Hank Williams Jr. and Friends


Hank Williams Jr. & Friends is the twenty-sixth studio album by Hank Williams Jr. It is Williams' breakthrough album, featuring a transition toward country rock and Williams' own unique style as opposed to imitating his father's. The album was issued by MGM Records as number M3G5009 and was later reissued by Polydor Records as number 831 575-4 Y-1. The album was also reissued on CD in 2000 by Mercury Records, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.

Production

According to Williams' autobiography, Living Proof, the album was recorded in Muscle Shoals, Alabama at Music Mill Studios between February and July 1975. The album insert says that this was recorded at Capricorn Studios in Macon, Georgia.

Critical reception

Village Voice critic Robert Christgau said, "the authority of Williams' voice and persona, plus the good sense of his songwriting and selection, focuses an Allman and a Marshall Tucker and a Charlie Daniels into what I'm sure will stand as the best Southern-style rock of the year." Years later, Allmusic editor Thom Jurek cited Hank Williams Jr. & Friends as "one of the best country-rock albums ever made and stands with the best of the outlaw recordings of the era."

Track listing

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the album's 2000 Mercury Records reissue liner notes.