THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
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Bobby Bare

Sample this concert
  1. 1Stage Introduction00:57
  2. 2Ain't Got Nothing To Lose03:04
  3. 3Up Against The Wall, Redneck Mother06:31
  4. 4Ride Me Down Easy06:49
  5. 5Cold Day In Hell03:42
  6. 6So Good So Bad03:59
  7. 7Praise The Lord And Send Me The Money03:15
  8. 8Detroit City04:30
  9. 9Numbers04:54
  10. 10Quaaludes Again04:00
  11. 11Redneck Hippie Romance03:42
  12. 12New Cut Road04:52
  13. 13The Winner05:21
  14. 14Goodnight Irene07:39
  15. 15Intermission04:05
  16. 16Drunk And Crazy03:34
  17. 17Streets Of Baltimore02:40
  18. 18Drop Kick Me Jesus Through The Goal Posts Of Life01:53
  19. 19Come Sundown She'll Be Gone02:58
  20. 20Tequila Sheila07:26
  21. 21Another Man Done Gone06:18
Liner Notes

Bobby Bare - vocals, guitar; Tom Hamilton - steel guitar, dobro; Dave Hargis - lead guitar; Gary Kubal - drums; Ken Smith - bass; Lewis Stephens - keyboards

Bare recorded a half dozen shows between 1982 and 1986 for the Silver Eagle Cross Country Radio concert series, and this performance, the second of two recorded on March 16, 1982 at the Paradise club in Boston, is among one of the best.

Bare was on his Ain't Got Nothing To Lose Tour, and used the occasion to open his shows with the song of the same name. From there, it is one gem after another. "Redneck Mother" and his comical slow ballad, "The Winner" (about a guy who always is the winner, but in the end, is really the loser) are among the highlights. He crosses over into country-rock with Billy Joe Shaver's "Ride Me Down Easy," which Bare took to the #1 spot on the country charts in the late 1970s.

The rest of the show is classic Bare. He praises the joys of too many drugs and alcohol (especially the latter), and curses a litany of hard hearted woman. "Cold Day In Hell," written by his good friend Shel Silverstein, is a great example. But the fun keeps on coming with songs like "Praise The Lord And Send Me The Money" and "Tequila Sheila."

Before Willie or Waylon were household names, Bobby Bare was banging out great country classics, many of which were among the earliest in the repertoire to have double entendre titles. In fact, it was Bobby Bare who introduced Waylon Jennings to RCA Records and launched his career as a country singer, way back in 1965. Aligned with the Outlaw country movement that also included Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash and others, Bare wrote plenty of songs about unrequited love, living in Texas, and drinking too much alcohol.

Bare has been on and off the country charts since the late 1950s, but his biggest success came in the latter half of the '60s and the '70s, when he took control of his career and his recordings and began producing himself. He would go on for several more years with this band and Columbia Records. By the end of the decade, however, he would be semi-retired with a concentration on limited touring and independently released records. His son, Bobby Bare Jr., a successful alternative artist and producer, eventually got him back in the saddle where he would once again tour and record on a yearly basis.