Terry Allen — Big ol' White Boys
Album: The Silent Majority (Terry Allen's greatest missed hits)
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 110
Released: 1976
Length: 5:54
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 110
Length: 5:54
Plays (last 30 days): 0
(no lyrics available)
Comments (24)add comment
Not as bad as Randy Newman.
Not as funny as Kinky Friedman
Not as funny as Kinky Friedman
Leslie wrote:
As I was reading the comments I read yours and immediately could hear it! I like the way you think! It would be a nice segue!
I wonder if Bill will follow this up with Sugar Magnolia?
As I was reading the comments I read yours and immediately could hear it! I like the way you think! It would be a nice segue!
Racial stereotypes dehumanize.
A solid 9 for an introspective view, on his view. Love someone who gives their opinion openly, even discordantly at times, and doesn't expect everyone to agree with it. Especially when its given with satire (Love the album cover). And also especially when they do it to help people see what they see. And then they listen intently when they are given an alternate view. Democracy used to be crazy like that in 1976. Anger for sure, but a lot less hate. I guess I should add that 1976 was a year of introspection and celebration for our country during a very turbulent time. Ok. I think this album was released in the 90's maybe? But the artist saw many decades before. So maybe he saw something worth listening to? I think so. Everyone is so railed into only thinking what they think they know must be right because the phone said so. Sometimes satire is the best medicine to help people remember. Hate and disunion are my only true enemies. But not someone who disagrees or has a different opinion than me. 1976/1776 in all. Go figure. I guess we can remember how to work together again now then too. With disagreement but a lot less hate. We are in one boat, and it's sinking. Fast. Let's work together as we listen together. Let's keep it afloat.
Terry Allen is something of a legend in Austin. He's one of the old school country fried hippies, in the mold of Gram Parsons, Townes Van Zandt and Willie Nelson. Local legends The Uranium Savages and The Austin Lounge Lizards rely on similarly humorous fare. The 'Lizards actually have quite a bit of musical talent, particularly bluegrass. The 'Savages suffer no such disability...
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's satire. But Timbuk 3's 'Standard White Jesus' may not be...
Kidding on both counts. Most of Terry and Timbuk's songs are steeped in satire. Timbuk 3's 'Future's so Bright' is a classic example.
Happy Listening from Austin!
c.
There, he said it. It's satire. Does that really make it better?
I say: yes. Yes it does. A little bit.
SwampYankee wrote:
I love the ending jam with the sitar and sax, a strange but wonderful combination.
Ditto that. I give it points for originality. Cool jam at the end.
I'm going to weigh in and say: I like it! A bit too 'easy listening' with the ol' sax at the end, but it all seems kinda toungue-in-cheek, especially the album cover!
stickers11 wrote:
Please tell me this is supposed to be satire....
Wow, if you're not sure then this song is about you!
Always love some good down home sitar.
I wonder if Bill will follow this up with Sugar Magnolia?
oh my god.
I just downgraded from a 2 to a 1
ChrisinIndy wrote:
Very similar (but slowed down) chord progression.
Whew. I'm glad I wasn't the only one that heard Sugar Magnolia in there. I thought I was losing my mind. Oh, wait. There it goes.
Please tell me this is supposed to be satire....
how many more people will it take to move this from acceptable to Ho-Hum?...I mean Jeez, on the album cover he's a Loser drinking a DeCaf (or a rise-and-shine cup of Jack-N-Coke incognito to calm his nerves for the exciting album cover shoot) with his arm around his coyote buddy 'Trophy Kill', wearing shades to get that BlindDog Fullerton 'look' plus the song absolutely Sucks Ass.....Greatest Missed Hits?....mmmmm....... No .....actually this could possibly rate in the Top 100 Worst Album Covers Ever, in the low 20's.
david byrne doing Don't fence me in and then
"Big ol' White Boys"
was that a segway ?
if not let me pretend and smile.
I can't even rate this one, it's too different lol. I'll have to hear it again (and louder when my office mates are out to lunch) to determine yea or nay.
I love the ending jam with the sitar and sax, a strange but wonderful combination.
Jake\'s description nails it: \"West Texas Hindu Honky-Tonk\"! I like it! :D
It's Grateful Dead's Sugar Magnolia, only with different words! Yes?
Very similar (but slowed down) chord progression.
it\'s one that made me stop, look and listen. and it wasn\'t at the train tracks.
Killjoy