Willie & Waylon...or is it Waylon & Willie?

Willie and Waylon looking pretty fucked up!

Willie, Waylon and the Anti-Hero


By the early 1970s, mainstream country acts were selling more records than ever. Unlike their rock counterparts, however, a country artist's control over his/her own work was limited at best. Record companies and the producers that worked for them still determined for the most part who played on what session and which songs were included -- even the album cover art was under the company's control.


Willie Nelson was a Nashville veteran who knew all too well the vagaries of trying to maintain creative control. While lauded for his songwriting ("Hello Walls," "Crazy" among others), Nelson's jazz/blues affinities didn't always fit in with other's preconceptions of what qualified as country. Unable to present his recording self the way he wanted, Nelson grew increasingly frustrated until, in 1971, he left Nashville for the Austin, Texas area, taking the dissolution of his second marriage and the destruction of his house by fire as an omen to start anew.
With its college campus and tolerance of alternative lifestyles, Austin's music scene was beginning to blossom. If Nelson's arrival served as something of a catalyst to that scene, his annual Fourth of July Picnic would prove to be its Mecca. For the first time, rednecks and reefer heads (sometimes approaching 100,000 strong) were thrown together, only to learn their differences weren't nearly as severe as they'd been told. Willie the Peacemaker was helping to heal the social divisiveness left over from the 60s while at the same time cracking the ever-elusive youth market country found so difficult to corral. Country music's opportunity to regain its relevancy had finally arrived.
Nelson's liberation from the constraints imposed by Nashville recording orthodoxies allowed him to put his own spin on the "concept" album, a format very much in vogue at the time in rock. Red Headed Stranger took three days to cut and cost a mere $20,000. When producer Billy Sherrill heard the tapes he insisted on adding strings to fill out the austere, stripped-down sound. Nelson resisted, offering instead to give up his hard-fought artistic control should the record tank. Two million plus units later, Stranger is looked to as a masterpiece which defies categorization while Nelson, no longer considered "Country Willie", has gone on to become something of an icon in contemporary popular culture.


Nelson wasn't the only one exasperated by the rigidity of the country recording industry. Waylon Jennings was a journeyman whose career had been sidetracked more than once by music industry decision makers. He had his own ideas on what was country and, with the help of an astute lawyer who helped him regain creative control over his work, he was finally able to record them. The results ended up as part of 1976's Wanted! The Outlaws. The compilation, also featuring Nelson, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser, turned accepted wisdom on its head as it struck a nerve with a youth audience searching for an honest alternative to the excesses that were beginning to infect rock. Outlaws quickly became the first country album to be certified platinum, indicating sales of one million copies.
The term "outlaw" may have been a marketing confection, but the name stuck nevertheless and it wasn't long before an entire movement was "born" around its anti-hero posturing. The phrase was, in fact, half-accurate at best. While their long hair, black leather and late-night party/recording sessions clearly made Waylon, Willie et al. Nashville "outsiders," their music represented more of a throwback to straight-ahead country than any kind of so-called "progressive" movement. The twist was, the "outlaws," like those in rock, were now as famous for their "renegade" character as they were for their music.

Country Turns Cool


Rebellion was certainly no stranger to country music. In fact, there were a number of predecessors, if not outright mentors, who helped make the "outlaws" possible, including Hank Williams Sr., Merle Haggard, Johnny Paycheck and country's original Peck's bad boy, Johnny Cash. This time around, however, the financial stakes had increased astronomically. Suddenly, country was cool...and extremely profitable.The powers that be had no choice but to take notice. And take notice they did.
Country's newfound hipness rapidly seeped into numerous aspects of American popular culture. Films like "Urban Cowboy" traded on turning Texas "slice of life" into Texas chic. Soon everyone wanted to ride a mechanical bull and hoist a Lone Star beer. Places like Houston's Gilley's and The Lonestar Cafe in New York were now the places to see and be seen in your western wear and cowboy boots. In short, you no longer had to live in the country to be country.
By the early 1980s, however, country chic had run its course. The original outlaws had long since left town, and were about to be replaced by men in white, 10-gallon hats, who also looked to country's rich musical past for inspiration. The old would soon turn new all over again.

From: http://www.halloffame.org/hist/time.essay5.html

 

For more on Willie and Waylon, please visit the following links:

Willie Nelson

Waylon Jennings

http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/cd/review.asp?aid=45182

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