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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Waylon is the best music has to offer!, March 12, 2005
This review is from: Are You Ready for the Country (Audio CD)
ARE YOU READY FOR THE COUNTRY is advertised at Waylon's "mature" record, a transition from the outlaw status to the soft-hearted, world-weary singer. Yet, there's still enough grit on this album to show that Waylon never lost his sandpaper edge, that he could easily combine he reknowned attitude with a heavy heart.

Such songs as the Neil Young penned title track and the cover of Marshal Tucker Band's "Can't You See" are heavy on the country/rock, while "Them Old Love Songs" is a slow country ballad that'll take you back to the good ol' days. "Old Friend" is a tribute to Waylon's late friend "Buddy Holly," while "Precious Memories" is one of the few gospel tunes Waylon ever recorded (despite the fact his voice was made to sing the genre).

ARE YOU READY FOR THE COUNTRY has no downside to it. It is a collection of truly great songs sung by one of the best voices country music ever had to offer. Waylon Jennings left a huge legacy behind him, and this album is an example of Waylon at the peak of his talents.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brings back memories, November 6, 2003
By 
William D. Ferrell (Poca, WV United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It was back in the late 1970's and I was a teenager who loved to listen to Waylon. These songs are classic "outlaw" waylon at it's best. Back in the mid 1970's Waylon released "Are You Ready For The Country" continuing on in the tradition of "Ramblin' Man", "This Time", "Honky Tonk Heroes" and the other albums he had been doing since breaking free from the "Nashville" production on the earlier sessions (they were good, but sounded like all the other Country artists on RCA at the time)... Waylon however wanted to do it his way and nowhere is it more evident than on "Are You Ready For The Country".
This set begins with the rocking title cut then he eases down with "So Good Woman" which sounds like it must have been directed straight at Jessi "You know I've run around all my life/You could've done better cause you've been a good wife"
"Them Old Love Songs" is the third track and talks about someones wish to find a love "like people do in them old love songs"... I could go on and on, but one of my favorites on here is "MacArthurs Park". Waylon had done a version with a female vocalist back in the last 1970's but the Nashville people put strings, horns and flutes in it. This time Waylon did it his way, singing all the vocals and using his band with the trademark sound of Ralph Mooney's steel guitar taking front and center. There is also the tribute to Buddy Holly here called "Old Friend" among others that are just plain good music.
This CD continues with the lp "What Goes Around" which starts off with "Ain't Living Long Like This", goes into the title cut and the first four songs are toe tappers, one of the best of which is "I've Got The Train Settin' Waitin", but then it gets weird with "It's The World's Gone Crazy" ("the dancer's are dancin' alone/the sidemen all want to be frontmen and the front men all want to go home... just an example of the lyrics on that weird little tune)... Side two of that album showed a more laid back smoothe Waylon starting with "Ivory Tower" then the story song "Out Among The Stars" about a down and out young man who "can't find a job but has found a gun" and holds up a liquor store, then the classic "Come With Me"... there are more tunes here but I've hit the hilites on two of my favorite Waylon lps of all time and they've put them together on this one CD... What more could you ask for?
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Two distinctly different faces of a legend, June 16, 2003
By 
F. Fowler (Oviedo, FL USA) - See all my reviews
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The pairing of these two pieces of Waylon's work seems rather odd. However, both are very welcome to be back in my Waylon collection after several years of being absent. "Are You Ready For The Country" is an example of Waylon's ability to capture that renegade spirit during the height of his commercial success. All of these songs are pure Waylon at his best, but his rendition of Toy Caldwell's "Can't You See" is, in this reviewer's opinion, the epitome of what the "Outlaw Movement" of the seventies was all about. Listening to "What Goes Around" takes us into a different era of Waylon's fame and legend. You can tell that his taste in material has changed, as has his delivery. Two stand out tracks on this album are "If You See Her" and "Old Love, New Eyes". Waylon was always defying anybody to label his music or pidgeonhole him as an artist. The differences in these two albums
is a testament to what made him one of the greatest recording artist in the history of country music. He could continuosly grow and expand his horizons, all the while making his fans want to ride along and listen. This collection brought back a lot of great memories for me. Thank's Amazon for offering it. And thank you Waylon, for all those years of rebellious inspiration.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars (4.5 stars) WAYLON #*@%$*# JENNINGS. THAT'S WHO ! (an outlaw classic), December 28, 2007
By 
ol' nuff n' den sum (the Virginia coast, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Are You Ready for the Country (Audio CD)
Waylon Jennings' Are You Ready for the Country (1976) is mostly an album of thoughtful and sentimental outlaw reflections, but it includes some songs that are on the rowdy side, too. Waylon looks back through his past in Old Friend, a song he wrote about Buddy Holly. Then he celebrates his wife in So Good Woman, and contemplates faith in the spiritual Precious Memories. Accepting the inevitable, he sings the lament of an aging outlaw coming to terms with the reality of a failed May/December romance in A Couple More Years.

I've walked a couple more roads than you baby, that's all
I'm tired of running and you're only learning to crawl
And you're going somewhere, but I've been to somewhere
And found it was nowhere at all
And I've picked up a couple of more years on you baby, that's all.

Jennings does a great version of Jimmy Webb's MacArthur Park (Revisited). Waylon had said he always thought of the sentimental classic as a country song.

I recall the yellow cotton dress
Foaming like a wave
On the ground around your knees
The birds, like tender babies in your hands
And old men playing checkers by the trees.

Are You Ready For The Country isn't all sentimental reflections and comfortable country songs, either. This guy can rock, too. Waylon was a member of Buddy Holly's touring band, and was giving 'em hell way back when rock n' roll was still in it's infancy. The title song was written by Neil Young, and this version sounds even better than Neil's. That's saying a lot coming from me, as Harvest is one of my all-time favorite albums. Waylon nails The Marshall Tucker Band's Can't You See, too, with a spirited vocal performance and highly charged backup from his band. It was during this mid-to-late 1970s period that Waylon Jennings recorded his best work (Dreaming My Dreams, Honky Tonk Heroes, Waylon Live, and others), and I would consider this album an essential part of that era.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My single all-time favorite Waylon Jennings album, March 30, 2007
By 
Mike (San Jose, CA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Are You Ready for the Country (Audio CD)
I was a fan of Waylon and his music, so I have the hits and concerts on CD. But this album really expresses his universal appeal. Like Johnny Cash, Waylon was a rock & roller just as much as he was a "country singer." For starters, Marshall Tucker's "Can't You See" is classic because he doesn't tack on an obligatory guitar solo. Who could top Toy Caldwell, anyway? This version is about the vocals, about Waylon's performance, about "what that woman is doing to him." "Precious Memories"...once again cross-referencing the many powerful spirituals recorded by his fellow Highwayman Johnny Cash...is a career-best performance. The title track...Neil Young's "Harvest" track "Are You Ready For The Country" is another Cash touchstone (any true Neil Young fan remembers his appearance on the genre-busting Johnny Cash TV show). Words can't express how much I miss Waylon Jennings. Some of his albums were hit and miss. Not this one. Get it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Two great seventies albums, May 26, 2005
The pairing of these two albums appears a little odd but many of Waylon's seventies albums had already been released on CD. Still, both albums are well worth hearing and Waylon's fans everywhere will welcome this twofer.

The first album here (Are you ready for the country) was recorded when Waylon was at the peak of the outlaw phase of his career. Apart from the brilliant title track, it features many other outstanding songs including Can't you see (written by Toy Caldwell of the Marshall Tucker Band), MacArthur Park (an incredible version of this classic song), Couple more years (also recorded by Dr Hook at around the same time), Old friend (about Buddy Holly) and Precious memories (the gospel classic).

The second album (What goes around) was recorded just three years later but by that time Waylon's sound had changed somewhat. The style may be different but the music is still brilliant. On this album, the first five tracks are generally up-tempo while the second five are generally slower, more reflective. The album opens with I ain't living long like this (a Rodney Crowell song also recorded by Emmylou) but my favorites here are It's the world's gone crazy (the lyrics may seem crazy at first but the song makes sense if you listen to it a few times), Ivory tower and Come with me.

Most of Waylon's seventies albums are now available on CD. If you are a Waylon fan, make sure that you buy them before they go out of print. This twofer may not be the highest priority among those available but it is certainly deserving of a place in any collection of Waylon's music.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hank certainly didn't do it this way..., January 27, 2007
By 
Reid Cain "rcain32" (San Luis Obispo, CA) - See all my reviews
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These are what I consider the last few good records Waylon cut before the string of bad records. In his auto biography he talks about cutting these records high as a kite on Cocaine.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Waylon's MacArthur Park, January 17, 2011
By 
LakeKids (Paso Robles,CA USA) - See all my reviews
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I confess...the real reason I purchased this CD was for Waylon's version of MacArthur Park, one of the most melancholy covers I've ever heard. Saying that, I was also pleased with the true country of the rest of the album. This will never replace the live Waylon albums but you get some of his really good songs...Are You Ready For The Country, Can't You See, A Couple More Years, etc. The live albums, especially with Willie, will always have top spot in my collection, however, MacArthur Park will assure this gets played often. And NO, it doesn't always make sense, but go to lyrics.com and print out the lyrics to sing along with the song and if you have a tender place in your heart, this will move you, almost to tears.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Vintage country, May 22, 2010
By 
Divascribe (San Antonio, TX) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
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This review is from: Are You Ready for the Country (Audio CD)
Waylon Jennings does it again with a classic album of good country music. The voice is there, and the emotion that goes with it. I bought the album after hearing his version of "Can't You See" on the radio. That's a great track, but there isn't a bad one on this album. Waylon's voice sounds like gigs in smoky bars, knocking back a few beers between sets. It also reminds me of good times at concerts in the '70s. Waylon may be gone, but his music lives on!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars CD review, September 20, 2010
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Seller is professional and shipped item in a timely fashion.
The CD sounds great. I would buy from this buyer again.
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Are You Ready for the Country
Are You Ready for the Country by Waylon Jennings (Audio CD - 2004)
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