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Johnny Paycheck - Bars, Booze & Blondes

Bars, Booze & Blondes
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Album Details: Bars, Booze & Blondes

Release Date:01/01/1979
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Track List: Bars, Booze & Blondes

  1. Two Candles One Dinner and a Bottle
  2. Point of No Return
  3. Heaven for Angels Unaware
  1. I Drop More Than I Drink
  2. Don't You Say Nothin' at All
  3. Tell Me Your Troubles

Pro Reviews: Bars, Booze & Blondes

  • All Music Guide

    This slice-of-life LP comes from Johnny Paycheck's late-'60s heyday, when the future boss-hater was still championing rough-hewn honky tonk during the rise of Billy Sherrill's slick Nashville sound (Paycheck would soon switch ranks and cash in with several Sherrill-produced hits of his own during the '70s). Cut for the Paycheck-focused Little Darlin' label, Bars, Booze Blondes finds the pre-rehab singer telling it straight from the tavern heart, wryly musing about his alchy predicament ("The Pint of No Return," "I Drop More Than I Drink"), barroom denizens ("We're the Kind of People"), and cheatin' songs ("The Meanest Jukebox in Town"). He even finds time for some therapy on "Problem Solvin' Doctor," which features a barroom shrink in office between nine p.m. and two a.m. and offering a nice line in jug prescriptions. Nicely peppered with shades of George Jones and Ray Price (both former employers), Paycheck's account of life in the shadows of Oly and Hamms neon makes for a welcome co...mpliment to Country Music Foundation's excellent The Real Mr. Heartache roundup of many of the singer's other Little Darlin' highlights. - Stephen Cook, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Johnny Paycheck

The first time that many people ever heard of Johnny Paycheck was in 1977, when his "Take This Job and Shove It" inspired one-man wildcat strikes all over America. The next time was in 1985, when he was arrested for shooting a man at a bar in Hillsboro, OH. That Paycheck is remembered for a fairly amusical novelty song and a violent crime (for which he spent two years i... Read more