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・ Are You Ready
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・ Are You Ready (Blue Rodeo album)
・ Are You Ready (Bucks Fizz album)
・ Are You Ready (Joanne song)
・ Are You Ready (Shakaya album)
・ Are You Ready (Shakaya song)
・ Are You Ready for Freddy
・ Are You Ready for Freddy?
・ Are You Ready for Love
・ Are You Ready for Love?
・ Are You Ready for More?
・ Are You Ready for Some More?
・ Are You Ready for the Big Show?
Are You Ready for the Country
・ Are You Ready for the Country (song)
・ Are You Ready for This?
・ Are You Ready to Be Heartbroken
・ Are You Ready to Fly
・ Are You Ready? (David Meece album)
・ Are You Ready? (Fatty Gets a Stylist song)
・ Are You Ready? (In Case of Fire song)
・ Are You Really Mine?
・ Are You Right There Father Ted?
・ Are You Satisfied?
・ Are You Scared 2
・ Are You Scared To Get Happy?
・ Are You Scared?
・ Are You Sequenced?


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Are You Ready for the Country : ウィキペディア英語版
Are You Ready for the Country

''Are You Ready for the Country'' is an album by Waylon Jennings, released on RCA Victor in 1976.
==Recording and composition==
''Are You Ready For the Country'' was the first solo LP Jennings released after the phenomenally successful ''Wanted! The Outlaws'' compilation, the first million selling album in country music. It was co-produced by Jennings and Ken Mansfield and recorded at Sounds Lab in Hollywood, his first sessions in Hollywood since a recording session for A&M in 1964. According to the 2004 reissue liner notes, most of the basic tracks were recorded between March 24 and March 27. Despite its title, the album contains several rock covers as the Texan continued developing his brand of progressive country music that had helped spur the outlaw country movement. However, critics have noted that ''Are You Ready For the Country'' does not have the cohesion that had characterized some of his previous studio efforts like ''Honky Tonk Heroes''. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic observes:
:"...Jennings' focus was beginning to blur slightly as he lost the sense of purpose that propelled his records of the first half the '70s, from ''The Taker/Tulsa'' to ''Dreaming My Dreams''. Here, the music hasn't really changed, but the flow is no longer seamless and the shifting tones can be a little jarring. Also, Jennings' songwriting starts to slip a little bit here; none of his originals are bad, and "I'll Go Back to Her" is quite good, but they're all decidedly second tier."
The album's biggest hit was Toy Caldwell's "Can't You See," a song by southern rockers Marshall Tucker Band that had also been featured on Hank Williams, Jr.'s 1975 ''Hank Williams, Jr. and Friends'' LP. The Jennings version peaked at #4 on the country singles chart and reached #97 on the pop chart. The title track (which hit #7) is a song from Neil Young's seminal 1972 album ''Harvest'' and appeared in the 1982 film The Executioner's Song (Jennings would record the duet "Bound For Glory" with Young on his 1985 ''Old Ways'' album). Young's contemporary Graham Nash contributes background vocals to "Precious Memories," a rare foray into the Gospel field for Jennings. According to Rich Kienzel's liner notes for the 2004 reissue, "Gospel was an area Waylon rarely explored, perhaps because his own religious beliefs included an a longstanding ambivalence about organized religion. As a kid in Texas, he briefly aspired to preach, only to conclude the rigid teachings of his family's church, the Church of Christ, didn't reflect his own more liberal, inclusive philosophies about God and Man." Perhaps the album's most curious track is "MacArthur Park (Revisited)," a contemporary take on Jennings' Grammy award winning 1969 single with The Kimberlys. In another nod to the past, "Old Friend" was written by Jennings about Buddy Holly; the latter had been a close friend of his until his death in 1959. Jennings would continue to include Holly songs on his albums and in his live set, crediting the fellow Texan for helping shape his musical vision. Jennings also contributed the contrite "I'll Go Back to Her" (which reached #4) and "Too Good Woman (#7), both songs addressing similar themes of forgiveness and repentance. The singer continued to mine the songbooks of fellow "outlaw" songwriters as well; Donnie Fritts, who had penned the ballad "We Had It All" for Jennings' ''Honky Tonk Heroes'' album, wrote the album track "Them Old Love Songs" with Troy Seals, and Shel Silverstein co-wrote the weary "A Couple More Years."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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