Hank Williams Jr
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Hank Williams Jr Biography
The offspring of famous musicians often have a hard time
creating a career for themselves, yet Hank Williams, Jr. is one of the
few to develop a career that is not only successful, but markedly
different from his legendary father. Originally, Hank Jr. simply copied
and played his father's music, but as he grew older, he began to carve
out his own niche and it was one that owed as much to country-rock as
it did to honky tonk. In the late '70s, he retooled his image to appeal
both to outlaw country fans and rowdy Southern rockers, and his
makeover worked, resulting in a string of Top Ten singles -- including
the number one hits Texas Women, Dixie on My Mind, All My Rowdy
Friends (Have Settled Down), Honky Tonkin', and Born to Boogie --
that ran into the late '80s. Hank Jr. never was above capitalizing on
his father's name, yet his tributes and name-dropping often seemed
affectionate, not crass. Also, Bocephus -- as his father nicknamed him
when he was a child -- was a passionate cheerleader for patriotic
American values; he even wrote a pro-Gulf War song during 1991. All of
these actions helped make him an American superstar during the '80s,
becoming one of the most recognizable popular culture figures of the
era. As new country took over the airwaves in the '90s, Williams slowly
disappeared from the charts and his concerts stopped selling as well as
they did ten years earlier, yet he retained a devoted core audience
throughout the decade.
The son of Hank and Audrey Williams, Hank Jr. was born in Shreveport,
LA, in 1949. Less than four years later, his father died, leaving
behind a huge legacy. When Hank Jr. was eight years old, Audrey decided
to push her son into the spotlight, positioning him as the rightful
heir to his father's legacy. Dressed in a white Nudie suit, he would
sing Hank Sr.'s biggest hits on package tours, and by the time he was
11, he had made his first appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. After a few
years of touring, Hank Jr.'s voice broke in 1963. As soon as his voice
changed, Audrey had her son sign a contract with MGM Records. Hank Jr.
recorded his father's Long Gone Lonesome Blues as his debut single,
and the record was a hit upon its early 1964 release, climbing to
number five. Later that year, he sang all the material for the Hank
Williams, Sr. bio pic Your Cheatin' Heart and starred in the film A
Time to Sing. Though he immediately had a hit, he wasn't able to follow
it up with another Top Ten hit until 1966, when his self-penned
Standing in the Shadows reached number five. By that time, he had
begun to grow tired of his reputation as a Hank Williams imitator and
was trying to create his own style, as Standing in the Shadows
proved. Following that single, he began to explore rock & roll
somewhat, occasionally performing under the name Rockin' Randall.
Despite his half-hearted rock & roll attempts, Williams continued
to concentrate on country music, turning out a string of hit singles,
including the number one All for the Love of Sunshine and a number of
inspirational cuts released under the name Luke the Drifter Jr., a
reference to his father's alter ego. Though his career was doing well,
Hank Jr. began falling into drug and alcohol abuse after he turned 18
years old. His personal life became progressively more complicated,
culminating in a suicide attempt in 1974. Following the attempt,
Williams moved to Alabama, where he not only got his life together, but
he changed his musical direction as well. Hooking up with Southern
rockers like Charlie Daniels, Marshall Tucker, and Toy Caldwell, he
recorded Hank Williams, Jr. & Friends, which fused hardcore country
with rock & roll. Though he wasn't scoring as many hits as he had
in the early '70s, his music was becoming more original and focused.
Just as his career was being revived, tragedy beset Williams. While he
was climbing a mountain in Montana in 1975, he fell 442 feet down the
side of the mountain. His injuries were serious -- his skull was split
and his face was crushed -- but he survived. Following extensive
reconstructive cosmetic surgery, he had to relearn how to speak and
sing. Williams' recovery period lasted a full two years. When he
re-emerged in 1977, he aligned himself the outlaw country movement, as
Waylon Jennings produced Hank Jr.'s comeback effort, The New South. It
took several years before Williams began to have hits again -- his
biggest hit in the late '70s was a cover of Bobby Fuller's I Fought
the Law, which reached number 15 -- but in the final six months of
1979, he had two Top Ten singles, Family Tradition and Whiskey Bent
and Hell Bound, which began a virtually uninterrupted streak of 29 Top
Ten hits that ran into 1988.
Throughout the '80s, Hank Jr. was one of the most popular, and
controversial, figures in country music. Following his image makeover,
he appealed primarily to young and rowdy crowds with his hell-raising
anthems and jingoistic ballads. Though he had established his own
distinctive style, he continued to name check and pay tribute to his
father, and these salutes became as much a part of his act as his
redneck rockers. Both the wild music and the party-ready atmosphere of
his concerts made Hank Jr. an immensely popular musician and helped him
crossover into the rock & roll audience. Williams' career really
began to take off in 1981, when he had three number one hits -- Texas
Women, Dixie on My Mind, and All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled
Down) -- and Rowdy began a streak of 15 gold or platinum albums that
ran until 1990. During that time, he won several awards, including
back-to-back Country Music Association Entertainer of the Year in 1987
and 1988.
By the end of the decade, Hank Jr.'s persona was becoming a little
tired, especially in light of the new breed of clean-cut new country
singers who had taken over Nashville. Williams could still have a hit
-- such as There's a Tear in My Beer, which was an electronic duet
between him and his father -- but by the end of 1990, he was no longer
hitting the Top Ten and by the middle of the decade he had trouble
reaching the Top 40. Despite his declining record sales, Hank Jr.
remained a popular concert draw into the latter half of the '90s,
ending an uncharacteristically long studio hiatus in 1999 with Stormy.
~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Written by Stephen Thomas Erlewine