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Best Of - All My Rowdy Friends

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Download links and information about Best Of - All My Rowdy Friends by Hank Williams, Jr.. This album was released in 2012 and it belongs to Rock, Country, Outlaw Country genres. It contains 22 tracks with total duration of 01:13:33 minutes.

Artist: Hank Williams, Jr.
Release date: 2012
Genre: Rock, Country, Outlaw Country
Tracks: 22
Duration: 01:13:33
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Family Tradition 4:02
2. Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound 3:10
3. Women I've Never Had 2:51
4. Outlaw Women 3:03
5. Kaw-Liga 4:22
6. Old Habits 3:03
7. Dinosaur 3:21
8. The Blues Man 4:20
9. Texas Women 2:27
10. Dixie On My Mind 2:38
11. All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down) 3:58
12. A Country Boy Can Survive 4:17
13. If Heaven Ain't a Lot Like Dixie 2:47
14. The Conversation (feat. Waylon Jennings) (featuring Waylon Jennings, Hank Williams, JR) 3:52
15. All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight 2:57
16. Country State of Mind 3:58
17. Born to Boogie 2:43
18. If the South Woulda Won 3:20
19. There's a Tear in My Beer (feat. Hank Williams) (featuring Hank Williams, JR) 2:52
20. Red, White, & Pink Slip Blues 3:59
21. Bartender Song (Sittin' At a Bar) [feat. Rehab] (featuring Hank Williams, Rehab, JR) 3:15
22. All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over for Monday Night Football 2:18

Details

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Whether you’re an ardent fan or just looking for a good place to become acquainted with the outlaw twang-rock of Hank Williams Jr., this 2012 compilation is a must-have. It appropriately opens with “Family Tradition,” where Jr. stakes his claim in country while divorcing himself from his father's strict honky tonk traditions. Of course this could only be followed up with “Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound,” a slower tune that muses on hard drinking and fast living over twangy pedal steel notes, a rootsy fiddle solo, and some sharp Telecaster picking. You can hear some of that slick early-'80s production seeping in by “Old Habits,” where Jr.’s now-unvarnished voice provides a gritty contrast as he sings mournfully of the vices he had to give up in order to stay alive and healthy. In a haunting rendition of “There's a Tear in My Beer,” he duets with his late father via 1989 studio magic.