
Don't Think Twice (Remastered) Waylon Jennings
Album info
Album-Release:
1970
HRA-Release:
21.03.2025
Album including Album cover
I`m sorry!
Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,
due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.
We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.
Thank you for your understanding and patience.
Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO
- 1 Don't Think Twice (Remastered) 03:00
- 2 River Boy (Remastered) 02:45
- 3 Twelfth Of Never (Remastered) 02:24
- 4 The Race Is On (Remastered) 02:40
- 5 Stepping Stone (Remastered) 01:51
- 6 The Real House Of The Rising Sun (Remastered) 03:35
- 7 Just To Satisfy You (Remastered) 02:21
- 8 Kisses Sweeter Than Wine (Remastered) 02:26
- 9 Unchained Melody (Remastered) 03:12
- 10 I Don't Believe You (Remastered) 04:00
- 11 Four Strong Winds (Remastered) 02:54
Info for Don't Think Twice (Remastered)
The country and western and folk music paths come together here as if they were two mountain trails meeting at a truly wonderful vista. This is years before Jennings introduced thudding double bass drums, heavy electric guitars, the thick scraggly beard, and the dark leather cowboy hat. Here he just looks like a well dressed dude who might break your nose in a bar. In the world of used record store buyers who ask for "no beards" on their Waylon, Merle, or Willie, this here is the jackpot. Jennings comes across as an undersung interpreter of Bob Dylan; this is a "Don't Think Twice" one can really take seriously, while the "I Don't Believe You," with its soulful dobro picking and swishing Jerry Lee Lewis-style piano, is one of the best covers ever of a songwriter whose work has been recorded extensively. There's more. Jennings pulls off a fine rendition of "House of the Rising Sun" and is arrogant enough to call his arrangement "The Real Rising Sun." A trio of terrific country tunes are there for the old fans, and things only falter with some banal cover versions on side two. Herb Alpert co-produced, and one wonders if he is blowing the trumpet on the version of Ian Tyson's "Four Strong Winds."
Waylon Jennings rose from hardscrabble poverty in West Texas to become Buddy Holly’s bassist. Then, he went from Nashville rebel to Outlaw star.
Jennings escaped what he considered the futureless world of Littlefield, Texas, by working in radio in Lubbock, and by picking up the guitar. His big break came when Buddy Holly tapped Jennings to play bass in his new band on a tour through the Midwest in late 1958 and early 1959.
In an oft-told moment, Jennings gave up his seat on an ill-fated flight that would claim the lives of Holly, J. P. Richardson (“the Big Bopper”), and Ritchie Valens. After the crash, Jennings’s musical world crashed around him. Holly had been his mentor, producing his first record (“Jole Blon,” Brunswick, 1958), and Jennings felt responsible, because his last words to Holly had been the joking refrain, “I hope your ole plane crashes” (in response to Holly’s “I hope your damned bus freezes up again”).
Waylon Jennings
Digitally remastered
Waylon Jennings
The American singer-songwriter Waylon Jennings (1937–2002) was an iconic figure in the so-called outlaw movement in 1970s country music. Jennings's influence loomed large among the artists who fused country, rock, and blues influences.
In the words of Andrew Dansby of Rolling Stone, “It's simply impossible to imagine Southern rock, from Allman to Van Zant, and fringe country from Steve Earle to Uncle Tupelo without Waylon Jennings.” The artistic independence that allowed Jennings to accomplish his innovations was hard-won, however. Possessing a melodious baritone voice and a relaxed, pleasantly raffish image, he spent the first part of his career within Nashville's established studio system, achieving significant chart success under the direction of the RCA label's legendary producer Chet Atkins. When Jennings became dissatisfied with music he found to lack the edge of real life, he challenged the structure of Nashville's music-making machinery. By insisting on using his own band in the studio and recording original songs as well as those penned by other renegade songwriters, Jennings achieved lasting commercial success. His 1976 album Wanted: The Outlaws, recorded with kindred spirit Willie Nelson, Jennings's wife Jessi Colter, and songwriter Tompall Glaser, became the first millionselling LP recorded in Nashville. Jennings became one of the superstars of country music during the last quarter of the 20th century, and his fan base extended well beyond the country-music world.
Claiming both Cherokee and Comanche ancestry, Wayland Arnold Jennings was born in tiny Littlefield, Texas, amid cotton fields northwest of Lubbock, on June 15, 1937. After a friend asked whether he was named after nearby Wayland Baptist University, his mother changed the spelling of his name to Waylon. Both of Jennings's parents were musicians who played local gigs, and his mother taught him to play the guitar. He worked as a cotton-picker during his early teens, and like other young men in his position, Jennings viewed music as a way out of a life of agricultural labor. Meanwhile, the job brought him into contact with local African Americans and their music. “I worked in the fields with black people and never paid much attention to it,” he recalled to Dansby. “They had the flats back then and I was probably the only white boy they'd let go down there when they had somebody in town playing music, because I delivered ice.”
Jennings dropped out of high school and got a job as a disc jockey at Lubbock radio station KVOW, hosting a twohour country-music show. From the beginning, he was enthusiastic about the music of Ernest Tubb, Bob Wills, and other classic figures of the genre, as well of the work of country-blues fusion pioneer, Jimmie Rodgers. Jennings formed a band, the Texas Longhorns, and met Elvis Presley during Presley's second visit to Lubbock. “I loved that churning rhythm on the bottom,” he recalled of Presley's sound. By 1958, Jennings had moved down the street to station KDAV, and while there he met Lubbock native Buddy Holly, who had just fired his band, the Crickets. Holly produced Jennings's debut single, a version of the Cajun standard “Jole Blon.” Jennings signed as Holly's bassist for a winter tour in 1958–59. When Holly's plane crashed in snowy weather on February 3, 1959, Jennings had been scheduled to be on board. According to Jennings's autobiography, Holly had joshed with Jennings, saying “I hope your damned bus freezes up again,” to which Jennings replied, “I hope your ol' plane crashes.”
With Atkins as producer, Jennings released his first majorlabel album, Folk-Country, in 1965, and he kept up a busy schedule at RCA, issuing several albums a year through the early 1970s. He was successful from the beginning and reached the top-five spot on the country music charts with the singles “Walk on out of My Mind” (1967), “Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line” (1967), “Brown Eyed Handsome Man” (1969; a cover of Chuck Berry's rock-and-roll hit), “The Taker” (1970), and “Good Hearted Woman” (1971).
By 1972, however, Jennings's upward chart trajectory had stalled, and he felt creatively restless. He wanted to record with his own band, something unheard of in the studio-dominated Nashville system of the time (and still not common). However, he had made connections with songwriters on the fringe of that system, such as fellow Texan Billy Joe Shaver. Shaver had barged in on a Jennings studio session and threatened violence if the singer did not listen to his songs. Jennings agreed to listen and the result was the 1973 album Honky Tonk Heroes. All but one song on the LP was a Shaver composition, and the lyrics dealt with such previously taboo subjects as an interracial sexual encounter and a drug arrest in Mexico. While Honky Tonk Heroes was only moderately successful, it inaugurated Jennings's outlaw period and went on to become a classic.
Although Nashville's promotional firms reacted coolly to the singer's new direction, Jennings countered by hiring New York City–based manager Neil Reshen, who booked Jennings into clubs—like Max's Kansas City in New York City—that had previously been off limits to country performers. Jennings's creative instincts were soon validated commercially. Both his 1974 single releases, “This Time” and “I'm a Ramblin' Man,” reached the top of the country charts, giving him the first two of his eventual 16 numberone singles.
Four successive Jennings albums—Dreaming My Dreams (1975), Are You Ready for the Country (1976), Ol' Waylon (1977), and I've Always Been Crazy (1978)—reached the number-one spot. Although 1979's What Goes around Comes Around stalled at number two, Jennings returned to the top with Music Man (1980). He wrote many of these hits, including the title track of I've Always Been Crazy, with its confession that “I've always been crazy—it's kept me from going insane.” Jennings also recorded several chart-topping singles with Nelson, including the ubiquitous “Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow up to Be Cowboys.”
Not only in their hard-living themes but also in their sound, Jennings's songs were innovative, standing out from the country music airing on the radio at the time. His music was influenced by rock and roll, with strong electric bass lines that gave it a four-four beat rather than country music's traditional two-step rhythm. Jennings did not discard country music's traditions, however; he obviously revered them, and he paid tribute to Wills in his lyrics for “Bob Wills Is Still the King.” In his hit single “Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way?,” he questioned whether the Nashville mainstream was really carrying forward the traditions laid down by country legend Hank Williams. ...
This album contains no booklet.