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Billy Joe Shaver: ''Everybody's Brother''

Billy Joe Shaver: ''Everybody's Brother''

Playlist

Get Thee Behind Me Satan (4:01) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 6,752
When I Get My Wings (4:25) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 3,820
Most Precious (4:16) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 2,683
Rolling Stone (3:09) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 2,148
Winning Again (2:48) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,497
No Earthly Good (2:55) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,274
The Tough Get Going (4:09) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,269
You'll Always Be My Best Friend (2:53) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,446
Jesus Is The Only One That Loves Us (3:33) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,195
Everybody's Brother (7:04) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 2,217
You Just Can't Beat Jesus Christ (3:42) Date added: 10/11/07 | Total listens: 1,428

User reviews for Billy Joe Shaver: ''Everybody's Brother''

Average rating3h starsOut of 30 votes

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Editor's review

Shaver's hard knocks have always felt a little harder than everyone else's, and this remains true on his tough-luck new LP. Cut with John Carter Cash, "Brother" mixes Man-in-Black pain with honky-tonk style. As with so much good country, its bad times don't depress because they feel inevitable.

Watch our Crossfade TV review!

Biography

Billy Joe Shaver's been thinking about making a spiritual album for a long time, but like everything in his life, he approaches spirituality on his own terms. "Somebody called this album 'honky tonk Gospel,'" Shaver says chuckling. "I kinda like that."

The last few years have been rough on Shaver. His mother, wife and son Eddy all died within a year's time. Then he suffered a massive heart attack, but he recovered and was soon back on the road, his characteristic optimism intact. "When I started working on this album, I pulled out a lot of old songs and started changing 'em. Most of 'em are heavy ? there's some strong medicine here."

Everybody's Brother (in stores September 25th on Compadre Records/Music World Entertainment) is a celebration of life as much as it is a meditation on mortality. "There were times I thought I'd be happy to go," Shaver confesses, "but you don't go when you want to. You go when God wants you. I've always been lucky and I'm lucky to still be here. God gave me this gift [of songwriting] and I'll keep polishing it as long as I can."

Producer John Carter Cash, son of Shaver's pal Johnny Cash, added his own studio polish to the project, while capturing all the rowdy energy of Shaver's live performances. "I'd play the song for the band and they'd chart it. Then we cut it. We did five songs a day, most of 'em on the first take. The studio band included Jamie Hartford on electric and acoustic guitars, Dave Roe, Johnny Cash's long time bass player on upright and electric bass; Laura Cash, John Carter's wife on fiddle; Pat McLaughlin on mandolin, acoustic guitar, backing vocals; Randy Scruggs on acoustic guitar; Paco Shipp on harmonica; Tony Harrel on piano, harmonium, organ and accordion and Rick Lonow, drums and percussion. Special guests include John Anderson, Tanya Tucker, Marty Stuart, Kris Kristofferson, and Native American singer/songwriter Bill Miller. Everybody's Brother is Shaver's sixth release on Compadre Records (other albums include Freedom's Child, The Real Deal, and Billy and the Kid).

The songs on Everybody's Brother deal with love, loss, mortality and the hereafter, all viewed from Shaver's unique perspective. "Rolling Stone" opens the album with a bang. The tune addresses Shaver's recent Las Vegas Wedding when he cracked his vertebrae during a post-reception wrestling match with a friend. "Get Thee Behind Me Satan" includes John Anderson who trades off on lead vocals and adds his harmonies to the chorus on the bluesy rocker. It's a confession and a celebration of salvation, with Shaver delivering a performance with a jubilant, unrestrained power. Next up is "No Earthly Good," a duet with Kris Kristofferson of a Johnny Cash song from his Personal File album. The song is a gentle put down of spiritual people who refuse to take responsibility for the sad state of the world. "I wrote for Cash's publishing house for a few years and he gave me that title, but I was so dumb, I didn't jump on it," Shaver recalls. "You Just Can't Beat Jesus Christ" rides a stomping Waylon Jennings rhythm. It was cut with Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson's nephew, Freddy Fletcher, on drums, Rougie Ray, who lays down some amazing harmonica licks, and a 15-year-old Eddy playing smoking guitar, at Jack Clement's studio in the 70s. "It's another first take. Jack's famous for working fast. It was all done live and everything leaks, so you can't overdub. John Carter remixed it carefully and it sounds like a million bucks." Four love songs Shaver wrote for his wife Brenda over the years give the album its heart. "To Be Loved By A Woman," "The Greatest Man Alive," "I'll Always Be Your Best Friend" and "Most Precious." "I've been saving some of these songs for a long time," Shaver says. "I went through them with John Carter and these seemed to hold together. They're all about loving someone so much you want the best for them. 'Most Precious' is the name of a perfume my wife used to wear. It was so light you could hardly tell she had it on, but I could tell. She was most precious to me."

The most remarkable song on the album is the title track, a nine minute epic. Bill Miller adds pow wow drums, Native American cedar flute and Native vocals to the track for a soundscape that pays tribute to America's oldest music. "It was my idea to mix cowboy and Indian music," Shaver says. "I'm Blackfoot on my father's side, and Bill's a full blood Mohican. He did a wonderful job." The song is a folk hymn praising the Lord and offering a prayer for our deliverance from the evils of war, poverty and hypocrisy. "The chorus is Lakota," Shaver explains. "'Hey Hanta Yo' means 'move aside' ? get out of the way if you ain't gonna help. It was a hard song to write and the night before we recorded it, I was up all night writing. I believe I had a visitation from Johnny Cash. I believe some of the verses are from him. I ought to give him co-writing credit." Shaver also reprises "When I Get My Wings," the title track from his Capricorn album of 1976. John Carter Cash rearranged it for bluegrass mandolin and sanctified Hammond B3. "It's a love song to the hereafter," Shaver says. "John Carter had a whole different take on it and it's doggone fine."

Shaver will be back on the road to support Everybody's Brother, but he's already looking forward to his next album and promoting his autobiography Honky Tonk Hero (University of Texas Press, 2005) and The Wendell Baker Story, his latest acting effort. "Luke Wilson wrote and directed The Wendell Baker Story. I play a retired Reverend in a nursing home with Harry Dean Stanton and Kris Kristofferson. I've been playing Reverends in a lot of stuff, and I don't know why." It could be Shaver's brutal honesty and openhearted generosity of spirit, which shines through on screen or off. The soulful quality of Everybody's Brother shouldn't surprise anyone who knows Shaver, a man who's able to touch the hearts of listeners and win new fans and friends wherever he goes.

Billy Joe Shaver's life is the stuff of legend, stranger than any fiction. Abandoned by his parents shortly after he was born in 1939, he was raised by his grandmother in Corsicana, Texas. A Hank Williams show he saw in the late '40s changed his life for good. "I don't remember how old I was, but I was too young to be sneaking out my bedroom window and walking down the railroad track at night. Homer and Jethro [a country comedy act featuring the super pickers Homer Haynes (guitar) and Jethro Burns (mandolin)] were playing on the loading dock behind a bread factory and I wanted to see them. I shimmied up a pole to hear better and Jethro said: 'Listen to this next guy, he's gonna be a big star.' Hank came out and sang one song. Then he walked off stage cause nobody was listening, but he made eye contact with me and sang right to me. Even though I'd been singing and making up songs since I could talk, it inspired me. When I crawled back in the window later on, my grandma was waiting. She beat the hell out of me."

"I guess God has a plan for me," Shaver says laughing slowly. "Jesus Christ took away the sting of death when he came to me and if you're not afraid of dying, you can be happy all the days of your life."

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