*** Welcome to piglix ***

Double Trouble (George Jones and Johnny Paycheck album)

Double Trouble
Double Trouble Jones&PayCheck Album.jpg
Studio album by George Jones and Johnny Paycheck
Released 1980
Studio Columbia Recording Studios, Nashville, Tennessee
Genre Country
Label Epic
Producer Billy Sherrill
George Jones chronology
My Very Special Guests
(1979)My Very Special Guests1979
Double Trouble
(1980)
I Am What I Am
(1980)I Am What I Am1980
Johnny Paycheck chronology
Bars, Booze & Blondes
(1979) Bars, Booze & Blondes1979
Double Trouble
(1980) Double Trouble1980
Mr. Hag Told My Story
(1981) Mr. Hag Told My Story1981
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 1/5 stars

Double Trouble is an album by American country music artists George Jones and Johnny Paycheck released in 1980 on the Epic Records label.

Double Trouble remains the "oddest" album George Jones ever recorded. The singer was enjoying the attention of hip rock & rollers, thanks to a glowing article in Rolling Stone, and it appears that this album was an attempt on the part of Epic and producer Billy Sherrill to take advantage of the crossover potential. Enlisting Paycheck, who had played bass for Jones as part of the Jones Boys in the 1960s and had scored numerous hits throughout the 1970s, the album consists of mostly covers of 1950s rock and roll but with Sherrill's heavy handed production and a chorus of female backing singers. The title was more than appropriate, considering that Paycheck and Jones in particular were at their raging, hell-raising worst. Critics panned the album but with the passing of time there is a bizarre fascination in hearing them so completely unhinged. As Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic observes, "The pair sound as if they were on one of their notorious drinking and drugging binges, making jokes with each other throughout every song (except the closing "You Better Move On") and singing without regard for key."

Double Trouble would be Jones and Paycheck's only duet album. Although the album stalled on the Billboard charts at number 45, the Chuck Berry song "Maybellene" would make the top ten, peaking at number 7. "You Can have Her" and the impressive "You Better Move On" were also minor hits. AllMusic calls it "easily the worst album George Jones ever recorded."



...
Wikipedia

...