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Straight to Hell

 
Album Review: Straight to Hell

  • Artist: Hank Williams III
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: March 28, 2006
  • Type: Contains explicit content
  • Genre: Country

Review

Anyone hoping that Hank Williams III's "Hellbilly" metal band Assjack would finally make it onto one of his albums is still out of luck, but Hank III's third solo effort Straight to Hell comes close to getting their no-quarter spirit onto plastic, if not their sound. Taking the no-frills hard-country sound of 2002's Lovesick, Broke & Driftin' as a starting point, Straight to Hell pumps a good bit more darkness into the mix; mostly recorded at home on a digital portastudio, Straight to Hell begins with a sample of the Louvin Brothers' "Satan Is Real" interrupted by a burst of demonic laughter, which then segues into the title tune, a testimony to a life of cheap thrills and dangerous living that sounds like a classic string band rounding the corners at 90-miles-an-hour with empty bottles of bourbon propping open the windows. A similar mix of old-school country and chemically-fueled rebellion run through songs like "Pills I Took" and "Smoke and Wine," and even the less menacing tunes like "My Drinking Problem" and "Angel of Sin" boast too much swagger and grit to fit comfortably on the radio next to Toby Keith or Gretchen Wilson. While Hank III's self-mythologizing outlaw stance is not entirely unlike that of his father, there's a crazier and more sinister energy to Straight to Hell than Bocephus has ever conjured up on record, and numbers like "Country Heroes" and "D. Ray White" eloquently testify to his notion that bad craziness is a long and rich tradition along the margins of Nashville. (He also has a few things to say about Hank Jr. hanging out with Kid Rock on "Not Everybody Likes Us" to confirm he's most certainly not turning into his dad.) The album's most extreme departure point, however, is the bonus audio collage "Louisiana Stripes," which combines a handful of high-lonesome tunes with layers of ambient noise, bits of found dialogue, dub-wise echo and reverb effects, stray telephone messages, and sound effects ranging from thunderstorms to gurgling bong water. There's a pure and soulful musical vision at the heart of Straight to Hell no matter how much Hank III lashes out against the confines of current country music and messes with the form, and that's what makes him most valuable as an outlaw -- there's lots of long-haired dope-smoking rednecks out there, but not many that can tap into the sweet and dirty heart of American music the way Hank III does, and Straight to Hell proves he's got a whole lot to say on that particular subject. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Tracks



CD 1

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Medley: Satan Is Real/Straight to Hell Ira Louvin, Charlie Louvin, Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:08)
Thrown out of the Bar (Lyrics) Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (2:07)
Things You Do to Me (Lyrics) Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (2:22)
Country Heroes Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:29)
D. Ray White Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:47)
Low Down Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:24)
Pills I Took Hank Williams III (2:31)
Smoke & Wine Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (2:36)
My Drinkin' Problem Hank Williams III (2:42)
Crazed Country Rebel Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:08)
Dick in Dixie (Lyrics) Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (2:37)
Not Everybody Likes Us Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (4:30)
Angel of Sin Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (6:07)


CD 2

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Louisiana Stripes Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (3:28)
Smoke & Wine/Alone & Dying/Back by My Side/What's His Name/Down in ... Cheech Marin, Wayne Hancock, Hank Williams III Hank Williams III (42:00)

Credits

Donnie Herron (Fiddle), Michael Latterell (Engineer), Eric Borash (Musician), Hank Williams III (Guitar), Hank Williams III (Vocals (Background)), Christy Kane (Photography), Hank Williams III (Engineer), Hank Williams III (Vocals), Hank Williams III (Guitar (Acoustic)), Jennifer Tzar (Photography), Rod Janzen (Guitar (Electric)), Randy Kohrs (Guitar (Acoustic)), Randy Kohrs (Vocals (Background)), Hank Williams III (Guitar (Electric)), Hank Williams III (Piano), Tia Sprocket (Vocals (Background)), Hank Williams III (Photography), Jim Lightman (Engineer), Shaun McWilliams (Drums), Stephen Mougin (Vocals), Keith Neltner (Illustrations), Scott Vestal (Musician), Johnny Hiland (Guitar (Electric)), James Mitchell (Guitar), Donnie Herron (Claw Hammer Banjo), Johnny Hiland (Soloist), Randy Kohrs (Pedal Steel), Keith Neltner (Design), Stephen Mougin (Mandolin), Randy Kohrs (Dobro), Hank Williams III (Shouts), Randy Kohrs (Tenor (Vocal))
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Wikipedia: Straight to Hell (album)
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Straight to Hell
Studio album by Hank Williams III
Released February 28, 2006 (2006-02-28)
Recorded December 2004—January 2005
Genre Neotraditional country, cowpunk
Length 1:27:56
Label Bruc Records
Producer Hank III, JoeBuck, Andy Gibson
Professional reviews
Hank Williams III chronology
Lovesick, Broke and Driftin''
(2002)
Straight to Hell
(2006)
Damn Right, Rebel Proud
(2008)

Straight to Hell is the third studio album by outlaw country/punk artist Hank Williams III. It was Williams' first release since settling a contract dispute with Curb Records and was one of the first releases on Curb's new Bruc Records imprint. It was also the first ever country music release to merit both a parental advisory sticker on the package and a clean version of the album for more conservative retail outlets like Wal-Mart, due to language more suited to Williams' punk rock side and some repeated drug and alcohol references. On his website, Williams encourages fans to support independent record outlets that are more willing to stock the uncensored version of the album[1].

Espousing the Do-it-yourself (DIY) ethic more associated with punk rock, Williams recorded the double album at what was referred to in the liner notes as "a house with a good wooden room in East Nashville" (recently revealed to be the house III's steel player, Andy Gibson, was living in at the time[1]) with a $400 Korg D 1600 digital workstation, handling producing and engineering duties along with his longtime Damn Band members JoeBuck and Andy Gibson, although instead of a "Produced and Engineered by..." credit, the Williams/Buck/Gibson triad was instead credited with "Settin' up the mics, turnin' the knobs and recording this record". The results would inspire Williams to state that every musician should own their own workstation in order to take full control of their own music.

The first disc features Williams and his Damn Band along with a handful of professional guest musicians, and includes several tracks that Williams had been performing for years in his live show, including the infamous anti-pop-country anthem "Dick In Dixie" (better known to longtime Williams fans as "Let's Put The Dick Back In Dixie And The Cunt Back In Country", and omitted from the clean version of the album entirely). Also notable on the album is "Not Everybody Likes Us", where Williams openly insults Kid Rock, pointing out that neither Rock's association with Williams's estranged father, Hank Williams Jr., nor Rock's being a "Yankee" would ever make him "the son of Hank".

The second disc features a rawer Williams performing the song "Louisiana Stripes" (described by one reviewer as "a worthy successor to Johnny Cash's 'Folsom Prison Blues'"[2]), as well as a "hidden" 42-minute track featuring a medley of other Williams compositions along with covers of his grandfather's "I Could Never Be Ashamed Of You", Cheech & Chong's "Up In Smoke" and Wayne Hancock's "Take My Pain", all linked with various soundbites and sound effects such as voice mail messages, passing trains, runaway horses, a creek, a funeral, pig snorts, backmasking and bong hits.

Fans who bought the album in participating independent record stores were given a free 12" picture disc that included the hidden track from disc two, split into two parts.

Contents

Track listing

Disc one

  1. "Satan Is Real/Straight to Hell (Medley)" (Charlie Louvin/Ira Louvin)/(Hank III) — 3:08
  2. "Thrown out of the Bar" — 2:07
  3. "Things You Do to Me" — 2:22
  4. "Country Heroes" — 3:29
  5. "D. Ray White" — 3:47
  6. "Low Down" — 3:24
  7. "Pills I Took" (Wyatt G. Hellickson) — 2:31
  8. "Smoke & Wine" — 2:36
  9. "My Drinkin' Problem" (Randy Howard) — 2:42
  10. "Crazed Country Rebel" — 3:09
  11. "Dick in Dixie" — 2:37
  12. "Not Everybody Likes Us" — 4:30
  13. "Angel of Sin" — 6:07

Disc two

  1. "Louisiana Stripes" — 3:28
  2. Hidden track (Medley) — 42:00
    1. "I Could Never Be Ashamed of You" (Hank Williams)
    2. "Smoke & Wine" (Slowed Down Version)
    3. "Alone & Dying"
    4. "On My Own"
    5. "Back by My Side"
    6. "Take My Pain" (Wayne Hancock)
    7. "What's His Name"
    8. "Down in Houston"
    9. Up in Smoke (Cheech Marin/Tommy Chong)

All songs written and composed by Hank Williams III except where noted.

Musical personnel

  • Hank Williams III - vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, electric tic-tac bass, Fremelo guitar, Phaser guitar, shouts, bong
  • JoeBuck - electric bass, stand-up bass, mandolin, accordion, guitar, electric tic-tac bass, shouts
  • Andy Gibson - steel guitar, Dobro, Hawaiian steel guitar
  • Donnie Herron - fiddle, clawhammer banjo
  • Johnny Hiland - electric guitar
  • Shawn McWilliams - drums
  • Randy Kohrs - Dobro, steel guitar, backing vocals
  • Tim Carter - banjo
  • Eric B - guitar
  • Tia Sprocket - backing vocals
  • Rod Janzen - electric guitar
  • Joe Fazzio - drums
  • Travis "Skunky" Gillespie - harmonica

Technical personnel

  • Hank Williams III - recording engineer, mix engineer
  • Joe Buck - recording engineer
  • Andy Gibson - recording engineer
  • Jim Lightman - mix engineer

References

  1. ^ Coroneos, Kyle. "Q & A with Andy Gibson". SavingCountryMusic.com. http://www.savingcountrymusic.com/?p=1034. Retrieved 2009=3=12. 
  2. ^ Flotat, Raymond. "Hank III (Straight to Hell) review". mxdwn.com. http://www.mxdwn.com/article.php?sid=654. Retrieved 2007-11-07. 

 
 

 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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