10 bài hát hàng đầu của hank williams jr năm 2023

10 bài hát hàng đầu của hank williams jr năm 2023

Born as Randall Hank Williams, the American singer-songwriter the fans know better as Hank Williams Jr., is the son of a legendary country musician, Hank Williams. Another alias Hank Williams Jr. has also gone by is Bocephus. The genres of music he’s typically performed have been a blend of blues, country, and Southern-style rock. For Hank Williams Jr., it was like-father-like-son as he mimicked his father’s footsteps, first covering his father’s songs and imitating his style.

The first television appearance Williams Jr. made was on The Jimmy Dean Show in 1964 on ABC. He was fourteen years old at the time and performed many of his father’s songs. He also guest-starred in another program, Shindig! However, as much as following in his father’s footsteps had its merit, Williams Jr. still needed to find his own place in the world of country music.

Life-Changing Experience

On August 8, 1975, while at Montana’s Ajax Peak, Hank Williams Jr. fell off the side of the mountain that nearly claimed his life. It took a long time to recover, but once he did, instead of following his father’s style of traditional country music, Williams Jr. began to mesh together blues, country, and rock as a genre all his own. Already a talented multi-instrumentalist, his ability to play a range of instruments put him in a unique position to make the most out of his new musical path.

Although he was very successful serving as a musical impersonator of his father during the first part of his career, it wasn’t until he changed course with his music style did he catapult from stardom into superstardom. In addition to changing how he played music, he also changed his appearance. When Hank Williams Jr. had his near-fatal accident in Montana, he underwent a series of reconstructive surgeries, plus learning how to talk and sing again. Because of the disfigurement and scarring, Williams Jr. sported a beard, wore a cowboy hat, and sunglasses. This wound up becoming the signature look as he wore this in public nearly all the time.

Controversies & Legacies

Now that Hank William Jr. formed his own voice and identity, the critics, fans, and peers sat up and took notice. In 1976, Rolling Stone Magazine commented his brand of country music had always been among the best coming out of Nashville. At first, Nashville didn’t care for his music as he, along with Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson, was considered the outlaws of country music. However, as his popularity rose, the industry could no longer take a blind eye to his accomplishments.

This meant finally recognizing him with music industry awards that snubbed him and his blend of music styles. From Hank Williams Jr., it was one hit after another since returning from the near-dead and clean through the 1980s as one of the most productive musical artists in the business. On the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in 1982, Hank William Jr. had nine studio albums charting at the same time.

All the work was original. In 1988, the Country Music Association recognized Williams Jr. as Entertainer of the Year. He won this exact same award three years in a row from 1987 until 1989 with the Academy of Country Music. From 1989 until 2011, Monday Night Football played a refashioned version of one of Hank Williams Jr.’s songs, “All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight.” Now titled “All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night, this continued until the artist made a statement, comparing then-president Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler.

Hank Williams Jr. has made it no secret he has been a loyal supporter of the Republican Party where he had considered at one point to run for political office, but never went through with it. In 2017, the song was reinstated with a new version that featured the combined performance of Hank Williams Jr., Florida Georgia Line, and Jason Derulo.

The discographic portfolio of Hank Williams Jr. boasts fifty-six studio albums to his credit, as well as twenty-five compilation albums, twenty-five music videos, and 109 singles. Of those singles, ten of them were number one hits in the U.S. As a solo artist and a musical collaborator, Hank Williams Jr. has earned several accolades, nominations, and awards for his music.

With the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), he earned his first gold certification from his second album, Your Cheatin’ Heart, which was released in 1964. From 1979 until 1992, he released seventeen studio albums that consecutively earned either gold or platinum certifications, also from the RIAA. Williams Jr., just like his own father, has become a music legend himself, and it doesn’t stop there. Born to Hank Williams Jr. were five children.

His son, Shelton, has performed as Hank Williams III. Four of his children have entered the music business while the fifth, Katherine Williams-Dunning, kept out of it. Unfortunately, her life was cut short when she died in a car crash on June 13, 2020.

Top 10 Hank Williams Jr. Songs

#10 – I’m for Love

In 1985, “I’m for Love” was the first single released from Hank Williams Jr.’s thirty-eighth studio album, Five-O. It was his seventh number one hit on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, and it was a number five hit on the Canadian singles chart. “I’m for Love” remained on the charts for fifteen weeks and earned a series of nominations, including Single Record of the Year by the Academy of Country Music.

In this performance, Hank Williams Jr. lyrically shared what he’s for and what he’s against, as well as how society viewed the sign of the times as they were going, and still are, going down. Hank Williams Jr., in song and in lifestyle, has always been vocal about his personal views in a rather candid manner. Among his fans, this is considered a great thing. Among those who disagree, he couldn’t care less. “I’m for Love” is what he cared about most, both in song and as part of his lifestyle.

#9 – All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight

The popularity of “All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight” surged when it became the opening theme to Monday Night Football, which ran consistently from 1989 until 2011. Before becoming a staple on the NFL’s most popular night of the week, it was a number ten hit on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart when it was released in 1984, as well as a number six hit on Canada’s Country Singles chart. The album, Major Moves, was the thirty-seventh studio recording for Hank Williams Jr.

In the music video, the song featured artists such as George Jones, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Little Jimmy Dickens, Paul Williams, Cheech and Chong, George Thorogood, Mel Tillis, Kris Kristofferson, Grandpa Jones, Port Wagoner, Jim Varney, and from the Oak Ridge Boys, William Lee Golden, and Duane Allen. At the end of the video, homage is paid to the late Hank Williams with a ghostly Cadillac that flew into the night sky.

That touching music video, each illustrating a piece of an artist’s personality, won Video of the Year in 1984 with the Academy of Country Music, as well as in 1985 with the Country Music Association. There are a few versions to “All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight,” namely the album version, single version, and the two made-for-NFL versions.

#8 – Born to Boogie

“Born to Boogie,” both song and album, was released in 1987 and became another hit favorite for Hank Williams Jr. The single peaked at number one position on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and Canada’s Country Singles chart. Both the single and the album won him a handful of award nominations, as well as wins for Entertainer of the Year in 1987 with the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association, and again in 1988. Also in 1988, he won Album of the Year with the Country Music Association. In the single, “Born to Boogie” was a classic Hank Williams Jr., lyrically sharing his autobiography in one of the most entertaining country songs ever to hit the charts. “Born to Boogie” is designed to boogie too, word for word.

#7 – Mind Your Own Business (featuring Reba McEntire, Tom Petty, Reverend Mike, and Willie Nelson)

The collaborated performance of “Mind Your Own Business” featured Hank Williams Jr., Reba McEntire, Tom Petty, Reverend Mike, and Willie Nelson, together, paying homage to the legendary Hank Williams, who first recorded this single in 1949. The 1986 cover version earned the artists a number one chart hit on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and the Canadian Country Singles chart. The narration of the song targeted a local busybody whose notorious for snooping around and spreading gossip. The original inspiration of the song came from his personal relationship issues with his wife and how it earned so much public attention. His delivery of the song served as a slap in the face to the media to literally mind their own business.

When he first introduced the song in 1949 he commented there was a little bit of prophecy put into that song, which turned out to be the case. As for the collaborated performance by his son, as well as McEntire, Petty, Mike, and Nelson, it wasn’t only a song that paid homage, but as a shared opinion with common ground. “Mind Your Own Business” was the second of three hit singles that came from his thirty-ninth studio album, Montana Cafe​​​​​. When fans pay close enough attention to this single, there are hints of Move it On Over, which is another Hank Williams, father, and son, classic.

#6 – Eleven Roses

“Eleven Roses” was a countrypolitan ballad that was recorded and released by Hank Williams Jr. in 1972. This was the first time the son of Hank Williams earned himself a number one hit on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, as well as on Canada’s Country Singles chart. It came from the album with the same name and was the first time for Williams Jr. to reach this pinnacle as a solo artist.

The focus of the story revolved around giving his love interest a bouquet of one rose short of a dozen, which was his hope when she looked into the mirror she’d find the missing twelfth rose staring back at her. The remorseful tone in Williams Jr.’s voice as the lyrical narrator made his tale not only gut wrenching believable but an easy favorite for fans of music that already saw a hint of blues, country, and a bit of rock already emerging from the artist before he officially became an outlaw in the music industry that was about to take the music industry by storm.

#5 – Ain’t Misbehavin’

Originally, “Ain’t Misbehavin” was a 1929 swing jazz song designed for the Broadway musical comedy, Connie’s Hot Chocolates. It was first made famous by Louis Armstrong’s trumpet solo, who admitted it was one of those songs a person could just cut loose with and swing with. There were a number of jazz greats, such as Leo Reisman and his orchestra, Bill Robinson, Gene Austin, Ruth Etting, and Fats Waller that each did “Ain’t Misbehavin'” justice with their own recordings.

It also inspired a number of artists from other musical genres to give this song a go, including Hank Williams Jr. In 1985, he recorded his outlaw country spin on the classic hit for his album, Five-O. In 1986, his version topped the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, as well as Canada’s Country Singles Chart. It also earned him several accolades and award nominations.

#4 – All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down)

In 1981, from the album, The Pressure Is On, “All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down)” peaked at the top of the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, as well as the Canadian Country Singles chart. What started off as a song became a trendy catch-phrase as “All My Rowdy Friends” would appear again in a song title a few years later in an altered version that became almost as iconic as Hank Williams Jr. himself. It also appeared in a few other singles belonging to the artist, including “Born to Boogie” and “Keep the Change.”

The theme of the song focused on a disillusioned singer who used to enjoy a rowdy lifestyle with his friends before they all opted to settle down and abandon those old wild ways. However, in the lyrical tale, there’s a part of him that longs to relive those old times, which made direct references to his days in the music industry’s outlaw movement that saw himself, George Jones, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, and his father, Hank Williams.

#3 – Family Tradition (featuring Charlie Daniels)

“Family Tradition” was a single that shared the same name as his twenty-ninth studio album, which was released in 1979. For Hank Williams Jr., it was a number-four hit on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and a number sixteen hit on Canada’s Country Singles chart. It also became an RIAA-certified gold seller. This musical statement of rebellion was another masterful delivery that made Hank Williams Jr. the iconic superstar he is today.

This served as his notice that he was now forging his own path in the music industry instead of staying on the same path his father took as a world-class entertainer. As proud as he was to be his father’s son, he also needed to become his own man, which he did. During the third and second verses of “Family Tradition,” the fiddling talent of Charlie Daniels livened up the song to add more power to its lyrical punch.

#2 – There’s a Tear in My Beer (featuring Hank Williams)

As father and son, Hank Williams and Hank Williams Jr. perform the duet, “There’s a Tear in My Beer.” The original recording belongs to Hank Williams, who performed this during one of his Nashville sessions between 1950 to 1951. However, he chose not to release it at the time. The demo of this recording was eventually given to Hank Williams Jr., who took it upon himself to have this re-recorded and released in 1989 as a duet with his father by using electronic merging technology.

In the original by Hank Williams, it is just himself and his acoustic guitar. In the remix, Hank Williams Jr. filled in the gaps, instrumentally and vocally. There was also a music video shoot for the song that combined old television footage of his father and present-day footage of himself to make it appear as if the two were performing together as a duet. Both the song and the video won over tremendous critical acclaim, as well as commercial success. On the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, “There’s a Tear in My Beer” peaked at number seven. It also won Video Of The Year by the Academy of Country Music, as well as the Country Music Association. It also won a Grammy Award in 1990 for Best Country Vocal Collaboration, crediting both father and son.

#1 – A Country Boy Can Survive

The RIAA-certified platinum hit, “A Country Boy Can Survive” deservedly earned top honors, and not simply as another hit song. Released early 1982, it climbed as high as number two on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and on the Canadian Country Singles chart. This is one of Hank William Jr.’s signature songs, despite the fact it did not reach number one like some of his other hits did.

In addition to its 1982 accomplishments, a rewritten, re-recorded, and retitled version of this song, now “America Will Survive” was the artist’s proclamation after the 9/11 attacks that took the twin towers down on September 11, 2001. This resulted in this version of the song peaking at number forty-five on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart. In 2007, the original version was released again to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of its original release, which saw “A Country Boy Can Survive” hit the same country music charts again at number forty-five. There was also a music video that was shot for the 2007 re-release.

The theme behind this single saw a reflection in the changes to the lifestyles of Americans that corresponded to rural concerns due to the impact of increasing urbanization, which is reassured by the power of self-reliance among country boys. It also brought up how true friendship mattered more than cultural backgrounds. Both in the original song and the patriotic remake, the victim in the musical story summed up how easy it is for human lives to be taken away when an individual or organization has no regard for it. It also, however, brought forth the importance that true survival of the fittest comes from personal character and not by allowing tragedies to get the best of our better judgment and who we really are as people.

Top 10 Hank Williams Jr. Songs article published on Classic RockHistory.com© 2022

Classicrockhistory.com claims ownership of all its original content and Intellectual property under United States Copyright laws and those of all other foreign countries. No one person, business or any organizations is allowed to re-publish any of our original content anywhere on the web or in print without our permission. All photos used are either public domain creative commons photos or licensed officially from Shutterstock under license with ClassicRockHistory.com. All photo credits have been placed at end of article.

10 bài hát hàng đầu của hank williams jr năm 2023

Hank Williams Jr. & nbsp; các bài hát bao gồm từ những bản ballad dịu dàng trong tĩnh mạch của cha anh ta đến Rowdy Party & nbsp; Anthems gần giống với âm nhạc của những người bạn nhạc rock phía nam của anh ta.

Sự nghiệp âm nhạc của Living Outlaw và Party khởi đầu kéo dài 60 năm đáng kinh ngạc.Những ngày đầu của anh làm nổi bật một ca sĩ nhạc đồng quê có năng khiếu với một tai cho các tác phẩm kinh điển.Williams đã phát minh lại bản thân vào giữa những năm 70, trở thành người sống ngoài vòng pháp luật, người nổi tiếng, sau một số bài hát tự nhận thức về hình ảnh công khai của mình.Con trai của Hank được sinh ra cho Boogie theo những cách mới táo bạo, thêm sự liên quan đến tên gia đình.

Mười bài hát sau đây của Hank Williams Jr. trong số các bài hát hay nhất của anh ấy.Hầu hết là những lựa chọn rõ ràng, nhưng chúng là một số bài hát nổi tiếng nhất của anh ấy vì một lý do chính đáng.

"Điều chỉnh thái độ" (1984)

Vài bài hát của bất kỳ nghệ sĩ đồng quê nào về cuộc sống khó khăn sẽ rất vui nhộn này là điều buồn cười hoặc đáng nhớ.Thêm vào đó, đó là cơ hội để nghe thấy sự đâm của Williams khi trở thành một người đàn ông Blues House.Nếu bạn nghe Bocephus cho một niềm vui nhỏ, hãy bắt đầu với Corker này.

"Man of Steel" (1983)

Williams Jr. hát về việc thiếu một hệ thống hỗ trợ gia đình thực sự trong cái nhìn di chuyển này phía sau bên ngoài thô lỗ của một người đàn ông.The Hardened Outlaw thừa nhận có Blues Lonesome về thời gian xa tuổi và tồn tại lâu hơn những người thân yêu và người yêu.Đó là một câu chuyện bi thảm đáng buồn đối với mọi người từ mọi tầng lớp.

"Whiskey Bent và Hell Bound" (1979)

Trong khi hầu hết các bài hát nổi tiếng của Williams ăn mừng tiệc tùng ở một mức độ nào đó, thì tác phẩm kinh điển này khảo sát chất thải sau khi thời kỳ tốt đẹp kết thúc.Các bài hát đồng quê về sự giao thoa của sự đau lòng và cuộc sống khó khăn là một tá, nhưng rất ít trong số những bộ điều chỉnh đó được đặt ra khá nhiều điều này & nbsp; một cách hiệu quả.

"Cherokee" (1981)

Câu trả lời của Williams cho cách kể chuyện dân gian của John Denver trong số các bài hát phải nghe rõ ràng hơn của anh ấy.Nó đứng giữa những màn trình diễn giọng hát lớn nhất của Bocephus và xứng đáng được công nhận nhiều hơn trong số những lần cắt sâu của quốc gia thập niên 70.Đó cũng là từ một album tuyệt vời nhất quán, một đêm đứng.

"Tất cả đã kết thúc nhưng tiếng khóc" (1968)

Rất lâu trước khi niềm đam mê của anh ta treo xung quanh các rocker miền Nam và sống như ma quỷ, Williams tự giới thiệu mình là một kẻ lừa đảo đồng quê truyền thống hơn.Sự cắt giảm sớm về vấn đề này, được xếp hạng trong số những ví dụ tốt nhất, ngoài sự dũng cảm "nếu miền nam chiến thắng", ngôi sao thế hệ thứ hai thực sự có thể hát.

"Cuộc trò chuyện" (1983)

Bản song ca của Williams với Waylon Jennings vẫn là lễ kỷ niệm tuyệt vời nhất của anh về cuộc sống gặp khó khăn của người cha nổi tiếng và âm nhạc được lưu trữ.Nó nắm bắt được nền tảng trung gian hợp lý giữa sự điên rồ và vị thánh có lẽ là huyền thoại âm nhạc đồng quê vĩ đại nhất của tất cả họ.Waylon Jennings remains his best celebration of his famous father's troubled life and storied music. It captures the rational middle ground between craziness and sainthood for perhaps the greatest country music legend of them all.

"Nếu thiên đường không giống Dixie" (1982)

Lễ kỷ niệm mang tính biểu tượng của Williams về nơi ở Alabama của anh ấy đã mang đến cuộc sống mới cho một số vùng nhiệt đới của đất nước cũ.Niềm tự hào, có thể là một quốc gia nhà hoặc Grand Ole Opry ở Nashville, Tennessee, trở lại với dòng chính với bài hát tình yêu này cho New South.Trong tất cả các bài hát hay nhất của Junior, việc tưởng tượng sự trở lại này là một dòng thời gian thay thế cho cha mình.Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee, returned to the mainstream with this love song for the New South. Of all of Junior's best songs, it's easiest to imagine this throwback as an alternate timeline hit for his father.

"Truyền thống gia đình" (1979)

Tuyên bố độc lập táo bạo của Ole Bocephus từ những kỳ vọng đè nặng lên con trai của một ca sĩ nhạc đồng quê nổi tiếng đã có một cuộc sống của riêng mình.Vài bài hát trong 40 năm qua đã truyền cảm hứng cho nhiều thanh tonk hay nhà huynh đệ hát đơn hơn so với những lát cắt không thể chối cãi này của nhạc đồng quê ngoài vòng pháp luật này.

"Tất cả những người bạn ồn ào của tôi sẽ đến tối nay" (1984) và bộ ba không chính thức của Great Hank Williams Jr.

Video âm nhạc, với mọi người tuyệt vời, người tuyệt vời từ Jim Varney đến George Jones, thậm chí còn thêm sự quyến rũ hơn cho một trong những bài hát vĩ đại nhất của Hank Jr.Cũng xem xét rằng bài hát đã biến thành một bộ ba.Tongue nói không kém phần "Tất cả những người bạn ồn ào của tôi (đã ổn định)" than thở ngày càng già đi và từ bỏ những thói quen cũnhững người xem.music video, featuring every awesome person from Jim Varney to George Jones, adds even more charm to one of Hank Jr.'s greatest anthems about raising hell. Consider also that the song turned into a trilogy. The equally tongue-in-cheek "All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down)" laments growing older and abandoning old habits, while the bombastic "All My Rowdy Friends Are Here For Monday Night" continues quenching those early week blues for Monday Night Football viewers.

Đọc thêm: & NBSP; Xem bản song ca đáng kinh ngạc của Willie Nelson và Merle Haggard cho bộ phim tài liệu PBS mớiSee Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard's Incredible Duet for New PBS Documentary

"Một cậu bé nông thôn có thể tồn tại" (1982)

Bài hát đáng nhớ nhất của Hank Jr. gợi lên không chỉ là những người hát đơn.Đó là một câu chuyện về những điều khó khăn như những chiếc đinh sống đi kèm với cuộc sống nông thôn.Bài hát đã có ý nghĩa mới vào năm 2002 với bản sửa đổi sau ngày 9/11 của Williams, "Mỹ sẽ tồn tại".

Những đề cập đáng kính: "Phụ nữ ngoài vòng pháp luật", "Bạn có chắc chắn đã thực hiện theo cách này""Outlaw Women," "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way," "Good Friends, Good Whiskey, Good Lovin'," "Long Gone Lonesome Blues," "127 Rose Avenue," "Wham, Bam, Sam," "Montana Cafe," "Texas Women," "This Ain't Dallas," "Daytona Nights," "Hotel Whiskey," "Country State of Mind," "Major Moves"

Xem: & nbsp; Bài hát mà mỗi người hâm mộ George Jones đều biết bởi trái tim

Bài hát nổi tiếng nhất của Hank Williams là gì?

Có lẽ bài hát nổi tiếng nhất của Hank, Truyền thống gia đình, được cho là thông báo nổi dậy của anh ấy - không chỉ về những cách hoang dã của anh ấy mà còn như bản sắc nghệ thuật của anh ấy về miền Nam Rock hợp nhất với Honky Tonk.Family Tradition,” is said to be his uprising announcement – not only about his wild ways but as well as his artistic identity of southern rock fused with honky tonk.

Hank Williams Jr có bao nhiêu lượt truy cập hàng đầu?

Bắt đầu với năm bản làm lại hàng đầu của cha Long Long Lonesome Blues vào năm 1964, Williams đã thực hiện bảng xếp hạng đĩa đơn của Billboard Country trên 100 lần, ghi được 10 lượt truy cập số một.10 Number One hits.

Hank Jr có bao nhiêu lượt truy cập số 1?

Bản ghi của tất cả các album và đĩa đơn được phát hành bởi Hank Williams Jr. bao gồm 56 album phòng thu và 25 album tổng hợp.Ông đã phát hành 109 đĩa đơn và 24 video âm nhạc.Mười một trong số những người độc thân của anh ấy đã đạt vị trí số một ở Hoa Kỳ hoặc Canada.Eleven of his singles have reached Number One in either the United States or Canada.

Hank Williams Junior đã làm bài hát gì?

Bài hát hay nhất của Hank Williams Jr..
Hồ sơ lề đường |1979. Truyền thống gia đình ..
Kiềm chế |1984. Tất cả những người bạn ồn ào của tôi sẽ đến tối nay.....
Kiềm chế |1981. Một cậu bé nông thôn có thể sống sót.....
Kiềm chế |1981. Tất cả những người bạn ồn ào của tôi (đã ổn định) ....
Kiềm chế |1979. Whiskey uốn cong và địa ngục ràng buộc.....
Kiềm chế |1987. Sinh ra cho Boogie.....
Kiềm chế |1981. Phụ nữ Texas.....
Kiềm chế |1979. ....