©
1980 RCA Victor
Richie Albright - drums
Ralph Mooney - steel guitar, dobro
Duke Goff,
Jerry Bridges - bass
Waylon Jennings - vocals, guitar, dobro
Gordon Payne - guitar, harmonica
Carter Robertson - background vocals
Johnny Rodriguez, Rance
Wasson,
Rick (
L.D.)
Wayne,
Billy Ray Reynolds,
Randy Scruggs,
Jerry Reed - guitar
Barney Robertson, Charles Cochrane - keyboards
"
Clyde" (
J. J. Cale)
"
It's Alright" (
Jennings)
"
Theme from '
The Dukes of Hazzard' (
Good Ol' Boys)" (Jennings)
"
Nashville Wimmin'" (
Harlan Howard)
"
Do It Again" (
Walter Becker,
Donald Fagen)
"
Sweet Music Man" (
Kenny Rogers)
"
Storms Never
Last" (
Jessi Colter)
"
He Went to Paris" (
Jimmy Buffett)
"
What About You?" (
Jack Anglin,
Johnnie Wright)
"
Waltz Across
Texas" (
Ernest Tubb)
The new decade brought another #1
album for Jennings, his fifth since
1976. Produced by the singer and
Waylors drummer Richie Albright, the mood is lighter than it had been on Jennings previous release, the ballad-heavy
What Goes Around Comes Around. It contains the popular "Theme from "The Dukes of Hazzard" (Good Ol' Boys)," which became Jennings' tenth solo #1 hit. As the narrator for the
1975 movie Moonrunners, Jennings was tapped to serve in the same capacity for The Dukes of Hazzard which premiered on
CBS in
1979 and was based on Moonrunners. Jennings wrote the theme song for the show and recorded two versions: the television theme version and a slightly different version made commercially available on both single and album which received radio airplay.
The television show version features a banjo which the commercially available version does not, as well as a bridge which follows the first verse and chorus.
Following the second chorus, Jennings makes a tongue-in-cheek reference to his faceless appearance in the credits by singing, "I'm a good ol' boy, you know my mama loves me, but she don't understand why they keep showing my hands and not my face on TV!", a statement referring to the opening shot in the television theme version where Jennings is only shown below the neck playing guitar. As
Andrew Dansby of
Rolling Stone wryly noted in
2002, "In 1980, another generation discovered Jennings, albeit only a third of him." The song was certified double-platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America with over 2 million in sales. Jennings other songwriting contribution, "It's Alright," is a simultaneous tribute to
Oklahoma rocker
J.J. Cale (
Music Man opens with a cover of Cale's song "Clyde") and
George Jones ("If we could all sing like we wanted to, we'd all sound like George Jones").
Waylon also mentions his wife Jessi Colter on "It's Alright" and recorded her song "Storms Never Last" for the LP, which they would reprise on their duet album
Leather and Lace. In the liner notes to
The Essential Waylon Jennings, Wade Jessen quotes the singer: "
Jessi had this song and she threw it away. Like
Lash Larue I brought it back. She said, 'I have a silly song for you.' There was not a rhyming line it, every line in the song standing on its own. At first the chorus went, 'Storms never last/Do they, Waylon?' She wrote it for me." The
singles "Clyde" and "Storms Never Last" reached #7 and #17 respectively.
Jennings relied on covers heavily for Music Man, which may have been an indication of his dampened creativity due to years of touring, recording, and drug abuse. In addition to Cale, he also covers songs by Kenny Rogers, whose 1979 album
Kenny had kept Waylon's previous album out of the #1 spot, and Jimmy Buffett. One of Jennings most unexpected recordings is his surprisingly credible version of
Steely Dan's
1972 song "Do It Again," although for some purists his propensity for remaking songs well outside the realms of country music was in danger of becoming schtick. Jennings was far more at home on the Ernest Tubb classic "Waltz Across Texas" and the Harlan Howard's lascivious "Nashville Wimmen." Jerry Reed, Johnny Rodriguez, and Randy Scruggs play on the album.
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- published: 16 May 2016
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