
Lubbock (On Everything) is a Country album by Terry Allen, originally released in 1978. On Gatefold: 9 pressings tracked.
Sound DNA
- Country
- Americana & Roots
- raw
- wistful
- southern
About
A Texas country classic by an internationally recognized conceptual artist, <i>Lubbock (On Everything)</i> has shaped much of what’s come since the ambitious double album was released in 1979—both in and out of the Panhandle college town it’s dedicated to. Terry Allen is a Lubbock native, but he had already spent over a decade in California, studying art and pursuing anything but odes to his hometown. “I had a pretty sarcastic and negative attitude about Lubbock and Texas—on the surface, anyway,” as he put it later. “It wasn’t until I listened back to the songs I’d written that it dawned on me. The songs weren’t angry. They had a real care, <i>love</i> for this country and these people.” He wrote those songs ahead of his return to town, when he joined forces with fellow local and soon-to-be frequent collaborator Lloyd Maines—a Texas country legend and father of Natalie—to craft the expansive and intimate vision of Texas life. For all Allen’s erudition and artsy accolades, the album is straight country: catchy melodies, winking portraits of locals, and more than a little grit. There’s fiddle and pedal steel and jangling barroom piano, and Allen’s exaggerated twang riding easily atop it all (how many other country singers have leaned into their accents to similar ends but for different reasons?). The album’s opener, dedicated to another Texas boy made good in the art world, is its best-known song. “Amarillo Highway (For Dave Hickey)” was covered most famously by Robert Earl Keen, but never really topped in its original, over-the-top, pan-handlin’, man-handlin’ form. A dose of McMurtryian West Texan storytelling in rowdy song form, the track is rightfully canonical—as is the entire album, country with plenty of musical meat on the bone, and a shimmering, relentless originality. Immerse yourself in Terry Allen’s <i>Lubbock</i>, and emerge with a richer picture of every place you never thought much about.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1Amarillo Highway (For Dave Hickey)4:00
- 2High Plains Jamboree3:33
- 3The Great Joe Bob (A Regional Tragedy)4:42
- 4The Wolfman of Del Rio5:38
- 5Lubbock Woman3:36
- 6The Girl Who Danced Oklahoma4:18
- 7Truckload of Art5:24
- 8The Collector (And the Art Mob)2:02
- 9Oui (A French Song)2:21
- 10Rendezvous USA2:45
- 11Cocktails for Three2:57
- 12The Beautiful Waitress5:37
- 13High Horse Momma3:03
- 14Blue Asian Reds (For Roadrunner)3:47
- 15New Delhi Freight Train7:28
- 16FFA1:11
- 17Flatland Farmer4:18
- 18My Amigo3:20
- 19The Pink and Black Song4:00
- 20The Thirty Years War Waltz (For Jo Harvey)6:32
- 21I Just Left Myself2:09
Credits
Performers
- Ponty BoneACCORDION
- Lloyd MainesACOUSTIC GUITAR ELECTRIC GUITAR PEDAL STEEL GUITAR
- Kenny MainesBASS HARMONY VOCALS
- Karen BlalackCELLO
- Curtis McBrideDRUMS
- Richard BowdenFIDDLE
- Joe ElyHARMONICA
- Alan ShinnPERCUSSION MARIMBA
- Terry AllenPIANO VOCALS
- Don CaldwellSAXOPHONE STRINGS ARRANGED BY
- Mark AnthonyTROMBONE
- Tommie AndersonTRUMPET
- Russ StandeferTUBA
- Leslie BlackburnVIOLA
- Ruth Ann TruncaleVIOLIN
- Susan AllenVIOLIN
- Luis MartinezGUITAR
- Jesse TaylorGUITAR
Rare pressing on Gatefold · 9 pressings tracked on Gatefold
