Nashville Rebel [Box Set] [Box]Waylon Jennings
Release Date: 09/26/2006
Original Release:
2006
# of Discs:
4
J&R Item # 933459_CD
UPC # 828768964026
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
Disc: 2
Disc: 3
Disc: 4
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Waylon Jennings
Producer: Buddy Holly; Wendy Bagwell; Chet Atkins; Danny Davis; Richie Albright; Chips Moman; Ken Mansfield; Ray Pennington Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: 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); Kenneth A. Buttrey, Ritchie Albright, Sonny Curtis (drums). 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. 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.
No Depression (p.91) - "Waylon was out there, edgy and experimental and playing off tradition..."
Mojo (Publisher) (p.110) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[With] rock'n'roll, folk-country, honky tonk blues, psychedelic cowboy, outlaw country and tough but tender songs..."
Texan country singer Waylon Jennings was always a bit of a rocker. Early on, he played bass with Buddy Holly, and his first solo records included Beatles covers, highly unusual for a country artist at the time. Jennings was one of the key figures of the outlaw country movement of the 1970s, rejecting the lush countrypolitan sound in favor of a raw, electrified approach that owed more to the Rolling Stones than to Billy Sherrill. With a small band and simple arrangements, Jennings introduced contemporary rock-oriented grooves into his hard-hitting country sound, adding some funky grit to common-man poetics on tunes about the tougher side of life. He inspired a subsequent generation of country iconoclasts, and spurred on contemporaries like Willie Nelson and Tompall Glaser.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Allen, Jim (Singer/Songwriter) Anderson, John Axton, Hoyt BR5-49 Bandy, Moe Bare, Bobby Bellamy Brothers (The) Black, Jeff Brown, Junior Bruce, Ed Cash, Johnny Clark, Guy Clayton, Lee Coe, David Allan Colter, Jessi Earle, Steve Fulks, Robbie Glaser, Tompall Haggard, Merle Hall, Tom T. Howard, Harlan Hubbard, Ray Wylie Jones, George Knight, Chris (Guitar) Kristofferson, Kris Montana, Country Dick Nelson, Willie Newbury, Mickey Paycheck, Johnny Prine, John Randall, Jon Reed, Jerry Rich, Charlie Robison, Charlie Shaver, Billy Joe Silverstein, Shel Tritt, Travis Van Zandt, Townes Walker, Jerry Jeff Watson, Dale Wayne, Dallas Williams, Don Williams, Hank III Williams, Hank, Jr. Young, Steve
Influences:
Axton, Hoyt Beatles (The) Cash, Johnny Curtis, Sonny Holly, Buddy Pierce, Webb Presley, Elvis Rolling Stones (The) Tubb, Ernest Valens, Ritchie Williams, Hank Wills, Bob
Similar Genres:
Progressive Country |