127 Rose Avenue

127 Rose Avenue

by Hank Williams, Jr.
127 Rose Avenue

127 Rose Avenue

by Hank Williams, Jr.

CD

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Overview

Released in June of 2009, the first single from Hank Williams, Jr.'s 127 Rose Avenue is called "Red, White & Pink Slip Blues," a paean to the economic uncertainty of 21st century recession America. It's like a lot of contemporary country singles these days, anthemic truth tales reflecting the concerns of the common (wo)man, who is struggling to find his/her place in a country that seems to have packed itself up and left them behind. The single was a hit and may carry the album to the higher rungs of the charts with it. That said, this has nothing to do with the actual quality of the music. In many ways, Williams has been remaking the same record since the early 1980s. It has his seamless blend of loud Southern rock-style guitars, rowdy, rebellious lyrics, hell-raising drums, and fist-pumping choruses, with a ballad or two thrown in for good measure. It's a formula, but one that has worked to keep Williams with Curb Records and on the charts for nearly 30 years. No matter what the trend in the music itself, from the Urban Cowboy days on, Williams has remained in style remarkably enough because his songwriting reflects the timeless concerns of country fans. He first took up the heady electric guitar sound in the late '70s and perfected it in the early '80s. 127 Rose Avenue changes the production style to reflect what's going on in contemporary country -- big compressed guitars, melds of fiddles and banjos, and rock & roll drum kits. The other notable tracks on this set are the loud and proud, self-penned, "Farm Song" with a guest appearance by pedal steel guitar icon Robert Randolph; "All the Roads," a duet with the Grascals, and, as is usual on a Hank Jr. record, an homage to his father called the "The Last Driftin' Cowboy," with a sample from "Honky Tonk Blues,." If you dig Bocephus' countless previous albums and/or are a fan of the new brand of Nashville rock that calls itself "contemporary country," you'll dig this. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 06/16/2009
Label: Curb
UPC: 0715187914926
Rank: 85198

Tracks

  1. Farm Song
  2. Red, White & Pink-Slip Blues
  3. High Maintenance Woman
  4. Mighty Oak Trees
  5. Forged By Fire
  6. Last Driftin' Cowboy
  7. 127 Rose Avenue
  8. All the Roads
  9. Sounds Like Justice
  10. Long Gone Lonesome Blues
  11. Gulf Shore Road

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Hank Williams, Jr.   Primary Artist,Guitar (Electric)
Perry Coleman   Vocals (Background)
Robert Randolph   Pedal Steel
Lisa Cochran   Vocals (Background)
Brent Mason   Guitar (Electric)
Scotty Sanders   Guitar (Steel)
Ed Seay   Vocals (Background)
Eric Darken   Marimba,Jew's-Harp
Bobby Terry   Guitar (Baritone),Guitar (Electric),Guitar (Acoustic)
Chris Leuzinger   Guitar (Electric)
John Jarvis   Piano
Paul Leim   Drums
Troy Lancaster   Guitar (Electric)
Paul Franklin   Guitar (Steel)
Steve Turner   Drums
Aubrey Haynie   Fiddle
Doug Johnson   Vocals (Background)
Bryan Sutton   Guitar (Acoustic)
Eddie Bayers   Drums
Dennis Wage   Organ (Hammond)
Kirk "Jelly Roll" Johnson   Harmonica
Troy Johnson   Vocals (Background)
Joe Chemay   Bass

Technical Credits

Hank Williams   Mastering,Composer
Joe Martino   Assistant Engineer
Bud McGuire   Composer
Ed Seay   Mixing,Engineer
Hank Williams, Jr.   Composer,Producer
Craig White   Digital Editing
Patrick Murphy   Engineer
Doug Johnson   Engineer,Producer
Daryl Burgess   Composer
Mark Stephen Jones   Composer
Don Poythress   Composer
Ken Levitan   Management
Mark Catacchia   Assistant Engineer
Ray Hood   Composer
Shawn Simpson   Digital Editing
Phil Barnhart   Composer
John Ozier   Production Coordination
John Scott Sherrill   Composer
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