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Never Say Die Live

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Download links and information about Never Say Die Live by Waylon Jennings. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Country, Outlaw Country genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:02:55 minutes.

Artist: Waylon Jennings
Release date: 2000
Genre: Country, Outlaw Country
Tracks: 14
Duration: 01:02:55
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Closing In On the Fire 5:16
2. Waymore's Blues (special guest appearance by John Anderson) 3:38
3. Never Say Die (Live) 5:06
4. Amanda / A Couple More Years (Live) 6:40
5. Drift Away (Live) 3:54
6. Nothing Catches Jesus By Surprise (Live) 4:26
7. Good Hearted Woman (Live) 3:36
8. I'm Not Lisa (special guest appearance by Jessi Colter) 3:12
9. Storms Never Last (special guest appearance by Jessi Colter) 3:39
10. Never Been to Spain (Live) 5:28
11. (I'm A) Ramblin' Man (special guest appearance by Montgomery Gentry) 2:52
12. Goin' Down Rockin' (Live) 5:31
13. I've Always Been Crazy (special guest appearance by Travis Tritt) 4:19
14. Can't You See (Live) 5:18

Details

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At age 63, Waylon Jennings may have reached the point that he is commercially marginal, but his long hit-filled career gives him a repertoire that can make for a powerful concert set, and on this album, recorded at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville in January 2000, he demonstrates that he remains able to turn in a performance to match. This is a special show, with frequent guest-star appearances from Jennings' acolytes — John Anderson ("Waymore's Blues"), Montgomery Gentry ("[I'm A] Ramblin' Man"), Travis Tritt ("I've Always Been Crazy") — as well as his wife, Jessi Colter, who gets a solo spot with her hit "I'm Not Lisa" and duets with Jennings on their hit "Storms Never Last." In addition to the familiar material, Jennings mixes in songs from his little-heard late-'90s albums, such as the title track from his 1998 collection, Closing In on the Fire, and covers the pop hits "Drift Away" and "Never Been to Spain." He makes an engaging host, joking with his guests and talking to the audience, but what matters most is that his bass baritone remains sturdy, while his veteran band (which earns a co-billing) still plays his songs with authority. Jennings vows that he is "Goin' Down Rockin'," and if so, that's appropriate, but this album suggests there's still plenty of life in him.