Search - Waylon Jennings :: Nashville Rebel (W/Book) (Spkg)

Nashville Rebel (W/Book) (Spkg)
Waylon Jennings
Nashville Rebel (W/Book) (Spkg)
Genres: Country, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (20) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (22) - Disc #4

A previously unreleased duet with Johnny Cash is among the special tracks to be found on the Waylon Jennings boxed set "Nashville Rebel," due Sept. 26th via RLG Nashville/Legacy. "The Greatest Cowboy of Them All" was rec...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Waylon Jennings
Title: Nashville Rebel (W/Book) (Spkg)
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: RCA
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 9/26/2006
Album Type: Box set, Original recording remastered
Genres: Country, Pop
Style: Outlaw Country
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaCD Credits: 4
UPC: 828768964026

Synopsis

Album Description
A previously unreleased duet with Johnny Cash is among the special tracks to be found on the Waylon Jennings boxed set "Nashville Rebel," due Sept. 26th via RLG Nashville/Legacy. "The Greatest Cowboy of Them All" was recorded in 1978, the same year the late Jennings' duet with Willie Nelson, "Mamas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys," spent four weeks at No. 1 on Billboard's country chart. Beyond such hits as "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way," "Good Hearted Woman," "I Ain't Living Long Like This," "Highwayman" and "Rose in Paradise," the four-disc collection includes two early period tracks that have never been released in the U.S.: "It's Sure Been Fun" and "People in Dallas Got Hair." "Nashville Rebel" was created in tandem with Jennings' widow Jessi Colter and their son Shooter Jennings. Liner notes were penned by Patti Smith guitarist Lenny Kaye and country historian Rich Kienzle.
 

CD Reviews

Here's a 4-CD set that's worthy of its subject
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 10/02/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Going toe-to-toe with the monolithic, authoritative import box sets on the Bear Family label, Sony-BMG has finally given American country fans a comprehensive, thoroughly satisfying -- and affordable! -- overview of Waylon Jennings' entire career. From his early years singing in bars in the Southwest through his entry into (and swift departure from) the Nashville establishment, on into his "outlaw" golden years, this captures Waylon at his best.



Disc One, which concentrates on Jennings' early years as a 1960s "folk-country" singer in Nashville, probably has the most to offer fans who are already familiar with his big, rowdy hits of the '70s and early '80s. Although the folk-oriented material isn't as rugged or meaty as his later work, there are some soulful performances and unusual arrangements and production touches that may surprise even longtime fans. The disc is well-chosen and nicely paced, and packed with plenty of non-hit material that may be unfamiliar even to devoted Waylon fans. Discs Two and Three comprehensively document his glory years, all those fearless, funny, sad, soulful hits that stand at the very core of the outlaw/alternative country canon. Yeah, there are some songs left out, but not many, and all the major touchstones are included. The last disc skims his work in the 1980s and '90s, with the added bonus that his work for the rival MCA label is also sampled, making room for some of his later hits and one-off material.



There are a lot of good Waylon best-of collections on the market today, but this really blows most of them away. We could all think of some additional songs we'd like to see on here as well, but for anyone who just wants to get a really, really good introduction to Waylon's work, this collection oughtta do it for you."
Waylon Done It His Way
Jim Newsom | Norfolk, VA | 10/30/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Waylon Jennings had one of the quintessential country music voices, a deep baritone audibly imbued with the hardscrabble upbringing of a child of itinerant farmhands who grew up to become a hard-headed, hard-boiled singer of songs on his own terms.



Jennings embodied the "outlaw" movement that reinvigorated country music in the 1970s. But his music career stretched back to the beginnings of rock-n-roll, when he was a disc jockey in Lubbock, Texas, who befriended rock pioneer Buddy Holly. Holly produced his first recording, a strange cover of the Cajun tune, "Jole Blon" that featured King Curtis on doo-wop saxophone. That single flopped, but Jennings was assured of being at least a footnote in the music history books even if he never recorded again:



After breaking up his band, the Crickets, Holly recruited Jennings to play electric bass with him on the "Winter Dance Party Tour" of 1959. When the heater on the tour bus stopped working, Holly chartered a plane for himself and his band to fly from a show in Clear Lake, Iowa, to the next night's performance in Moorhead, Minnesota. But Jennings gave up his seat on the plane to J. P. Richardson, aka "the Big Bopper," because Richardson had come down with the flu. Just before the plane took off, Holly joked to Jennings, "Well, I hope your old tour bus freezes up." Jennings good naturedly replied, "I hope your darn ol' plane crashes!"



And that's just what happened on February 3, 1959, "the day the music died." His final words to his good friend would haunt Waylon Jennings for years, and that eerie feeling that he was supposed to have been on the doomed plane would trouble him for the rest of his life.



Nonetheless, country music stardom was in his future, and his first hit came in 1965 with the Buck Owens-like, "Stop the World (and Let Me Off)." The next year he reached the country Top Ten with a semi-rockabilly ride through Gordon Lightfoot's "(That's What You Get) For Lovin' Me," and he flirted with the upper reaches of the country charts for the next five years with a series of singles cranked out in the efficient factory-like production style of the then-dominant "Nashville Sound."



But he was chomping at the bit, eager to make records on his own terms. His frustration peaked about the same time he learned of the record industry's indulgent treatment of rock musicians and in 1972, he successfully renegotiated his contract with RCA, freeing himself from the heavy hand of corporate Nashville and gaining control over his own recorded output. With his pal, Willie Nelson, and other free-thinking artists like Johnny Cash, Tompall Glaser, Kris Kristofferson and Hank Williams, Jr., he plotted a new direction and inspired a movement that took its name from his recording of "Ladies Love Outlaws" and was cemented with the compilation album, Wanted! The Outlaws, the first platinum-selling country album ever.



By the mid-`70s, Waylon Jennings was one of the true superstars of country music, crossing over to appeal to rockers as well with songs like "I'm a Ramblin' Man," "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way" and "Good Hearted Woman." He closed out the decade with a string of chart toppers including "Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love)," "Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to be Cowboys," "I Ain't Living Long Like This," and the theme from the TV show, The Dukes of Hazzard.



Nashville Rebel is a four-disc set that collects 92 songs from throughout Jennings' career, opening with that Buddy Holly collaboration and continuing with late `60s hits like "The Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line," through the "Outlaw" period on into the "Highwayman" projects with Nelson, Cash and Kristofferson and concluding with a couple of latter day outings including his final Top Ten tune, "Wrong," a multi-cultural blend of marimba and dobro from 1990.



Along the way there are several duets with Willie, a few with wife Jessi Colter, and some surprises--you'd think "MacArthur Park" would be a ridiculous choice for a country singer, but Jennings actually gives his six-and-a-half minute "MacArthur Park (Revisited)" a depth not even hinted at in Richard Harris' pop hit version.



The box set takes its title from a low-budget American International straight-to-drive-in movie from 1966 in which Jennings plays a musician with "a guitar in his hand...a gal on his arm and a talent for trouble with his fists." Ironically, he would become a much more serious kind of Nashville Rebel, paving the way for a union of hippie rockers and country traditionalists that shook up the arbiters on both sides of the divide.



While contemporary country has embraced the rock elements ol' Waylon brought into it in spades, the factory system is now as strong as it's ever been. But this box set reminds us that once upon a time, there was a man who took on Nashville's entrenched powers and triumphed by doing it his way.





copyright © 2006 Port Folio Weekly. Used by Permission.



Orignally published in Port Folio Weekly 10/31/06."
Superb 4-CD encapsulation of Jennings' career
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 11/16/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jennings catalog has seen its share of reissues, in both original albums and anthologies, but never before has a box set captured the full story of his career. Reissues of original albums have told Jennings' story in bits and pieces, single-disc anthologies have cherry-picked the chart highlights, and Bear Family's import box sets "Destiny's Child" and "Six Strings Away" have laboriously cataloged the details of his pre-outlaw career. But with the release of this beautifully produced 4-CD collection, RCA provides both depth and breadth, essaying Jennings transition from a protégé of Buddy Holly to purveyor of folk- and country-rock hybrids to increasingly uncomfortable Nashville cat to rebel immortality and self-direction. Jennings' transformation is highly personal yet shared out loud with his audience; and especially visceral when condensed from thirty-seven years of individual albums to a four-disc box-set.



The earliest side here, one of three cut under the direction of Holly in 1958, is a version of the Cajun classic "Jole Blon" featuring a '50s-styled sax and a waltz-time saunter. The collection's second track, "My Baby Walks All Over Me," dates to Jennings' initial early '60s residency in Arizona, with Ray Corbin's twangy lead guitar retaining the sort of energy laid down by James Burton on early tracks by Ricky Nelson. Next, the set jump-cuts to Jennings mid-60s beginnings at RCA where the sound was more polished (and in stereo), the jumpier tempos had relaxed to a cantor, and Jennings voice turned to an earthy croon.



Jennings' enduring legacy was minted by his fight for artistic independence in the early-70s, but his initial RCA sides are just as worthy as his outlaw breakthrough. He may have felt constricted by RCA's factory song construction, but the results included some of his most endearing sides, including "Stop the World and Let Me Off," "(That's What You Get) For Lovin' Me," "Mental Revenge," "Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line," and "Brown Eyed Handsome Man." Even with Chet Atkins' and a studio full of Nashville A-listers smoothing the background, Jennings gravitas carried every single.



The late-60s original "Just to Satisfy You" shows Jennings at the peak of his pre-outlaw period, with a stripped down arrangement and lightly jazzed beat accompanying his commanding baritone. Ironically, it was an earlier, more raw recording of this same song that had brought the Jennings to RCA's attention several years earlier. Lesser remembered treats from this era include a hit duet with Anita Carter on "I Got You," a soulful duet with Jessi Colter on her "I Ain't the One," and the title track to the American International Pictures film "Nashville Rebel." The latter, recorded in 1966 by Harlan Howard, was tremendously prophetic, with lines like "I've got things to do, and things to say in my own way."



By the end of the decade, the Nashville system - writers, producers, studios and session musicians all supplied by the label - left Jennings unfulfilled. He did indeed have things to say in his own way, and that included a broader choice of writers and recording venues, and most importantly, the familiarity and warmth of recording with his road band. RCA's way of doing things wasn't producing the commercial success he felt he could achieve, and so Jennings found himself compromised both artistically and financially.



The end of the '60s provided the circumstances for Jennings to make a change. He'd grown increasingly uncomfortable with RCA's cookie-cutter style, married Jessi Colter (his third and lasting marriage), and been given time to think by a bout of hepatitis that temporarily ended his touring. Willie Nelson had decamped to Austin with similar thoughts of independence, and Jennings longtime drummer Richie Albright suggested that they push for the sort of artistic freedoms afforded RCA's rock acts. By mid-decade, Jennings had released the successful "Honky Tonk Heroes" and "Ladies Love Outlaws" LPs, and with his RCA contract up for renewal, he held a strong hand.



By the tail-end of his initial contract he'd already begun to wrest control of his recordings away from RCA. 1972's slowed-down take of Buck Owens' "Under Your Spell Again" is sung as a duet with Colter, a pair of tracks from "Lonesome On'ry and Mean" features Jennings' roadband, and a co-producer credit on "You Can Have Her" pointed to the following year's independence day. Jennings hired himself a New York City manager and gained the desired concessions in re-signing with RCA. He was now free to record what he wanted how he wanted and with who he wanted to play and produce.



The initial fruit of this new-found freedom was 1973's legendary "Honky Tonk Heroes" LP. Jennings co-produced with Tompall Glaser and recorded an album of songs by Nashville-outsider Billy Joe Shaver. The album's title track begins in tribute to Jimmie Rodgers before segueing to a twangy guitar-and-drums sound that hadn't much been heard in Nashville. The stripped-down arrangements have a more live feel than anything Jennings had recorded before, and Shaver's songs were fresh and direct.



To further insulate himself from label pressures, Jennings moved his recording sessions from RCA to Tompall Glaser's independent studio, subsequently dubbed "Hillbilly Central." The initial LP from this arrangement, "This Time," gave Jennings his first #1 single with its title track. Thus began a streak of spectacular albums, including "The Ramblin' Man," "Dreaming My Dreams" and "Are You Ready for the Country," and a string of iconic hits that included "I'm a Ramblin' Man," "Rainy Day Woman," "Amanda," and "Are You Sure Hank Done it This Way." Jennings toured extensively with this material, and disc 3 opens with a trio of cuts (from 1974's "Waylon Live") that shows off his towering talent as a stage performer.



Jennings fame crossed over to the pop charts with "Mamas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys," and his involvement with "The Dukes of Hazzard" brought his theme song and narration to televisions nationwide. His albums of the early '80s continued to track new ground, and his singles, including duets with Willie Nelson, and covers of Otis Redding, Little Richard and Eagles hits, kept him on the upper-reaches of the charts.



In the mid-80s Jennings recorded an album with Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson as The Highwaymen and moved his solo career from RCA to MCA. At MCA, producer Jimmy Bowen crafted a decidedly more modern sound (gone is the steel, in is subtle synthesizer), but Jennings still sounds great, and the material is well chosen. A 1990 move to Epic yielded the top-10 "Wrong" before diabetes and carpal tunnel syndrome slowed Jennings work. A few more albums for indie labels (not anthologized here) found his artistic flame undimmed. The collection closes with the well-chosen, "I Do Believe," from 1995's reunion of The Highwaymen. Jennings song is resolutely independent, yet faithful, as had been his entire career.



Completists will note a few omissions (nothing from his lackluster stint with A&M is included, nor is the Grammy® winning take of "MacArthur Park"), and fans may miss a few favorite album tracks, but that isn't the purpose of this set. Further, this isn't filled with rarities and alternate takes; again, that's not the point of this box. Instead, these 92 selections paint the full picture of Jennings artistic arc, from proto-rock 'n' roller, to industry man, to his own man. Across four discs, Jennings talent can't be denied, whether singing within the confines of Nashville's system, or flung wide-open to his personal interpretation.



Lenny Kaye's introductory essay is written as both a friend and biographer, filled with warm remembrances and penetrating insights. Rich Kienzle's liner notes provide detail on Jennings' career, recording the pivotal moments that created these recordings. This is a superb introduction to Jennings' career, and a wonderfully listenable condensation for fans. [©2006 hyperbolium dot com]"