About The Song

Of all the characters in country music’s 1970s “outlaw” movement, no one lived up to the role more than David Allan Coe. A bearded, tattooed ex-convict who rode with motorcycle gangs, Coe was an infuriatingly inconsistent artist. At his best, he captured the independence and frustrations of a working-class rebel with the raucous lyricism of a Waylon Jennings; at his worst, Coe became a cartoonish self-parody along the lines of Hank Williams Jr. Now, 11 years past his last hit single, Coe has gone the route of many aging performers — he has re-recorded his greatest hits for a concert album, “Live — If That Ain’t Country . . .”

Recorded last year at Billy Bob’s in Fort Worth, the disc contains four of Coe’s seven Top 30 country hits plus the two No. 1 hits he wrote for other singers, Johnny Paycheck’s “Take This Job and Shove It” and Tanya Tucker’s “Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone).” These versions are no improvement on the originals. On the other hand, the album includes four previously unissued Coe compositions, including two modestly interesting meditations on country-music history, “Willie, Waylon and Me” and “The Ghost of Hank Williams,” and a quite impressive Southern-rock number, “Talkin’ to the Blues.” Warren Haynes, who played slide guitar for Coe before joining the Allman Brothers Band, rejoins his old boss on this recording date and contributes a catchy song, “Soul Shine,” as well as some tasty blues licks. Appearing Monday at Blackie’s Country in Springfield. To hear a free Sound Bite from David Allan Coe, call Post-Haste at 202/334-9000 and press 8102. (Prince William residents, call 690-4110.) CAPTION: David Allan Coe’s “Live” album includes four previously unreleased songs.

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Lyrics

The old man was covered with tattoos and scars
He got some in prison and others in bars
The rest he got working on old junk cars
In the daytime
They looked like tombstones in our yard
And I never seen him when he wasn’t tired and mean
He sold used parts to make ends meet
Covered with grease from his head to his feet
Cussing the sweat and the Texas heat
And mosquitos
And the neighbors said we lived like hicks
But they brung their cars for pa to fix anyhow
He was veteran-proud, tried and true
He’d fought ’till his heart was black and blue
Didn’t know how he’d made it through the hard times
He bought our house on the G.I. bill
But it wasn’t worth all he had to kill to get it
He drank Pearl in a can and Jack Daniels black
Chewed tobacco from a mail pouch sack
Had an old dog that was trained to attack
Sometimes
He’d get drunk and mean as a rattlesnake
There wasn’t too much
That he would take from a stranger
There were thirteen kids and a bunch of dogs
A house full of chickens and a yard full of hogs
I spent the summertime cutting up logs for the winter
Tryin’ like the devil to find the lord
Workin’ like a nigger for my room and board
Coal-burnin’ stove, no natural gas
If that ain’t country, I’ll kiss your ass
If that ain’t country
It’ll hair lip the pope
If that ain’t country
It’s a damn good joke
I’ve seen the Grand Ole Opry
And I’ve met Johnny Cash
If that ain’t country
I’ll kiss your ass
Mama sells eggs at a grocery store
My oldest sister is a first-rate whore
Dad says she can’t come home anymore
He means it
Ma just sits and keeps her silence
Sister, she left ’cause dad got violent
And he knows it
Mama she’s old, far beyond her time
From chopping tobacco and I’ve seen her cryin’
When blood started flowin’ from her calloused hand
And it hurt me
She’d just keep working, tryin’ to help the old man
To the end of one row and back again like always
She’s been through hell since Junior went to jail
When the lights go out she ain’t never failed
To get down on her knees and pray
Because she loves him
Told all the neighbors he was off in the war
Fighting for freedom
He’s good to the core and she’s proud
Now our place was a graveyard for automobiles
At the end of the porch there was four stacks of wheels
And tires for sale for a dollar or two
Cash
There was fifty holes in an old tin roof
Me and my family we was living proof
The people who forgot about poor white trash
And if that ain’t country, I’ll kiss your ass
If that ain’t country
It’ll hair lip the pope
If that ain’t country
It’s a damn good joke
I’ve seen the Grand Ole Opry
And I’ve met Johnny Cash
If that ain’t country
I’ll kiss your ass
I’m thinking tonight of my blue eyes
Concerning the great speckled bird
I didn’t know god made honky-tonk angels
And went back to the wild side of life

By yenhu

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