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Setlist: The Very Best of Waylon Jennings (Live)

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Download links and information about Setlist: The Very Best of Waylon Jennings (Live) by Waylon Jennings. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Country, Outlaw Country genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 37:16 minutes.

Artist: Waylon Jennings
Release date: 2011
Genre: Country, Outlaw Country
Tracks: 12
Duration: 37:16
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Are You Ready For the Country (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 2:52
2. I've Always Been Crazy (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 4:35
3. Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 2:43
4. Bob Wills Is Still the King (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 1:35
5. Luckenbach, Texas (Back To the Basics of Love) [Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984] 3:12
6. Theme From the Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol' Boys) [Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984] 1:54
7. Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 2:29
8. I May Be Used (But Baby I Ain't Used Up) [Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984] 3:06
9. Lucille (You Won't Do Your Daddy's Will) [Live At Opryland, Nashville, TN - October 14, 1983] 3:05
10. I Ain't Living Long Like This (Live At Opryland, Nashville, TN - October 14, 1983) 3:47
11. Dreaming My Dreams With You (Live At Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA - June 15, 1984) 3:01
12. Can't You See (Live) 4:57

Details

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It just wouldn’t seem right if Ol’ Waylon didn’t begin a live show with his household hit “Are You Ready for the Country.” Setlist: The Very Best of Waylon Jennings (Live) compiles the cream of the late Jennings’ live crop to play like one epic concert where all his fan favorites are covered with true grit. Roadhouse favorite “Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way” gets punctuated by pumping a twangy Telecaster through some late-‘70s guitar-phase effect coupled with some delightfully out-of-place electric sitar droning in the background. Paying tribute to another one of his country music heroes, Jennings tears into “Bob Wills Is Still The King” without resorting to any campy Western swing approximations — though there is some of the album’s finest pedal steel all over this one. A cover of the Marshall Tucker Band’s “Can’t You See” closes with Southern-rock aplomb.