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Hangin' Tough (Waylon Jennings album)

Hangin' Tough
WaylonJenningsHanginTough.jpg
Studio album by Waylon Jennings
Released January 1987
Recorded Groundstar Lab, Nashville
Sound Stage Studio, Nashville
Genre Country
Outlaw country
Length 36:17
Label MCA
Producer Jimmy Bowen
Waylon Jennings
Waylon Jennings chronology
The Best of Waylon
(1986)The Best of Waylon1986
Hangin' Tough
(1987)
A Man Called Hoss
(1987)A Man Called Hoss1987
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 2/5 stars

Hangin' Tough is an album by Waylon Jennings, released on MCA Records in 1987.

Jennings, who fought RCA and the Nashville system tooth and nail to gain control over his music in the early seventies, actively sought out Music Row's most commercial songwriters for Hangin' Tough, which was produced by Jennings and Jimmy Bowen. Like his previous album Will the Wolf Survive, it displays a slicker sound typical of the records coming out of Nashville in the mid-1980s, utilizing synthesizers and digital recording, but Jennings vocal style on the LP, which AllMusic describes as "stout and unflappable," carries off the songs with conviction. "Rose in Paradise," written by Jim McBride and Stewart Harris, was released in January 1987 as the first single from the album and became Jennings' twelfth number one country single, remaining there for one week and spending a total of nineteen weeks on the country chart. The song tells the story of a wealthy, jealous banker from Macon who keeps his wife a virtual prisoner in his mansion. The woman, the "rose in paradise," eventually leaves her husband and runs off with the gardener. A second single, "Fallin' Out," a song about a troubled marriage, reached #8. Hangin' Tough also displays Jennings' fondness for digressing beyond the country format. "Chevy Van," which had been a hit single for Sammy Johns in 1973, details how an unnamed male driver picks up an unnamed female, who then proceeds to eventually seduce him into a one-night stand in the back of his Chevrolet Van. At the end he drops her off "in a town that was so small, you could throw a rock from end to end. A dirt road main street, she walked off in bare feet", and laments "It's a shame I won't be passing through again." Jennings looks back to the seventies again with his reading of Gerry Rafferty's 1978 hit "Baker Street," which opens the album and substitutes a bluesy, Eric Clapton-sounding guitar solo for the original's famous saxophone tag line. Another interesting song choice is "Defying Gravity (The Executioner's Song)" written by cult hero Jesse Winchester.


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