Longhaired Redneck Explained

Longhaired Redneck
Type:studio
Artist:David Allan Coe
Cover:daclonghairedredneck.jpg
Released:March 1976
Recorded:1975 at Columbia Studio in Nashville
Genre:Country, Outlaw country
Length:28:16
Label:Columbia
Producer:Ron Bledsoe
Prev Title:Once Upon a Rhyme
Prev Year:1975
Next Title:Rides Again
Next Year:1977

Longhaired Redneck is an album released by country musician David Allan Coe. It was released in 1976 on Columbia.

Recording

Longhaired Redneck was Coe's third album for Columbia in three years and the first where he wrote or co-wrote all the songs. Coe had already written several hits for other artists and scored his own Top 10 hit in 1975 with the Steve Goodman-John Prine composition "You Never Even Called Me by My Name." By 1976 the outlaw country movement was in full swing as artists such as Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson were finally enjoying massive commercial success after years of fighting to record their music their own way. Coe, however, was still somewhat of an outsider, almost too outlaw for the outlaws, a predicament summed up well by Thom Jurek in his AllMusic review of the LP:

The outlaw country zeitgeist was summed up well in the title track of Longhaired Redneck, which recounts playing in a dive "where bikers stare at cowboys who are laughing at the hippies who are praying they'll get out of here alive." The song, which has an unmistakable rock swagger, features Coe performing an impressive imitation of Ernest Tubb, making it irretrievably country as well, illustrating the dichotomy of what was being referred to as "progressive" country music. Coe later explained, "It was terminology that I'd made up at the time. I was trying to tell people that not everybody with long hair was a hippie. Not everyone was the kind of person that thought you could punch them out, take their money and that they'd say, 'I won't do nothin' about it.'"[1] The song is also an early example of Coe's penchant for namedropping, as he mentions Merle Haggard and proclaims "Johnny Cash helped me get out of prison."

Several of the songs, such as the prison lament "Revenge" and "Living on the Run," play up to the outlaw image, while "Spotlight" explores the lonely wasted existence of a country singer. ("Roll me a smoke, give me some coke...") and advises the press, "Don't waste your time or your flashbulbs, too many heroes are dead." (In the same AllMusic review, Thom Jurek contends the song "sums up the way he views his life at this particular juncture, and given the lyrics, his mind couldn't have been a nice place to live.") Conversely, Longhaired Redneck also contains songs with warmer themes, such as "Texas Lullaby" ("See those tumbleweeds blowin’, Lord it makes me want to cry/It reminds me of my daddy and that Texas lullaby") and "Family Reunion," which boasts multilayered harmonies and an allusion to the bluegrass classic "Fox on the Run". "Free Born Ramblin’ Man" is a more obvious derivative paean to Southern rock, with its Allman Brothers-like guitar intro and title evoking that band's biggest hit.

Coe is backed by The Nashville Edition and The Jordanaires on vocals, as well as some of Nashville's top session musicians such as Reggie Young and Charlie McCoy.

Reception

AllMusic praised the album, opining "Like most of Coe's '70s material, this one's essential outlaw country that stands the test of time.”

Track listing

All Songs written by David Allan Coe except where noted.

  1. "Longhaired Redneck" (Coe, Jimmy Rabbitt) – 3:24
  2. "When She's Got Me (Where She Wants Me)" – 2:49
  3. "Revenge" (Coe, Jimmy Sadd) – 2:33
  4. "Texas Lullaby" (Coe, Ann McGowan) – 4:14
  5. "Living on the Run" (Coe, Jimmy L. Howard) – 2:35
  6. "Family Reunion" – 4:03
  7. "Rock and Roll Holiday" – 2:11
  8. "Free Born Rambling Man" – 2:16
  9. "Spotlight" – 3:11
  10. "Dakota the Dancing Bear, Part 2" (Coe, Larry Murray) – 4:00

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. An Exclusive Interview with: DAVID ALLAN COE . Engelhardt. Kristof. January 1, 2003 . The Review . Michigan. January 14, 2020 .