I've Got Something to Say
I've Got Something to Say | ||||
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File:Dacivegotsomethingtosay.jpg | ||||
Studio album by | ||||
Released | June 1980 | |||
Recorded | 1976 | |||
Studio | Columbia Studios, Pete's Place in Nashville | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 30:47 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer | Billy Sherrill | |||
David Allan Coe chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I've Got Something to Say is an album released by country musician David Allan Coe. It was released in 1980 on Columbia. Guy Clark, Bill Anderson, Dickey Betts (from The Allman Brothers Band), Kris Kristofferson, Larry Jon Wilson, and George Jones are all featured on this album.
Background
Although Coe had enjoyed great success as a songwriter and recorded high-quality albums since signing with Columbia in 1974, he had not broken through to the country music mainstream in the way other artists associated with outlaw country movement had. Coe could be his own worst enemy in this respect, alienating the mainstream by hanging out with biker gangs, recording an album of if explicit songs, and falsely claiming he had been on death row for murder. Coe also became embroiled in a feud with pop star Jimmy Buffett, who accused Coe of plagiarising one of his songs. Coe often rubbed many of his peers the wrong way; according to Dan Beck, a Pittsburgh songwriter who was on the scene when Coe first came to Nashville, “In a way, we didn’t necessarily take David that seriously. I remember songwriters used to go see him play someplace, and he’d play somebody else’s songs and say he wrote it! People used to laugh.”[1] Coe would go on to achieve success, but by 1980 three of his previous singles did not chart, and he had not even reached the country Top 30 since 1976 when “Longhaired Redneck" hit #17, as Nashville kept its distance from the tattooed country singer.
Recording
With the dawn of a new decade, Coe and producer Billy Sherrill set out to reach a wider audience and bring Coe back to the charts by inviting other singers and musicians to take part in the sessions for what would become I’ve Got Something to Say. This collaborative is evident in the song “Hank Williams Junior Junior,” a tribute to the only son of Hank Williams, who overcame his father’s shadow and personal demons (including a disastrous fall off a Montana mountain in 1975) to emerge as one of country music’s hottest stars. Like Coe, Hank Jr. aligned himself with the outlaw movement and embraced southern rock. The song was written by Bonnie Bramlett and Allman Brothers guitarist Dickey Betts, with Betts playing on the track. Coe also takes another stab at southern rock with "I Could Never Give You Up (For Somebody Else),” an offering that is disparaged in Thom Jurek’s AllMusic review as Coe “impersonating Leon Russell's singing voice and trying to make it a Southern rocker in the tradition of the Allmans, comes out sounding a hell of a lot more like Wet Willie.”[2]
Billy Sherrill may have had a hand in corralling George Jones to sing on “This Bottle (In My Hand),” a song Coe wrote that sound as if it was torn from the pages of Jones’s mind. The legendary country singer was in the midst of having his career resurrected with the enormous success of “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” but was also still in the midst of a years-long cocaine-fuelled booze binge that saw him missing shows and acquiring the nickname “No Show Jones.” The opening verse tells the story of a hopeless alcoholic who appears intent on destroying himself:
- Last week he spent his whole pay cheque on whiskey
- And on Friday night he’ll do it all again
- He’ll drink till he falls down and then he’ll order one more round
- And then go home with that bottle in his hand
Sherrill’s production is straight hardcore honky tonk, and Coe hold his own with Jones, who delivers a typically stellar performance. Bill Anderson, who Coe later gave credit for a true friend in the business[3]}}, also makes a guest appearance, singing on “Get a Little Dirt on Your Hands.”
Track listing
All Songs written by David Allan Coe except where noted.
- "I've Got Something to Say" – 2:03
- "Back to Atlanta" – 3:48
- "I Could Never Give You Up (For Someone Else)" – 2:23
- "Take It Easy Rider" – 2:40
- "The Great Nashville Railroad Disaster (A True Story)" (Bobby Braddock, Rafe Van Hoy) – 3:05
- "Hank Williams Junior-Junior" (Dickey Betts, Bonnie Bramlett) – 2:44
- "Get a Little Dirt on Your Hands" (Bill Anderson) – 3:42
- "If You'll Hold the Ladder (I'll Climb to the Top)" (Buzz Rabin, Sara Busby) – 2:39
- "This Bottle (In My Hand)" – 2:51
- "Take This Job and Shove It Too" – 2:17
- "Lovin' You Comes So Natural" (Coe, Curtis Buck, Jimmy Lancaster)
Personnel
- Guy Clark, Bill Anderson, Dickey Betts, Kris Kristofferson, Larry Jon Wilson, George Jones – vocals
- Reggie Young, Ken Bell, Dick Betts, Boomer Castleman – guitar
- Pete Drake, Dale Seigfreid – steel guitar
- Henry Strzelecki, Ron Bledsoe, Ralph Ezell - bass
- Kenny Malone, Owen Hale – drums
- Buddy Spicher – fiddle
- Steve Nathan, Chalmer Davis – piano, keyboards
- Jimmy English – banjo
Chart performance
Chart (1980) | Peak position |
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U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums | 66 |
- ^ Streissguth, Michael 2013, p. 156.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Allmusic
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Smith, Michael (June 2004). Swampland.com Original Outlaw: David Allan Coe http://www.swampland.com/title=The Original Outlaw: David Allan Coe. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
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