Click to listen to Sound Samples |
Song Title | |||
1. | Penitentiary Blues | ||
2. | Cell #33 | ||
3. | Monkey David Wine | ||
4. | Walkin' Bum | ||
5. | One Way Ticket To Nowhere | ||
6. | Funeral Parlor Blues | ||
7. | Death Row | ||
8. | Oh Warden | ||
9. | Age 21 | ||
10. | Litlte David | ||
11. | Conjer Man |
Notes
Personnel: David Allan Coe (vocals); Teddy Paige (guitar, harmonica); Mac Gayden, Charlie McCoy (guitar, bass guitar); Ed Kollis (harmonica); David Briggs (piano); Billy Linneman, William C. Sanders (bass guitar); Kenneth Buttrey, Karl Himmel (drums).
Recording information: Singleton Sound Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
David Allan Coe is widely known as one of the poster boys for 1970s Outlaw Country, and on PENITENTIARY BLUES, his debut album, Coe's patented bad-boy image was already fully formed. Musically, however, he was entrenched firmly in an urban blues mode, as opposed to the honky-tonk infused sound of his best-known albums. Nevertheless, his lyrics espouse his trademark themes of prison, trouble, and hard living.
Recording information: Singleton Sound Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
David Allan Coe is widely known as one of the poster boys for 1970s Outlaw Country, and on PENITENTIARY BLUES, his debut album, Coe's patented bad-boy image was already fully formed. Musically, however, he was entrenched firmly in an urban blues mode, as opposed to the honky-tonk infused sound of his best-known albums. Nevertheless, his lyrics espouse his trademark themes of prison, trouble, and hard living.
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