List of tributes to Hank Williams


Albums
Hank Williams tribute albums have been released by a diverse range of artists, including Ray Price, Connie Stevens, George Hamilton IV, Floyd Cramer, George Jones, Glen Campbell, Charley Pride, Freddy Fender, Moe Bandy, Ronnie Hawkins, Charlie Rich, Del Shannon, Sammy Kershaw, Trio Los Panchos, Roy Orbison, Jack Scott, Girls Guns and Glory and Hank Locklin. Some additional examples of albums recorded in Williams' honor include:
The tribute album Timeless was released in 2001, featuring cover versions of Hank Williams songs by Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Keith Richards, Tom Petty, Hank Williams III and others. Cash's version of "I Dreamed About Mama Last Night", which appears on the album, was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance. Timeless" was also awarded the Grammy for Best Country Album.
Dion DiMucci, famous for his doo-wop songs "The Wanderer" and "Runaround Sue", named Hank Williams as his most influential artist and covered "Honky Tonk Blues" on his Grammy-nominated album "Bronx in Blue" in 2007.
Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis teamed up on the 1971 album
Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis Sing Hank Williams, which featured covers of 12 of Williams's greatest hits.
British alternative band recorded a full album of Williams cover versions in 1994 entitled
Hanky Panky. This was intended to be the first in a series of tribute albums by covering the work of influential songwriters and musicians, but no further albums were recorded or released.
Irish singer/songwriter Bap Kennedy covered 11 songs by Hank Williams on his 1999 album
Hillbilly Shakespeare. His follow-up album Lonely Street'', released in 2000, contains numerous references to Hank Williams, and on the sleeve notes, Kennedy acknowledges that the songs were inspired by Williams, as well as Elvis Presley.

Songs

In 1981 Drifting Cowboys steel guitarist Don Helms teamed up with Hank Williams, Jr. to record "The Ballad of Hank Williams". The track is a spoof or novelty song about Hank Sr.'s early years in the music business and his spending excesses. It was sung to the tune of "The Battle of New Orleans," popularized by Johnny Horton. Hank Jr. begins by saying, "Don, tell us how it really was when you was working with Daddy." Helms then goes into a combination of spoken word and song with Williams to describe how Hank, Sr. would "spend a thousand dollars on a hundred dollar show," among other humorous peculiarities. The chorus line "So he fired my ass and he fired Jerry Rivers and he fired everybody just as hard as he could go. He fired Old Cedric and he fired Sammy Pruett. And he fired some people that he didn't even know" is a comical reference to Hank Williams's overreaction to given circumstances. In 1991 country artist Alan Jackson released "Midnight in Montgomery", a song whose lyrics portray meeting Hank Williams's spirit at Williams's gravesite while on his way to a New Year's Eve show. Country artist Marty Stuart also paid homage to Williams with a tribute track entitled "Me and Hank and Jumping Jack Flash". The lyrics tell a story similar to the "Midnight in Montgomery" theme but about an up-and-coming country music singer getting advice from Williams's spirit. In 1983 country music artist David Allan Coe released "The Ride," a song that told a story of a young man with his guitar hitchhiking through Montgomery and being picked up by the ghost of Hank Williams in his Cadillac and driven to the edge of Nashville: "... You don't have to call me mister, mister, the whole world called me Hank."
Songs that pay tribute to Williams include:
Other songs include "Hank, It Will Never Be the Same Without You", "Hank Williams Meets Jimmie Rodgers", "Tribute to Hank Williams", "Hank and Lefty Raised My Country Soul", "Hank Williams Will Live Forever", "The Ghost of Hank Williams," "In Memory of Hank Williams", "Thanks Hank", "Hank's Home Town", "Good Old Boys Like Me", "Why Ain't I Half as Good as Old Hank ?", "The Last Letter", and Charley Pride's album There's a Little Bit of Hank in Me..
"I've Done Everything Hank Did But Die" was written and performed by Keith Whitley. Never officially released, it was presumably recorded sometime after Whitley had surpassed the age of 29, Hank's age when he died. Whitley, who like his idol battled alcoholism, died of acute alcohol poisoning at the age of 33.
On the album Show Me Your Tears, Frank Black's song "Everything Is New" recounts the tragedy of both Williams' and Johnny Horton's deaths. The relevant lyrics are "Hiram said to John have you met my wife? Someday she'll be yours when I lose my life. He lost it after playing the old Skyline. Seven years later, after that same gig, John took the wheel, but when he got to the bridge Billy Jean was alone for the second time." Billy Jean of course refers to Billie Jean Jones who married both Hiram "Hank" Williams and, later, John "Johnny" Horton. Both men died in vehicles, and both played their last concerts at Austin, Texas's "the old Skyline" Club.

Films

is the first biographical film about Hank Williams, directed by Gene Nelson in 1964. It starred George Hamilton as Hank and Susan Oliver as Audrey Williams.
David Acomba directed in 1980, starring Sneezy Waters.
The Canadian film Hank Williams First Nation was directed by Aaron James Sorensen and released in 2004. This country star's location was Nashville, Tennessee rather than Montgomery, Alabama.
The Last Ride is a 2011 film depicting the last four days of William's life. Directed by Harry Thomason, the film stars Henry Thomas as Hank and Jesse James as Silas the young driver.
Film director Paul Schrader has written an unproduced script entitled Eight Scenes From the Life of Hank Williams.
It was announced in 2014 that British actor Tom Hiddleston would star in a Marc Abraham biography of Williams entitled I Saw the Light. Hiddleston sang Williams' country classic "Move It On Over" at the Wheatland Music Festival. Williams' grandson, singer Hank Williams III, has publicly expressed his displeasure with the film, saying it's "deeply flawed."

Other tributes

The Off-Broadway musical , co- authored by Randal Myler and Mark Harelik, earned an Obie award for star Jason Petty and numerous other New York City theatre award nominations for producer David Fishelson and director Randal Myler in 2003, including "Best Musical" and "Best Off-Broadway Musical" from the Lortel and Outer Critics Circle organizations. In addition, the show earned positive reviews from the national press: Rolling Stone critic and editor Anthony DeCurtis wrote, “I was genuinely surprised, even stunned by Hank Williams: Lost Highway.... a rare achievement in any musical theater that I've ever seen;” and Jeremy McCarter of New York magazine called the production "electrifying", "the most successful jukebox musical I've seen," and "New York's most exciting new musical since Urinetown." The original cast recording of the show was released in 2003.
The play Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave is a fictional account of the concert he was traveling to when he died. Written by Maynard Collins, the play toured across Canada from 1977-1990, and starred Sneezy Waters. A film, made for Canadian TV, first aired on December 31, 1980.
On Dolly Parton's 2008 album, Backwoods Barbie, the song "The Lonesomes" mentions Hank Williams: "Just like that old song by Hank Williams, I am so lonesome I could cry." On her 2014 album Blue Smoke, the song "Home" mentions Williams when saying "I'm so lonesome I could cry just like old Hank."
The chorus of Waylon Jennings' hit "Luckenbach, Texas " refers to "...Hank Williams pain songs and Newbury's train songs, and blue eyes cryin' in the rain."
Images of a Country Drifter, a tribute to Williams in song and narration, has been performed by singer-songwriter David Church throughout the United States and Canada.
Canadian songwriter Leonard Cohen refers to Hank Williams in Tower of Song:
American indie rock band Bright Eyes references Williams' death in "Classic Cars":
The Residents' album contains one side of Hank Williams songs.

Music videos