| When Waylon Jennings hooked up with songwriter Billy Joe Shaver, he found 
        the perfect author for his obsessions, his fascinations, and his very 
        image. Waylon had always been looking, perhaps unintentionally, for a 
        common ground between country and rock, and Shaver's songs -- sketching 
        an outlaw stance with near defiance and borrowing rock attitude to create 
        the hardest country tunes imaginable -- were perfect. On his previous 
        album, Waylon had sung that "ladies love outlaws," but now he 
        found the music that would soon be called outlaw country, a defiant, ballsy 
        blend of mythmaking and truth-telling. Shaver never had a better voice 
        for his songs, and Jennings never had better songs for his style. Honky 
        Tonk Heroes arrived at a crucial moment, a time when true honky tonk was 
        fading, so only a dose of rock & roll could save it. And, no matter 
        how much rock attitude is here, this is pure country in its stance and 
        attitude -- yet Honky Tonk Heroes' very defiance makes it a perfect discovery 
        album for listeners who never thought they would like country music. And 
        the songs! Shaver earned his stripes here, with songs that were emotional, 
        funny, and clever, utterly bringing the mythic outlaw ethic to life. "Black 
        Rose," "You Asked Me To," and "Honky Tonk Heroes" 
        remain among the greatest things Waylon ever cut, and every other song 
        here matches them. Few country albums have ever been this consistent, 
        and few records, from any genre, have been as consistently compelling. 
        A wonderful album -- one that's hard to tire of.  (by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All 
        Music Guide) |