The first time Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson released a duet record, it was at the height of outlaw country — it was 1978, and the two were the biggest stars in country music, not only selling millions of copies, which was unheard of prior to outlaw, but they were critically respected. They dominated the scene, which allowed them to get away with a patchwork record of solo cuts, duets, and old tunes with overdubbed vocals by Nelson. Five years later, they teamed up again for WWII (har har), and while this record displayed considerably more care, it also displayed some of the flaws that marked their solo work of the time. In 1983, Waylon and Willie were still riding high on the country charts, but the quality of Jennings' work was beginning to slip and his sales were responding accordingly, as 1982's Black on Black reflected. Nelson had his biggest hit ever that year with Always on My Mind, but it also was his worst album to date, the first time he sounded like he couldn't be bothered. The sessions that comprise WWII date from before those records (most are from December 1981), but they were all produced by the same producer, Chips Moman, whose touch was a little too slick for either Waylon or Willie to do their best work. Fortunately, he lightens up a bit for this record; it's still polished and not gritty at all, but the choice of material is pretty good, particularly the Jimmy Webb ("Mr. Shuck and Jive"), Guy Clark ("The Old Mother's Locket Trick"), and Tom T. Hall ("The Year That Clayton Delaney Died") covers, and Willie's Nashville-bashing original, "Write Your Own Songs." However, the billing, like last time, is a little misleading, since this is essentially a Waylon Jennings record featuring five duets with Willie Nelson (who contributes no solo cuts this time). This winds up being a little more consistent than Black on Black (even though it shares "May I Borrow Some Sugar From You"), largely because Willie's presence helps focus the song selection and performance, but even at its best, WWII is nowhere near as good as Waylon and Willie are at their best, since they're coasting on reputation through most of this, a fact that's only enhanced by Moman's glossy showcase production.
WAYLON JENNINGS & WILLIE NELSON
WAYLON AND WILLIE 2
RCA Victor AHL1-4455
September/1982
Produced by Chips Moman & Waylon Jennings
Reggie Young, Johnny Christopher, Chips Moman - guitar
Ralph Mooney - steel
Mike Leach, Jerry Bridges - bass
Gene Chrisman, J.I. Allison - drums/percussion
Bobby Wood - piano
Bobby Emmons - keyboards
Toni Wine, Johnny Christopher - vocals
Recorded at Moman's Studio, Nashville
1.
MR. SHUCK AND JIVE
(Jim Webb)
« © '82 PolyGram Int, ASCAP »
Tell us once again this morning old friend how did you win the war
Everybody loves a hero it don't matter if they've heard the tale before
And tell us of the time when almost everybody knew you were a star
And how intelligent you are
Prove that you're alive Mr Shuck and Jive
You can tell us of the man who stole your fortune and nearly ruined your life
Or better still the one about the TV and the couch and your best friend's wife
Tell us of grand projects never finished with somebody else to blame
And all the reasons that your fame
Just never did arrive Mr Shuck and Jive
[ piano ]
If you can get yourself together kindly write a criticism of this song
How it's exquisitely constructed and yet mechanical and somehow slightly wrong
And you can put it in your book about the enemy you never even met
You know you just might make it yet
But somehow you'll survive Mr Shuck and Jive
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2.
ROMAN CANDLES
(Michael Smotherman)
« © '82 Cherry Lane Music, ASCAP / Windstar Music, ASCAP »
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3.
SITTIN' ON THE DOCK OF THE BAY
(Otis Redding - Steve Cropper)
« © '68 Irving Music, BMI »
I'm sittin' in the morning sun sittin' when the evening comes
Watchin' the ships roll in then I watch 'em roll away again
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay watchin' the tides roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay wasting time
Left my home in Georgia I was headed for the Frisco Bay
I have nothing to live for looks like nothing's gonna come my way
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay watchin' the tides roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay wasting time
Looks like nothing's ever gonna change
Everything still remains the same
I can't do what them people tell me to do
So I guess that I'll just remain the same
[ piano ]
Sittin' here restin' my bones and this loneliness won't leave me alone
Two thousand miles I roamed just to make this dock my home
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay watchin' the tides roll away
I'm just sittin' on the dock of the bay wasting time
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4.
YEAR THAT CLAYTON DELANEY DIED
(Tom T. Hall)
« © '71 Newkeys Music, BMI / Unichappell Music, BMI »
I remember the day that Clayton Delaney died
They said for the last two weeks that he suffered and cried
It made a big impression on me although I was a barefoot kid
They said he got religion at the end and I'm glad that he did
Clayton was the best guitar picker in our town
I thought he was a hero and I used to follow Clayton around
I often wondered why Clayton who seemed so good to me
Never took his old guitar and made it down in Tennessee
Well daddy said he drank a lot but I could never understand
I knew he used to picked up in Ohio with a five piece band
Clayton used to tell me son you better put that old guitar away
There ain't no money in it it'll lead you to an early gray
I guess if I'd admit it Clayton taught me how to drink booze
I can see him half stoned pickin' up the Lovesick Blues
When Clayton died I made him a promise I was gonna carry on somehow
I'd give a hundred dollars if he could only see me now
I remember the year that Clayton Delaney died
Nobody ever knew it but I went out in the woods and I cried
I know there's a lotta big preachers that know a lot more than I do
But it could be the good Lord likes a little picking too
I remember the year that Clayton Delaney died
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5.
LADY IN THE HARBOR
(Sonny Curtis - Jerry Allison - Doug Gilmore)
« © '82 Albert Hall Music, BMI / Skol Music, BMI / Zygote Music, BMI »
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6.
MAY I BORROW SOME SUGAR FROM YOU
(Chips Moman - Bobby Emmons)
« © '82 Songs Of PolyGram, BMI / Tree Publishing, BMI »
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7.
LAST COWBOY SONG
(Ed Bruce - Ron Peterson)
« © '80 Tree Publishing, BMI »
This is the last cowboy song the end of a hundred year waltz
The music is sad as they're singing along another piece of America's lost
He rides a feed lot and clerks in a market
On weekends selling tobacco and beer
His days're spent surrounded by fences
But he'll dream tonight of when fences weren't here
The Old Chisholm Trail is covered by concrete
They truck 'em to market in fifty foot rigs
They blow by his market never slowing to reason
Like living and dying was all he did
This is the last cowboy song...
This is the last cowboy song...
This is the last cowboy song
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8.
HEROES
(Chips Moman - Bobby Emmons)
« © '82 Songs Of PolyGram, BMI / Tree Publishing, BMI »
Son you make me feel so proud I pop the buttons of my shirt
I know I said I'd take you to the lake today
But I'm going to have to break those plans and it really hurts
Every time I go fishin' it'd always start me wishin'
That I could be a child again
Take my 50 cents and go down to the local picture show
To watch my heroes rope and ride
Most times they'd win but when they'd lose it always made me cry
Ain't nothing quite as sad as watching your heroes die
One by one as they fall soon there'll be no heroes at all
[ piano ]
Well I guess the fish just ain't bitin' just as well it don't feel like fightin'
All in all it just ain't that great a fishin' day that old newspaper headline
Kind of wrapped around this old heart of mine another big one got away
And I can't count the times he's made me laugh
But this time he's made me cry
There ain't nothing quite as sad as watching your heroes die
One by one as they fall soon there'll be no heroes at all
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9.
TEDDY BEAR SONG
(Nick Nixon - Don Earl)
« © '72 Songs Of Universal, BMI »
Well I wish I had button eyes and red fat nose
Shaggy cotton skin and just one set of clothes
Sittin' on the shelf in the local department store
With no dreams to dream and nothin' to be sorry for
I wish I was a Teddy Bear
Nor living nor loving nor going nowhere
I wish I was a Teddy Bear
And I wish that I never had fallen in love with you
I wish I had a wooden heart and a sawdust mind
Then your mem'ry wouldn't come around to hurt all the time
With a sewed on smile and a painted twinkle in my eye
Then I never would've ever had to learn how to cry
I wish I was a Teddy Bear...
I wish I had a string you could pull that would make me say
What you wanna hear from me to make you stay
Then I'd know everytime I spoke the words were right
And no one would know what a mess I've made in my life
I wish I was a Teddy Bear...
I wish I was a Teddy Bear...
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10.
WRITE YOUR OWN SONGS
(Willie Nelson)
« © '82 Full Nelson Music, BMI »
You callin' us heathens with zero respect for the law
But we're only songwriters just writing our songs and that's all
We write what we live and we live what we write is that wrong
If you think it is Mr Music Executive why don't you write your own songs
And don't listen to mine they might run you crazy
They might make you dwell on your feelings a moment too long
We're making you rich and you're already lazy
So just lay on your ass and get richer or write your own songs
[ guitar ]
Mr Purified Country don't you know what the whole things about
Is your head up your ass so far that you can't pull it out
The world's gettin' smaller and everyone in it belongs
And if you can't see that Mr Purified Country why don't you write your own songs
And don't listen to mine...
So just lay on your ass and get richer or write your own songs
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11.
OLD MOTHER'S LOCKET TRICK
(Guy Clark)
« © '82 World Song, ASCAP »
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