The 1970s was the golden era of outlaw country, and a lot of amazing music came out during that time. Known for its no-rules attitude and lack of interest in appealing the mainstream country fans, ...
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"Take This Job and Shove it" Named Among 'Songs That Define Outlaw Country' is Now Used in Strikes
It was written by David Allan Coe, made famous by Johnny Paycheck and became the only song to top the country charts for both men.
Waylon Jennings died in 2002 at the age of 64, one year after being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Throughout his career, he remained an honest artist fighting to record his music the ...
But the bulk of the songs on the album weren’t new. Rather, the track list was a sampler’s platter of some of the best that had been coming out of the outlaw country movement in recent years. It ...
Waylon Jennings is most associated with outlaw country. But the country music subgenre didn’t reach its commercial peak until the 1970s. To understand how Jennings—along with Willie Nelson, Johnny ...
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Country music reflects on legends amid Coe's death
Outlaw's final chapter: David Allan Coe, a key outlaw country figure with a controversial legacy, has died at 86, prompting ...
She might not look like or sound like what you think of when you think of outlaw country. But Mickey Guyton is an outlaw. Not only that, but she's the biggest, baddest outlaw artist the genre has seen ...
The outlaw country movement had already been in full swing for a few years when Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Tompall Glaser and Jessi Colter united to release Wanted! The Outlaws. But this project ...
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