Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Waylon Jennings - Don't You Think This Outlaw Bit's Done Got out of Hand

This song [which appears on the album I’ve Always Been Crazy] was completely written and inspired by Waylon Jennings.  It’s also a true story…

After Waylon Jennings hit the big time he traded amphetamines for cocaine.  It was a serious habit - a $1500/day habit.  More than once he pulled a Keith Richards and stayed awake for seven days straight.  His habit was well-known, and it attracted the attention of the DEA.  They got wind of a package that was sent to him from New York.  He was in Nashville recording some music for a Hank Williams, Jr. album.  Evidently an individual working in Neil Reshen’s office [Waylon’s manager at the time] was trying to curry favor with Waylon and sent him an unsolicited package of cocaine.  Within minutes of the package’s arrival, the DEA paid a visit to Waylon in the recording studio.  They knew about the package and followed it to the recording studio.

To hear Waylon tell the story [go to YouTube to hear him or read his autobiography Waylon], Richie Albright [his drummer and the producer of this particular session] was in the control room while Waylon was in the studio.  Waylon had received the package but didn’t open it, and when he saw the DEA in the control room, he threw the package over his shoulder and it got stuck under one of the baseboards on the other side of the studio.  All the while this was going on, Richie had the talk-back button pushed and Waylon could hear everything that was said [but the agents couldn’t see Waylon].  Waylon then came into the control room and read the warrant for his arrest and the search warrants.  The search warrant was screwed up – it allowed the DEA to search Waylon’s Nashville office, but not the recording studio.  The DEA couldn’t go in there.

While Waylon was engaged with the DEA agents, Richie went into the studio under the pretext of moving around some baffles.  But what he really did was find the cocaine and take it to the bathroom.  Before everyone knew it, the toilet flushed for all to hear.  One of the DEA agents got really pissed and asked where the cocaine was.  Waylon responded “if it ever was here it ain’t here no more.” 

Waylon was charged with possession of cocaine, but the charges were dropped because of “lack of evidence.”  But he got a song out of it, one that he used to open many shows.  It has his trademark thumping bass, four-on-the-floor driving rhythm that works very well as a show opener.  He often followed with with JJ Cale’s Clyde, a song about a bass-playing dog – it was a good one-two punch [see video].  Until Waylon Jennings came along, country music didn’t sound like this.  His lawyer freaked out because he heard the song and thought it was a “confession.”  Waylon didn’t care…


I'm for the law and order the way that it should be
This song's about the night they spent protecting you from me
Someone called us outlaws in some old magazine
New York sent a posse down like I ain't ever seen

Don't you think this outlaw bit's done got out of hand?
What started out to be a joke the law don't understand
Was it singing through my nose that got me busted by the man?
Maybe this here outlaw bit's done got out of hand, out of hand

We were wrapped up in our music that's why we never saw
Cars pull up, the boys get out and the room fills up with law
They came boundin' through the backdoor in the middle of a song
They got me for possession of something that was gone, long gone

Don't you think this outlaw bit's done got out of hand?
What started out to be a joke the law don't understand
Was it singing through my nose that got me busted by the man? Oh Lord
Maybe this here outlaw bit's done got out of hand
Don't you think this outlaw bit's done got out of hand, out of hand? 

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