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Waylon Jennings

Waylon Jennings Album: “Nashville Rebel [Box]”

Waylon Jennings Album: “Nashville Rebel [Box]”
Description :
Personnel: Waylon Jennings (vocals, guitar); Chip Young, Jerry Reed (guitar); Pete Drake (steel guitar); King Curtis (saxophone); David Briggs, Floyd Cramer, Hargus "Pig" Robbins (piano); Norbert Putnam (bass guitar); Richie Albright, Sonny Curtis, Kenny Buttrey (drums). <p>Recording information: 1958 - 1995. <p>Waylon Jennings rightfully deserves to have his name listed alongside artists like Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, and Willie Nelson in the pantheon of country. As an interpreter, performer, and innovator, Jennings was an original, bucking against the traditional Nashville channels with his lean, rootsy sound and blazing the trail for the outlaw country movement. A comprehensive account of Jennings's evolution and achievement is finally available in the four-disc box set NASHVILLE REBEL. <p>Reaching all the way back to 1958 and his slightly rock-&-roll, slightly folky early work, NASHVILLE REBEL does a grand sweep of Jennings's career through the '60s, into the epoch-defining '70s, and straight through to the mid-'90s and his recordings with the Highwaymen. Included are duets with Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, and Jessi Colter, as well as some surprise covers of tunes by Los Lobos, Neil Young, and others. Attentive sequencing and assembly, and a lengthy, lavish booklet packed with photographs caps off this box, which deserves a place in any country-music library.
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Track Listing :
1 Jole Bloom
2 My Baby Walks All Over Me Video
3 That's the Chance I'll Have to Take Video
4 Stop the World (And Let Me Off) Video
5 Anita, You're Dreaming Video
6 Time to Bum Again Video
7 (That's What You Get) for Lovin' Me Video
8 Green River Video
9 Nashville Rebel Video
10 Mental Revenge Video
11 Love Of The Common People Video
12
13 Walk On Out Of My Mind Video
14 I Got You Video
15 Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line Video
16 Yours Love Video
17 Just to Satify You
18 Someting's Wrong in California
19 Brown Eyed Handsome Man Video
20 Cedartown, Georgia Video
21 I Ain't the One - (with Jessi Colter)
22 Singer Of Sad Songs Video
23 It's Sure Been Fun
24 Six White Horses Video
25 People in Dallas Got Hair
2-1
2-2 Mississippi Woman Video
2-3 Lovin' Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again) Video
2-4 Tulsa, (Don't Let the Sun Set on You)
2-5 Sweet Dream Woman Video
2-6 Ladies Love Outlaws Video
2-7 Under Your Spell Again - (with Jessi Colter)
2-8 Lonesome, On'ry and Mean Video
2-9 Pretend I Never Happened Video
2-10 You Can Have Her Video
2-11 Honky Tonk Heroes Video
2-12 Black Rose Video
2-13 We Had It All Video
2-14 You Asked Me To Video
2-15 This Time Video
2-16 It's Not Supposed to Be That Way Video
2-17 Slow Rollin' Low Video
2-18 I'm a Ramblin' Man Waylon Jennings and Montgomery Gentry Video
2-19 Rainy Day Woman Video
2-20 Amanda Video
2-21 Bob Wills Is Still the King Video
2-22 Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way Video
2-23 Waymore's Blues Video
2-24
2-25 Dreaming My Dreams With You Video
3-1 T for Texas Video
3-2 Freedom to Stay Video
3-3 Good Hearted Woman - (with Willie Nelson)
3-4 Suspicious Minds - (with Jessi Colter)
3-5 Can't You See Video
3-6 Are You Ready for the Country Video
3-7 MacArthur Park Video
3-8 Jack-A-Diamonds Video
3-9 Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basicsof Love) - (with Willie Nelson)
3-10 Brand New Goodbye Song Video
3-11 Wurlitzer Prize, The (I Don't Want to Get Get Out of Hand)
3-12 Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Growup to Be Cowboys - (with Willie Nelson)
3-13 There Ain't No Good Chain Gang - (with Johnny Cash)
3-14 I've Always Been Crazy Video
3-15 Don't You Think This Outlaw's Bit'sdone Got Out of Hand
3-16 Greatest Cowboy of Them All, The - (with Johnny Cash)
3-17 Come With Me Video
3-18 I Ain't Living Long Like This Video
3-19 Clyde Video
3-20 Theme from the Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol' Boys) Video
4-1 Storms Never Last - (with Jessi Colter)
4-2 Shine Video
4-3 Just to Satisfy You - (with Willie Nelson)
4-4 Women Do Know How to Carry On Video
4-5 Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay - (with Willie Nelson)
4-6 Lucille (You Won't Do Your Daddy's Will) Video
4-7 Breakin' Down Video
4-8 Take It to the Limit - (with Willie Nelson)
4-9 Conversation, The - (with Hank Williams Jr.)
4-10 I May Be Used (But Baby I Ain't Used Up) Video
4-11 Never Could Toe the Mark Video
4-12 America Video
4-13 Waltz Me To Heaven Video
4-14 Highwayman - (with Kris Kristofferson)
4-15 Drinkin' and Dreamin' Video
4-16 Working Without a Net Video
4-17 Will the Wolf Survive? Video
4-18 What You'll Do When I'm Gone Video
4-19 Rose in Paradise Video
4-20 Rough and Rowdy Days Video
4-21 Wrong Video
4-22 I Do Believe - (with Kris Kristofferson)
Album Information :
Title: Nashville Rebel [Box]
UPC:828768964026
Format:CD
Type:Boxed Set
Genre:Country
Artist:Waylon Jennings
Producer:Buddy Holly; Wendy Bagwell; Chet At
Label:Legacy Recordings
Distributed:Sony Music Distribution (
Release Date:2006/09/26
Original Release Year:2006
Discs:4
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
Studio / Live:Studio
Jim Newsom (Norfolk, VA) - October 30, 2006
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
- Waylon Done It His Way

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.

F. Fowler (Oviedo, FL USA) - October 22, 2006
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- Where have all the icons gone?

If you are a long time diehard Waylon fan like me, you probably already have most all of the music in this boxed set. So what, buy it anyway. The book alone is worth more than the price Amazon is asking. The music included makes for a great soundtrack while you enjoy the book.

Grandpa Tom "Music is in my soul......" (Twin Cities, Minnesota) - March 19, 2012
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- American music at it's best

This LEGACY box-set delivers on every level. Track choices, sonic re-work, art work on the book and package, historical narration, and exceptional value, (92 tracks), for less than $30.

Waylon's career spanned from the 1950's into the 2000's, including collaborations with the many of the greatest artists we will ever know.

That voice. That songwriting. That guitar playing. That style. That greatness. Unmistakably American. Thank you, Waylon. RIP.

bicround_2000 "bicround_2000" (Dallas, Texas United States) - February 19, 2007
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- The Greatest Waylon Collection to Date!!!!

I have never been a fan of RCA and the way they treat Waylon Jennings music collections. For example: Waylon's original Greatest Hits has eleven tracks, but since it came out on CD, RCA only puts nine tracks on it. You have to buy the import to get the complete original album! Also, the last box set these RCA guys put together had only two CD's worth of music, worthless!! THIS TIME THEY GET IT RIGHT!!! Fours CD's covering everything from the early 60's to even the MCA hits of the late 80's. I especially like the added Cash duets and the Highwayman stuff. On disc 1: That song called "People In Dallas Got Hair" is pure greatness!!!!

The book that's included is a huge bonus:) It has lots of rare pics of Waylon and all of the fans & people who shaped the legend over the years. I think every man, woman, and child should have this box-set added to their country collection............

Troy S. Cassity "hellbilly66" (Lost Buckeye in Ca.) - June 30, 2009
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
- A Must Have!

This is a must have for any Waylon fan! All the great songs, some old rare ones, some previously unreleased. Another good thing is this 4 disc set is chronological,, so you could listen to the whole thing and you are basically hearing his career progression. R.I.P. Hoss, You are missed!

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