Hank Williams III and Curb Records had a contentious relationship through most of the 14 years he was signed to the label, and Curb hasn't exactly been going out of its way to get in his good graces since he's moved on.
Long Gone Daddy is the second "new"
Hank Williams III Curb has released since his contact with the label ran out at the end of 2010; 2011's
Hillbilly Joker was a slightly reworked version of a hardcore punk/metal album Curb refused to release when it was originally submitted, and 2012's
Long Gone Daddy is a set of old-honky tonk tunes featuring unreleased outtakes from
Williams' first two albums for Curb,
Risin' Outlaw and
Lovesick, Broke and Driftin', filled out with material drawn from various compilations and a duet with Joey Allcorn from the latter's album 50 Years Too Late. Given the cut-and-paste nature of this album and the fact the bulk of it was previously deemed unworthy of release, the pleasant surprise is that
Long Gone Daddy isn't bad at all.
Hank III is a sure hand with old-school honky tonk numbers, and the covers of classics by
Merle Haggard,
Johnny Cash,
Waylon Jennings, and
Hank's grandfather
Hank Williams, Sr. are great stuff, sung with all the twangy commitment they deserve.
Hank III's own "What They Want Me to Be," like Allcorn's "This Ain't Montgomery," suggests that his philosophical differences with Curb were there right from the start in their tales of struggling against the Nashville mainstream. And with the absurd dance remix of "If the Shoe Fits" that closes the album, the label twists their knife into
Williams one more time. For fans who prefer
Hank III's purer hillbilly style over the more rock-oriented material that has come to dominate his work, most of
Long Gone Daddy will be a short (33 minutes) and sweet reminder of his earlier and less frenetic days, but it's difficult for anyone who cares about
Williams' music to not see this and
Hillbilly Joker as blatant displays of disrespect toward an artist who dared to follow his own creative path. ~ Mark Deming