Hank Williams Hank Williams Jr Again

American singer-songwriter and musician

Hank Williams Jr.

Williams in 2008

Williams in 2008

Background information
Nativity name Randall Hank Williams
Also known equally
  • Bocephus
  • Rockin' Randall
  • Luke the Out-of-stater Jr.
Born (1949-05-26) May 26, 1949 (age 72)
Shreveport, Louisiana, U.South.
Genres
  • Land
  • southern rock
  • country stone
Occupation(s)
  • Vocalist-songwriter
  • musician
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • banjo
  • pianoforte
  • keyboards
  • harmonica
  • fiddle
  • drums[1]
Years active 1964–present
Labels
  • MGM
  • Warner Bros.
  • Curb
  • Bocephus
  • NASH Icon
Website hankjr.com

Musical artist

Randall Hank Williams (born May 26, 1949), known professionally every bit Hank Williams Jr. or Bocephus, is an American singer-songwriter and musician. He is the son of country music legend Hank Williams.

Early on life [edit]

Williams was born Randall Hank Williams on May 26, 1949, in Shreveport, Louisiana. His father nicknamed him Bocephus (after M Ole Opry comedian Rod Brasfield's ventriloquist dummy).[ii] After his male parent'due south death in 1953, he was raised by his mother, Audrey Williams.

While he was a child, a number of contemporary musicians visited his family unit, who influenced and taught him various music instruments and styles.[ citation needed ] Among these figures of influence were Merle Haggard, Johnny Cash, Fats Domino, Earl Scruggs, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis. Williams first stepped on the stage and sang his begetter'due south songs when he was viii years old.

He attended John Overton High School in Nashville, Tennessee, where he would bring his guitar to music class and play for pep rallies and performances of the choir.

Career [edit]

Williams began his career following in his famed father's footsteps, covering his male parent'southward songs and imitating his begetter's manner. Williams' first boob tube appearance was in a 1964 episode of ABC'due south The Jimmy Dean Show, in which at age 14 he sang several songs associated with his father. Later that year, he was a guest star on Shindig!.[three]

In 1964, Williams made his recording debut with "Long Gone Lonesome Blues", ane of his begetter's many classic songs.[4]

He provided the singing voice of his father[5] in the 1964 motion picture Your Cheatin' Heart. [6] He also recorded an album of duets with recordings of his father.[5]

A change in appearance and musical direction [edit]

Although Williams' recordings earned him numerous country hits throughout the 1960s and early 1970s with his role equally a "Hank Williams impersonator", he became disillusioned and severed ties with his mother.[ why? ]

By the mid-1970s Williams began to pursue a musical direction that would eventually make him a superstar. While recording a series of moderately successful songs, Williams began a heavy pattern of both drug and alcohol abuse. Upon moving to Alabama, in an endeavor to refocus both his creative free energy and his troubled personal life, Williams began playing music with Southern rock musicians including Waylon Jennings, Toy Caldwell, and Charlie Daniels. Hank Williams Jr. and Friends (1975), often considered his watershed album, was the product of these then-groundbreaking collaborations.

On Baronial 8, 1975, Williams was nearly killed in a mountain-climbing accident in southwestern Montana. While climbing Ajax Peak on the continental divide (Idaho border) w of Jackson, the snow beneath him collapsed and he fell almost 500 feet (150 m) onto rock; he suffered multiple skull and facial fractures.[vii] [8] [9] [10] The incident was chronicled in the semi-autobiographical, made-for-telly film Living Proof: The Hank Williams Jr. Story. He spent two years in recovery, having several reconstructive surgeries in addition to having to learn to talk and sing once more. To hibernate the scars and the disfigurement from the blow, Williams grew a beard and began wearing sunglasses and a cowboy hat. The bristles, hat, and sunglasses have since become his signature wait, and he is rarely seen without them.[ citation needed ]

In 1977, Williams recorded and released One Night Stands and The New S, and worked closely with his old friend Waylon Jennings on the song "One time and For All".[ citation needed ]

In 1980, he appeared on the PBS show Austin City Limits during Season 5, along with the Shake Russell-Dana Cooper Ring.[ citation needed ]

Acceptance into the land music establishment [edit]

Williams performing at the Chumash Casino Resort in Santa Ynez, California, 2006

In 1976, Rolling Stone wrote that Williams' "mainstream state cloth has ever been among Nashville's best".[11] Williams' career began to hitting its height after the Nashville establishment gradually—and somewhat reluctantly—accepted his new sound. His popularity had risen to levels where he could no longer exist overlooked for major manufacture awards.

He was prolific throughout the 1980s, sometimes recording and releasing two albums a year. Family Tradition, Whiskey Bent and Hell Spring, Habits Erstwhile and New, Rowdy, The Pressure Is On, High Notes, Strong Stuff, Man of Steel, Major Moves, Five-O, Montana Cafe, and many others resulted in a long string of hits.

Betwixt 1979 and 1992, Williams released 21 albums—18 studio albums and iii compilations—that were all certified at least gold by the RIAA. Betwixt 1979 and 1990, he enjoyed a string of 30 Top X singles on the Billboard Country charts, including eight No. 1 singles, for a total of 44 Acme Ten singles, including a total of ten No. 1 singles, during his career.[ commendation needed ]

In 1982, he had 9 albums simultaneously on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, all of which were original works and non compilations. In 1987–88, Williams was named Entertainer of the Year past the Country Music Clan. In 1987, 1988, and 1989, he won the aforementioned honour from the Academy of Country Music. The pinnacle anthology of his acceptance and popularity was Born to Boogie.[ citation needed ]

During the 1980s, Williams Jr. became a country music superstar known for catchy anthems and hard-edged, stone-influenced land. During the late 1970s and into the mid-1980s, Williams' songs constantly flew into the number ane or number two spots, with songs such every bit "Family Tradition", "Whiskey Aptitude and Hell Jump", "Old Habits", "Ain't Misbehavin'", "Born to Boogie", and "My Name Is Bocephus".[ clarification needed ]

The hit unmarried "Wild Streak" (1987) was co-written by Houston native Terri Sharp, for which Williams and Sharp both earned gold records.[ citation needed ]

In 1988, he released a Southern pride song, "If the South Woulda Won". The reference is to a notional Southern victory in the Civil War.

His 1989 hit "In that location's a Tear in My Beer" was a duet with his father created using electronic merging technology. The song was written by his male parent, and had been previously recorded with Hank Williams playing the guitar as the sole musical instrument. The music video for the song combined existing tv footage of Hank Williams performing, onto which electronic merging technology impressed the recordings of Williams, which and so fabricated information technology appear as if he were actually playing with his father. The video was both a critical and commercial success. It was named Video of the Twelvemonth by both the Country Music Clan and the Academy of State Music. Williams would go on to win a Grammy Laurels in 1990 for Best State Vocal Collaboration.[ commendation needed ]

He is well known for his hit "A Country Boy Can Survive" and as the performer of the theme vocal for Monday Dark Football, based on his 1984 hitting "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight". In 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1994, Williams' opening themes for Monday Dark Football earned him four Emmy Awards.[ commendation needed ]

In 2000, he provided the voice of Injun Joe in Tom Sawyer. In 2001, Williams Jr. co-wrote his classic striking "A Country Male child Can Survive" after 9/xi, renaming information technology "America Can Survive". In 2004, Williams was featured prominently on CMT Outlaws. In 2006, he starred at the Summerfest concert.[ citation needed ]

He has also made a cameo appearance forth with Larry the Cablevision Guy, Kid Rock, and Charlie Daniels in Gretchen Wilson's music video for the song "All Jacked Up". He and Kid Stone besides appeared in Wilson'southward "Redneck Adult female" video. Hank also had a pocket-size role of Kid Stone's video "Simply God Knows Why", and "Redneck Paradise".[ citation needed ]

In April 2009, Williams released a new single, "Red, White & Pink-Sideslip Blues", which peaked at number 43 on the country charts. The song was the lead-off single to Williams' anthology 127 Rose Avenue. The album debuted and peaked at number vii on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Also in July 2009, 127 Rose Avenue was announced as his last album for Adjourn Records.[12]

Musical style [edit]

Hank Williams Jr. began his recording career as a traditional state singer. In the first phase of his career, he predominantly recorded covers of his father's songs. He likewise recorded singles nether the name Luke the Drifter Jr.[13] (a reference to his father's alias "Luke the Drifter"), and stone and roll singles under the aliases Rockin' Randall[14] and Bocephus,[13] a nickname given to him by his father.

Williams' fashion evolved slowly as he struggled to find his own voice and place within traditional country music, before challenging the country music institution with a blend of traditional land, rock and dejection. This style has been classified equally southern rock,[15] [16] [17] [18] [nineteen] [20] [thirteen] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] state rock,[xv] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] rock and roll,[13] [33] [34] blues rock,[xix] [34] outlaw state,[16] [35] land blues[20] and rockabilly.[34]

Equally a multi-instrumentalist, Williams' repertoire of skills includes guitar, bass guitar, upright bass, steel guitar, banjo, dobro, piano, keyboards, saxophone, harmonica, fiddle, and drums.[ane]

Legacy [edit]

Artists who have cited Hank Williams Jr. equally an influence include Delta Generators,[36] Walker Hayes,[37] Sam Hunt,[38] Davin James,[39] Shooter Jennings,[40] Wayne Mills,[41] The Sickstring Outlaws[42] and Gretchen Wilson.[43]

From 1989 through October 2011,[44] his song "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight", refashioned as "All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night", had been used to open up broadcasts of Monday Dark Football until it was pulled later on Williams's controversial comments about President Barack Obama.[45] [46] The vocal returned to open up the show in 2017 although information technology was temporarily removed in 2020.[47]

On April ten, 2006, CMT honored Williams with the Johnny Cash Visionary Laurels, presenting it to him at the 2006 CMT Music Awards. On November xi, 2008, Williams was honored as a BMI Icon at the 56th almanac BMI State Awards. The artists and songwriters named BMI Icons have had "a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers".[48]

In 2011, Williams was named 1 of "Seven Living Legends" of his native Shreveport, Louisiana, past Danny Fob (1954–2014) of KWKH radio.[49] Others named were journalist Bob Griffin of KSLA and KTBS-TV, and James Burton. Two others cited, Claude King and Frank Folio, both died in 2013.[fifty]

In 2015, Williams was inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame. On August 12, 2020, Williams was selected to be inducted into the Land Music Hall of Fame.[51]

Personal life [edit]

His daughter Katherine Williams-Dunning, the merely one of Williams's 5 children not to pursue a career in music, died on June 13, 2020, in a auto crash at the age of 27.[52] His son Shelton performs equally Hank Williams Iii; his other children Holly Williams, Hilary Williams and Sam Williams[53] are as well musicians, as is his grandson Coleman Williams (Hank III'due south son), who performs under the sobriquet "IV."[54] His wife, Mary Jane died on Tuesday, March 22, 2022[55] Mary Jane was 58.[56]

Politics [edit]

Williams has been politically involved with the Republican Party. For the 2000 U.S. Presidential election, he rerecorded his song "We Are Immature Country" to "This is Bush–Cheney State". On October xv, 2008, at a rally in Virginia Beach for Republican presidential nominee John McCain, he performed "McCain–Palin Tradition", a song in support of McCain and his running mate, Sarah Palin.[57] He has contributed to federal election campaigns, more often than not to Republicans, including Michele Bachmann'southward 2012 presidential entrada. However, he has donated to some Democrats in the past, most notably Jim Cooper and John S. Tanner.[58]

In November 2008, Williams considered a run for the 2012 Republican nomination as a U.S. Senator from Tennessee for the seat held by GOP incumbent Bob Corker, although his publicist said regarding Williams "no announcement has been made".[59] Williams, ultimately, did not run.

In an Oct 3, 2011, interview with Trick News Channel'south Fox & Friends, Williams discussed a June golf game where President Barack Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner had teamed against Vice President Joe Biden and Ohio Governor John Kasich, maxim the match was "i of the biggest political mistakes ever". When asked why the golf game game troubled him, Williams stated, "Come up on. That'd be like Hitler playing golf with Netanyahu ... in the shape this country is in?" He also said that the President and Vice President were "the enemy" and compared them to "the Iii Stooges". Subsequently, anchor Gretchen Carlson said to him, "You used the proper name of one of the most hated people in all of the globe to depict, I recall, the president." Williams replied, "Well, that is true. But I'one thousand telling you like it is." Equally a result of his statements, ESPN dropped Williams' opening song from its Mon Night Football game broadcast of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers versus the Indianapolis Colts and replaced information technology with the national anthem.[ citation needed ]

Williams afterwards said his analogy was "extreme – but it was to brand a signal", and "some of us accept strong opinions and are often misunderstood ... I was but trying to explain how stupid it seemed to me – how ludicrous that pairing was. They're polar opposites, and it made no sense. They don't meet eye to eye and never will". Additionally, Williams said he has "always respected the office of the president ... Working-class people are hurting – and information technology doesn't seem like anybody cares. When both sides are high-fiving information technology on the ninth pigsty when everybody else is without a job – information technology makes a whole lot of us angry. Something has to change. The policies take to change". ESPN afterwards said it was "extremely disappointed" in Williams' comments, and pulled his opening from that night's broadcast.[60]

Iii days later, ESPN announced Williams and his song would non render to Monday Dark Football, ending the use of the vocal that had been part of the broadcast on both ABC and ESPN since 1989.[61] Williams expressed defiance and indifference on his website, and said he was the one who had made the determination. "Later on reading hundreds of e-mails, I take fabricated MY decision," he wrote. "By pulling my opening Oct 3rd, Yous (ESPN) stepped on the Toes of The First Amendment Freedom of Speech, and so therefore Me, My Vocal, and All My Rowdy Friends are OUT OF HERE. It'southward been a neat run."[62] Williams' son, Hank Williams Iii, stayed neutral in the debate, telling TMZ.com that most musicians, including his father, are "not worthy" of a political discussion.[63]

After his song was pulled from Monday Dark Football, Williams recorded a song criticizing Obama, ESPN and Fox & Friends, titled "Keep the Change". He released the track on iTunes and via costless download at his website.[64] The song garnered over 180,000 downloads in two days.[65]

Williams continued to make his opinions of President Obama known and during a performance at the Iowa State Off-white in August 2012, he called Obama a Muslim telling the crowd, "We've got a Muslim president who hates farming, hates the armed services, hates the U.Southward. and nosotros hate him!" [66]

Discography [edit]

  • Hank Williams Jr. Sings the Songs of Hank Williams (1964)
  • Your Cheatin' Middle (1964)
  • Connie Francis and Hank Williams Jr. Sing Peachy Country Favorites (1964)
  • Ballads of the Hills and Plains (1965)
  • Dejection My Name (1965)
  • Country Shadows (1966)
  • A Time to Sing (1967)
  • My Own Style (1967)
  • My Songs (1967)
  • Luke The Drifter Jr. (1968)
  • Songs My Father Left Me (1969)
  • Luke the Drifter Jr. Vol. 2 (1969)
  • Live at Cobo Hall (1969)
  • Sunday Morning (1969)
  • Removing The Shadow (1970)
  • Luke The Drifter Jr. Vol. 3 (1970)
  • Singing My Songs: Johnny Cash (1970)
  • I've Got A Correct To Weep (1971)
  • Sweet Dreams (1971)
  • All For The Love of Sunshine (1971)
  • Whole Lotta Loving (1972)
  • Eleven Roses (1972)
  • Later Y'all, Pride's Non Hard to Eat (1973)
  • Living Proof (1974)
  • The Last Love Song (1974)
  • Bocephus (1975)
  • Hank Williams Jr. and Friends (1975)
  • One Dark Stands (1977)
  • The New S (1977)
  • Family Tradition (1979)
  • Whiskey Aptitude and Hell Jump (1979)
  • Habits Quondam and New (1980)
  • Rowdy (1981)
  • The Force per unit area Is On (1981)
  • High Notes (1982)
  • Strong Stuff (1983)
  • Homo of Steel (1983)
  • Major Moves (1984)
  • 5-O (1985)
  • Montana Cafe (1986)
  • Hank Live (1987)
  • Built-in to Boogie (1987)
  • Wild Streak (1988)
  • Lone Wolf (1990)
  • Pure Hank (1991)
  • Bohemian (1992)
  • Out of Left Field (1993)
  • Hog Wild (1995)
  • A.One thousand.A. Wham Bam Sam (1996)
  • 3 Hanks: Men with Broken Hearts (1996)
  • Stormy (1999)
  • The Almeria Club Recordings (2002)
  • I'm One of You (2003)
  • 127 Rose Artery (2009)
  • Former Schoolhouse New Rules (2012)
  • It's Nigh Time (2016)
  • Rich White Honky Dejection (2022)

Awards and nominations [edit]

Year Award Honor
2020 Country Music Hall of Fame Inductee Land Music Hall of Fame and Museum
2017 No. 50 in Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest State Artists of All Time Rolling Stone[67]
2007 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame Inductee Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame
2007 CMT Giants CMT
2007 Tennessean of the Year Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame
2006 Johnny Cash Visionary Honour CMT Music Awards
2003 No. 20 in CMT's forty Greatest Men of State Music CMT
1994 Composed Theme Emmy
1993 Composed Theme Emmy
1992 Equanimous Theme Emmy
1991 Equanimous Theme Emmy
1990 Video of the Year – At that place's a Tear in My Beer TNN/Music City News
1990 Vocal Collaboration of the Year – There'due south a Tear in My Beer TNN/Music Urban center News
1989 Video of the Year – There's a Tear in My Beer Academy of Country Music
1989 Song of the Yr nomination – At that place's a Tear in My Beer Academy of Country Music
1989 Single Record of the Year nomination – There'south a Tear in My Beer University of Land Music
1989 Entertainer of the Yr Academy of Land Music
1989 Music Video of the Twelvemonth – In that location'due south a Tear in My Beer Country Music Clan
1989 Vocal Event of the Year – At that place's a Tear in My Beer Country Music Association
1989 Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals – In that location's a Tear in My Beer Grammy Awards
1988 Entertainer of the Year Academy of Country Music
1988 Video of the Twelvemonth – Young Country Academy of Country Music
1988 Elevation Male Vocaliser nomination Academy of Country Music
1988 Male person Vocalist of the Year nomination Country Music Association
1988 Album of the Year – Born to Boogie Country Music Association
1988 Entertainer of the Year Country Music Association
1988 Grammy Award for All-time Country Vocal Performance, Male nomination – Built-in to Boogie Grammy Awards
1987 Top Male person Vocalist nomination University of Land Music
1987 Song of the Year nomination – Built-in to Boogie Academy of Land Music
1987 Single Tape of the Twelvemonth nomination – Built-in to Boogie Academy of Land Music
1987 Entertainer of the Twelvemonth Academy of State Music
1987 Anthology of the Year nomination – Born to Boogie Academy of Country Music
1987 Entertainer of the Year Country Music Association
1987 Music Video of the Twelvemonth – My Proper noun Is Bocephus Land Music Association
1987 Male person Vocaliser of the Year nomination Country Music Clan
1987 Grammy Award for Best Country Vocal Performance, Male nomination – Ain't Misbehavin Grammy Awards
1986 Height Male Vocaliser nomination Academy of Land Music
1986 Entertainer of the Year nomination University of State Music
1986 Male Vocalist of the Year nomination Country Music Association
1985 Music Video of the Year – All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight State Music Association
1985 Male Vocalist of the Year nomination State Music Clan
1985 Summit Male Vocalist nomination Academy of Country Music
1985 Single Tape of the Yr nomination – I'm for Love University of Country Music
1985 Entertainer of the Year nomination Academy of Land Music
1985 Album of the Year nomination – Five-O Academy of Country Music
1985 Grammy Honour for All-time Land Vocal Performance, Male nomination – All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over This night Grammy Awards
1985 Grammy Award for Best Country Song nomination – All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over This night Grammy Awards
1984 Video of the Year – All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over This evening Academy of Country Music
1984 Album of the Year nomination – Man of Steel Academy of State Music
1984 Entertainer of the Year nomination Academy of Country Music
1983 Entertainer of the Year nomination Academy of State Music
1982 Meridian Male person Vocalist nomination Academy of Country Music
1981 Top Male Vocalist nomination Academy of Country Music
1980 Grammy Award for Best Country Vocal Performance, Male person nomination – Family Tradition Grammy Awards
1966 Grammy Honor for Best State & Western Album nomination – Male parent and son: Hank Williams and Hank Williams Jr. Grammy Awards
1965 Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Album nomination – Hank Williams Jr. Sings the Songs of Hank Williams Grammy Awards

References [edit]

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  61. ^ "ESPN, Hank Williams Jr. role ways". ESPN.com. October half dozen, 2010.
  62. ^ "ESPN – Hank Williams Jr. theme song won't return to Mon Night Football – ESPN". ESPN. October half dozen, 2011. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  63. ^ "Hank Williams Jr.'s Son – My Dad Should Not Talk Politics". TMZ.com. Nov 22, 2011. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  64. ^ Weir, Tom (October 10, 2011). "Hank Williams Jr. retaliates with song that slams Fox". USA Today.
  65. ^ "Hank Williams Jr. Thrives With Downloads, Media Coverage Surrounding Controversy". CMT News. October 12, 2011.
  66. ^ "Land Star Calls Obama 'a Muslim'". ABC News. August 20, 2012.
  67. ^ "100 Greatest Country Artists of All Time". Rollingstone.com. June 15, 2017.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Hank Williams Jr. at IMDb
  • Williams, Hank, Jr., 1949– at Library of Congress Authorities, with 86 catalog records (primarily under 'Williams, Hank, 1949–' without 'Jr.')

bellmosume.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hank_Williams_Jr.

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