin' My Dreams and the album that caught my ear initially, This Time. This Time has an undercurrent of blues feeling that is what caught my ear and kept me listening to his later releases. Slow Rollin' Low and Slow Movin' Outlaw are the ones that caught my ear on This Time.

And while Lonesome, Onry and Mean is my all-time favorite Jennings song and highly recommended, Dreamin' My Dreams is the album that cemented Waylon's status as the leader of the outlaw movement in the mid-70s. The other plus about this album is Cowboy Jack Clement's songwriting (the world's best "I gotta get laid" song is on this one, called Let's All Help The Cowboys Sing The Blues) and production. It's a masterpiece and holds up well today, as opposed to a lot of the pop-country stuff that's been released over the years.

And this latest one.
 

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#4
Waylon, Willie and Ktis Kristofferson had my ear in the late 70's also...good stuff. There was a Waylon and Willie and the boys album or song but i just can't remember it...


Nando ...is Bill Domm a household name in Canada??

Bob, at the same time it dovetailed nicely with the Eagles, The Marshall Tucker Band and a few other of the time who blurred that line between ballads, country and rock..
 
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Bob Boyer

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I think that was the Outlaws: Wanted album. Waylon, Willie, Jessi Colter, and Tompall Glaser. Jessi's big hit was I'm Not Lisa. As Waylon's wife, she is widely credited with keeping him together and on this earth a lot longer than he had any right to be.

Edit: and the exact song you're thinking of is Luckenbach, Texas as in "let's go to Luckenbach, Texas with Waylon, Willie and the boys..."
 
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Fishoz

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I think that was the Outlaws: Wanted album. Waylon, Willie, Jessi Colter, and Tompall Glaser. Jessi's big hit was I'm Not Lisa. As Waylon's wife, she is widely credited with keeping him together and on this earth a lot longer than he had any right to be.

Edit: and the exact song you're thinking of is Luckenbach, Texas as in "let's go to Luckenbach, Texas with Waylon, Willie and the boys..."
Thanks for mentioning - I'm gonna pull some of his vinyl tonite and turn on the way back machine!
 

orange

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#7
My favorites are Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way, Amanda and The Wurlitzer Prize (which I sing often in karaoke).
 

Elite-ist

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Nando, if you're looking in used stores as well, I'd suggest what's considered his finest album - Dreamin' My Dreams and the album that caught my ear initially, This Time. This Time has an undercurrent of blues feeling that is what caught my ear and kept me listening to his later releases. Slow Rollin' Low and Slow Movin' Outlaw are the ones that caught my ear on This Time.

And while Lonesome, Onry and Mean is my all-time favorite Jennings song and highly recommended, Dreamin' My Dreams is the album that cemented Waylon's status as the leader of the outlaw movement in the mid-70s. The other plus about this album is Cowboy Jack Clement's songwriting (the world's best "I gotta get laid" song is on this one, called Let's All Help The Cowboys Sing The Blues) and production. It's a masterpiece and holds up well today, as opposed to a lot of the pop-country stuff that's been released over the years.

And this latest one.
Thanks for the recommendations, Bob. I do specifically go hunting for albums that members know well and speak highly of.

Waylon, Willie and Ktis Kristofferson had my ear in the late 70's also...good stuff. There was a Waylon and Willie and the boys album or song but i just can't remember it...


Nando ...is Bill Domm a household name in Canada??

Bob, at the same time it dovetailed nicely with the Eagles, The Marshall Tucker Band and a few other of the time who blurred that line between ballads, country and rock..
Bill Domm isn't someone that rings a bell, Lee.

Nando.
 

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#9
Ther sucessfull life were living got us fueding like the Dearbecks and Laatsches.

Between the Orange's computer woes
An Jazzy's jazz songs
An' cat got your tongue threads in the rain
Out in Gillette Wyomintg
Ain't nobody posting no pain tonight

I remember that song :rabbit:
 
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