Bartender's Blues | ||||
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Studio album by George Jones | ||||
Released | 1978 | |||
Recorded | October 1977 | |||
Studio | Columbia Recording Studio, Nashville, Tennessee | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | Error in Module:Hms: Seconds value must be less than 60 | |||
Label | Epic KE-35414 | |||
Producer | Billy Sherrill | |||
George Jones chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | link |
Baretender's Blues is an album by American country music artist George Jones released in 1978 on the Epic Records label. It was re-released on CD on the Razor & Tie label in 1996.
Like his previous album I Wanta Sing, 1978's Bartender's Blues has many up-tempo, rollicking songs that seemed to contradict the darkness and turmoil in Jones's personal life, which consisted of no shows, cocaine, and bankruptcy. Of Jones's previous four LPs on Epic, only one had cracked the Top Ten (1976's Alone Again) and he had not had a number one single since "The Door" in 1974. However, the singer was beginning to gain the attention from quarters that rarely paid much attention to country music, such as Penthouse, which called him "the spirit of country music, plain and simple, its true Holy Ghost", and The New York Times, which hailed the Texan "the finest, most riveting singer in country music." The song "Bartender's Blues" helped to further his reputation with these critics, primarily because it was written by pop star James Taylor, who also sang harmony on the track. The song, which contains the wistful ruminations of a bartender down on his luck, rose to number 6. In the liner notes to the Jones compilation Anniversary – 10 Years of Hits, producer Billy Sherrill states that he was unhappy with the performance on the song, feeling that Jones over-sang it, an example of "George Jones trying to sound like George Jones" (Jones agreed with this assessment in a 2006 Billboard interview). Another single, the gentle love song "I'll Just Take It Out in Love", peaked at number 11. Jones co-wrote two songs on the album, the tongue-in-cheek "If You Loved A Liar (You'd Hug My Neck)" and "I Don't Want No Stranger Sleeping in My Bed".
Sherrill employed his most contemporary production yet on Bartender's Blues, actually verging on soft rock in some places. The LP includes some of the most blatantly lascivious material that Jones had ever recorded, such as the suggestive "Leaving Love All Over The Place" and the sensual "Ain't Your Memory Got No Pride at All." Jones's contemporary and friend Merle Haggard had also recorded the latter on his 1977 album Ramblin' Fever.