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Leather and Lace

Leather and Lace
JenningsColterLeatherAndLace.jpg
Studio album by Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter
Released February 1981
Recorded Pantheon Recording Studio
Genre Country
Outlaw country
Label RCA Victor
Producer Waylon Jennings
Richie Albright
Waylon Jennings chronology
Music Man
(1980)
Leather and Lace
(1981)
Black on Black
(1982)
Jessi Colter chronology
That's the Way a Cowboy Rocks and Rolls
(1978)
Leather and Lace
(1981)
Ridin' Shotgun
(1981)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars

Leather and Lace is a duet album by Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter, released on RCA Victor in 1981.

Jennings and Colter met and married in 1969. As Jennings recalled in the audio version of his autobiography Waylon, "I went through my marriages like Grant went through Richmond. I finally gave up. I said, 'Hell, I ain't ever gonna be able to be married.' And when I thought it was just about all over, when I quit looking, that's when I found the right one." In a 1973 article with Chet Flippo of Rolling Stone, Jennings confessed, "When I met Jessie, I was pretty well at my lowest point. I weighed 138 pounds and I was bent on self-destruction. Wallerin' in self-pity was the biggest part of it, stayin' depressed all the time and stoned. Jess was the best thing that ever happened to me." Jennings and Colter recorded several duets, the most successful being "Suspicious Minds," which reached #25 on the country singles chart in 1970; it was re-released when it appeared on Wanted! The Outlaws in 1976 and rose all the way to #2. Colter often sang background vocals on Jennings' albums and scored her own smash hit with "I'm Not Lisa" in 1975. In May 1979, Jessi gave birth to the couple's only child, Waylon Albright Jennings (better known as Shooter Jennings) but, by 1981, Waylon was severely addicted to cocaine and nearly broke, despite coming off one of the most successful periods of critical and commercial success that country music had ever seen. It was in this state that the couple recorded their first LP together.

Although Jennings was, at the time of the album's release, most famous for his involvement with the outlaw country movement, Leather and Lace abandons the outlaw image in favor of calmer selections consisting partly of love songs. The medley of "The Wild Side of Life"/"It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" (originally 1952 hits for Hank Thompson and Kitty Wells respectively) was released rather successfully as a single, reaching #10 on the country charts. The Colter composition "Storms Never Last" had appeared on Jennings' previous album Music Man and is presented here as a duet for the first time. "You Never Can Tell (C'est la Vie)" is a well-known Chuck Berry song (with a country version having charted a few years prior by Emmylou Harris). "I Ain't the One" is a reprise of an earlier duet that had been the B-side to "Suspicious Minds" eleven years earlier. The album closes with Jennings returning to one of his favorite songwriters, Mickey Newbury, for "You're Not My Same Sweet Baby."


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