1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die: 49. Buck Owens and His Buckaroos – I've Got A Tiger By The Tail (1965)
You know with a name like that we’re going to be getting some Country and Western, and indeed we do, with a definite Honky-Tonk feel starting with the title track, as well as some more familiar ballads complete with slide guitar and fiddle with a dash of rockabilly (especially the infectious Trouble and Me with its entertaining lyrics). I thought Owens was showing an impressive range on the classic hangman ballad Streets of Laredo, but it turns out this was bass player Doyle Holly, who can go really low a la Jim Reeves when the songs calls for it.
Apparently this album is a good example of the “Bakersfield Sound”, so now I know that too. I was kind of expecting that the Buckaroos contained a country star that I’d heard of in their own right (the sound is very evocative of Waylon Jennings), but unlike some of the other performers in this list, Owens doesn’t seem to have been a hub for talent. However, the album is a fun bit of country, just enough to tickle my guilty pleasure for Americana without sliding too far into the more maudlin kind of country.
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