Search - Billy Joe Shaver :: Billy & The Kid

Billy & The Kid
Billy Joe Shaver
Billy & The Kid
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Billy Joe Shaver has endured a chain of traumas that would have sunk lesser beings. First, he lost his mother and wife. Then, in 2000, his son, guitarist, and principal collaborator Eddy died of a drug overdose. Billy Joe ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Billy Joe Shaver
Title: Billy & The Kid
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Compadre Records
Release Date: 8/24/2004
Genres: Country, Folk, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
Styles: Outlaw Country, Singer-Songwriters, Blues Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 616892595021

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Billy Joe Shaver has endured a chain of traumas that would have sunk lesser beings. First, he lost his mother and wife. Then, in 2000, his son, guitarist, and principal collaborator Eddy died of a drug overdose. Billy Joe himself endured heart surgery. Nowhere is his resiliency more apparent than on this adaptation of tapes from Eddy's never-completed 1996 solo album. Using music already recorded and retaining Eddy's own solo vocals, Billy Joe adds new songs and vocals to instrumental tracks. Awash in Eddy's visceral, eerie guitar, the new lyrics reflect love, mysticism, and spirituality. Billy Joe reflects on the recent past in "Eagle on the Ground," ruminates on celebrity in "Fame," and seemingly channels the Hereafter in the otherworldly "Window Rock." Eddy's edgy vocals dominate "Baptism of Fire" and the oddly prescient "If It Don't Kill You." His solo performance on "Necessary Evil," vocally and instrumentally, has the riveting feel of an early Muddy Waters 78. Painful as it is, this stands as a magnificent, even uplifting coda to the Shavers' tragically abbreviated musical collaboration. --Rich Kienzle

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CD Reviews

Yet Another Tribute to Eddy Shaver
D. K Mcgraw | Virginia, USA | 10/02/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Those already familiar with Billy Joe Shaver's music and the tragic tale of how he lost his mother, his wife, and his only son in the same year will not be surprised that Billy Joe has returned to pay tribute to his son and collaboarator, Eddy Shaver. As a tribute, this is a fascinating project. Much of the CD consists of guitar tracks recorded by Eddy before his death, retrieved from the vaults and fleshed out by the addition of Billy Joe's vocals and other instruments.



However, the result is somewhat unsatisfying. To be sure, it has its moments, but much of the material is weaker than we've come to expect from Shaver's recent projects.



The bottom line is, if you're not familiar with Shaver, I'd suggest starting with one of his truly brilliant projects, such as "Unshaven: Live at Smith's Olde Bar," the 1998 masterpiece "Victory," or 2001's "Earth Rolls On." On the other hand, if you have those CDs and love them, then it would be worth your while to follow Billy Joe with his latest release."
Raw!
B. Osborne | Georgetown, KY | 10/29/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This music is a baring of Billy Joe Shaver's soul. This whole CD is so powerfully raw, real and beautiful that words cannot express the emotions drawn from it. If you have the chance to buy it, do yourself a favor - hurry and get it! I love everything that Billy Joe has put out, but the music, the life story told on this album reached me in depths and places I didn't even know. This man constantly puts into words things that most of us only wish we knew how to express. With that, he allows us to feel and express emotions just waiting to be set free. Listen, cry, and know that life does continue. Then listen to Freedom's child for some good laughs, too! This album is a comforting hug to be enjoyed by all, with your good friend, Billy Joe!"
A good - but not great - tribute to a fallen son
Patrick Nichols | Austin, TX USA | 10/13/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Eddy Shaver's death from a drug overdose on New Year's Eve 2000 may not have been a shock to those familiar with "the kid." He'd battled various addictions for years and turned to heroin after the deaths of his mother and grandmother earlier that year. Eddy tried rehab, but it didn't take. The demons he'd been fleeing caught up with him at last.



Billy Joe Shaver has battled his share of demons throughout his 65 years. He's managed to beat most of them, but he couldn't stop Eddy's downward spiral. With Eddy gone, all Billy Joe can do is ensure he's not forgotten. Billy and the Kid is the father's final tribute to his fallen son.



The album starts movingly, with Billy Joe alone with his guitar on the heartbreaking "Fame": I look up in the stars and wonder where you are / I owe it all to you, your prayers have all come true?God bless you Eddy.



The other tracks are Eddy's compositions, pieced together by Billy Joe and producer Tony Colton. Lyrics were added in some places; instrumentals were layered in others. The results are as mixed as the processes used to assemble the album.



Eddy's talents are apparent throughout, from his soaring electric guitar riffs on "Baptism of Fire" to his gruff and bluesy vocals on "King of Fools." The whole package is showcased on the closing track, "Necessary Evil." Then again, his talent was a well-known commodity. Not only had he helped lead Shaver through several critically acclaimed albums, he had also played with Guy Clark, Dwight Yoakam, and other icons. And he was scheduled to head into the recording studio on a solo project just weeks after his death.



Yet his songwriting was still a work in progress. And it's clear that he hadn't yet achieved the lyrical mastery of his father. Billy Joe's devastating "Fame" sets a high standard that the other tracks just can't match. Its minimalist production and heartfelt intimacy stand in stark contrast to the electric patchwork that blankets much of the rest of the album.



Billy and the Kid is a good album. But with piecemeal and inconsistent production, it's not a great album. And it's not really a Billy Joe Shaver album. It is a eulogy for Eddy, and in that it succeeds in adding to the kid's curtailed legacy."