|  
       DAVE'S 
        DIARY - 4/11/12 - JAMEY JOHNSON/HANK COCHRANE  
       LIVING 
        FOR A SONG  
        JAMEY AND SIDEKICKS DO IT HANK'S WAY  
      "I came 
        to town a long time ago/ and it's been really good to me as you all know/ 
        but all of us rhyme runners and word hunters/ have some things that we've 
        been through/ so I wrote this song/ hoping I could tell some of it to 
        you." - Living For A Song - Hank Cochran-David James Holster-Bo 
        Roberts.  
      
         
            | 
          
             Legendary 
              singer-songwriter Hank Cochran was well prepared for the after life 
              - he released his autobiography Living For A Song eight years 
              before he died. 
               
              That meant the prolific tunesmith sourced much of the roughage for 
              his acclaimed posthumous documentary that premiered at the Nashville 
              film festival this year. 
               
              And, like the eclectic tribute disc created by his protégé 
              Jamey Johnson, there was an abundance of riches for his peers to 
              celebrate his creativity. 
               
              Johnson, 37, made detours from road trips to be at Cochran's bedside 
              on the eve of his death and during his final months of suffering. 
               
            It 
              was a smart branding to have all three projects share same title 
              - Living For A Song. 
           | 
         
       
      There was 
        no shortage of iconic artists donating their talents to the 16-song Mercury 
        Records album, released in October. 
         
        Johnson duets with Willie Nelson, Alison Krauss, Merle Haggard, Leon Russell 
        and Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris, Asleep At The Wheel, George Strait, Ray 
        Price, Elvis Costello, Ronnie Dunn, Bobby Bare, Lee Ann Womack, Kris Kristofferson, 
        Willie and Vince Gill and the Kristofferson, Nelson and Haggard trio. 
         
        Hank was born Garland Perry Cochran in the Great Depression in Isola, 
        Mississippi, on August 2, 1935. 
         
        He died at 74 on July 15, 2010, at his Hendersonville home after fighting 
        spirited health battles. 
         
        Cochran had triple bypass heart surgery in 2005 before pancreatic cancer 
        treatment in 2008.  
         
        Then in March, 2010, he had an emergency operation to repair an aortic 
        aneurysm the size of a grapefruit. 
       THE 
        EAGLE FLIES AGAIN  
      "Lately 
        I've heard rumours the eagle may be lame/ just because I've been idle 
        don't mean that I'm tame/ you've jeopardised my freedom, my natural place 
        to roost/ I can fly when I have to, they've turned the eagle loose." 
        - The Eagle - Hank Cochran-Red Lane-Mack Vickery.  
      
         
          |  
            
           | 
          Hank's 
            legacy includes a vast catalogue of songs and, like peers Merle and 
            Shotgun Willie, a raft of ex-wives who helped fuel song royalties. 
             
            "I don't write songs," Cochran said of his lucrative legacy. 
             
             
            "God writes 'em. I just hold the pen."  
             
            The longevity of country singer-songwriters is a bonus for peers wishing 
            to honour them in tribute discs, movies or documentaries. 
             
            Nelson's prowess as an actor means there are plenty of visual memories 
            to compliment his deep body of work. | 
         
       
      At 79 he 
        has the chance, if not the time, to critique the brace of tribute discs 
        and songs he has already earned.  
         
        Fellow Highwaymen Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings also dabbled in movies 
        before prematurely going to God as their careers enjoyed diverse degrees 
        of rebirth. 
         
        Their families have been able to exert quality control over the plethora 
        of tribute discs and, to a lesser extent, the Cash biopic Walk The 
        Line. 
         
        Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers, who died 26 years apart at 29 and 36, 
        did not live long enough to reap the rewards of their creativity. 
         
        But Williams's son Hank Jr, daughter Jett and grandson Hank 111 have kept 
        the family flame burning with their own careers while others made tribute 
        discs. 
         
        Californian Haggard, also recipient of tribute discs, released his Rodgers 
        vinyl tribute disc Same Train A Different Song in 1969 - a CD version 
        with bonus tracks emerged in 1999. 
         
        Bob Dylan, Shotgun Willie, Allison Krauss, Steve Earle, Jerry Garcia and 
        peers appeared on The Songs Of Jimmie Rodgers - the 1997 debut 
        disc on Dylan's Egyptian label. 
       COCHRAN 
        - THE DOCUMENTARY  
      "Do 
        you remember when you loved me/ before the world took me astray/ if you 
        do, then forgive me/ and make the world go away." - Make The World 
        Go Away - Hank Cochran.  
      But the other 
        Hank - Cochran - who shares home state Mississippi with Rodgers earned 
        a double honour, the tribute CD and documentary. 
         
        That was just a decade after he published his famed Living For A Song 
        - a Songwriter's Autobiography.  
         
        The Hank Cochran: Livin' For a Song documentary premiered April 
        25 at Nashville Film Festival.  
         
        It includes the last interviews with the Songwriters Hall of Fame legend. 
         
        The two-hour film, directed by Wes Pryor and written by Greg Welsch, also 
        features stories about the many parties Hank hosted aboard his boat, The 
        Legend.  
         
        Singer Jeff Bates, also born in Mississippi, narrates the film. 
         
        Others interviewed include Jamey, Haggard, Brad Paisley, Elvis Costello, 
        one of Hank's five wives - Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely - and his 
        three sons and stepdaughter.  
         
        Several Hank songs are performed in their entirety. 
         
        Texan Lee Ann Womack - who appears on the tribute disc - was one of many 
        Cochran peers who attended the premiere with Hank's widow Suzi. 
         
        "All I did was collect letters and papers and pictures to help them 
        put things together for the film," said Suzi who was wed to Hank 
        for his final 28 years. 
         
        "His first wife, who he was married to twice, gave me some of his 
        old letters. One was talking about being somewhere with early rock 'n' 
        roll legend Eddie Cochran when they were together as the Cochran Brothers." 
         
        I couldn't watch for a long time," confessed Suzi who says her favourite 
        Hank song is Don't You Ever Get Tired of Hurting Me.  
         
        "Then I finally got to where I could, but the first two times it 
        was hard for me. Then I realised what a gift of life it was for Hank." 
       GUITARS 
        AND TEARS  
      "I just 
        came in here from force of habit/ I don't intend to spend too much time 
        in here/ but I saw you heading for the jukebox/ and if you play A-11 there'll 
        be tears." - A-11 - Hank Cochran. 
         
        Hank's gift was a bonus - he suffered pneumonia, measles, mumps and whooping 
        cough at the age of two. 
         
        At the age of nine his parents split and he lived with his father before 
        he was put in a Memphis orphanage. 
         
        He later worked in New Mexico oil fields, aged 12, with uncle Otis who 
        taught him to play guitar in a two-year tutelage.  
         
        In 1954, just 18, he and late rockabilly singer Eddie Cochran (no relation) 
        toured as the Cochran Brothers before he moved to Nashville. 
         
        Hank, once wed to Grand Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely, also recorded five 
        albums and had a Top 20 hit in 1962 with Sally Was A Good Old Girl. 
         
        But it was as a songwriter, mentor and publisher that Cochran excelled. 
         
        He gave Willie his first break when he persuaded fellow Texan Ray Price 
        to sign him to his publishing company Pamper Music. 
         
        Hank and Willie recorded duets and Cochran appeared on the soundtrack 
        of the 1980 Nelson movie Honeysuckle Rose.  
         
        But it was a trip to the Bahamas that Cochran recalled in one of his final 
        interviews. 
       BAHAMAS 
        BUST 
      "This 
        ain't my first rodeo/ this ain't the first time this ol cowboy's been 
        throwed/ this ain't the first I've seen this dog and pony show/ honey, 
        this ain't my first rodeo." - This Ain't My First Rodeo - Hank 
        Cochran-Max D Barnes-Vern Gosdin. 
      
         
          |  
            
           | 
          It 
            preceded one of many encounters with the law over Willie's favourite 
            vegetarian appetiser and a trip to the White House as guest of President 
            Jimmy Carter.  
             
            "I was on the road with Willie and my boat was in the Bahamas," 
            Hank revealed.  
             
            "We had a couple days off and suggested we go to the boat. He 
            called his wife and I made the reservations. We had to fly to Treasure 
            Key and take a water taxi to the boat at Green Turtle. I told him 
            "Don't take any smoke or anything 'cause there is a lot over 
            there anyway. He put on a clean pair of jeans and put his dirty jeans 
            in his duffle bag. I just packed three pair of jeans and bought T 
            shirts on the island when I visited my boat. | 
         
       
      I told Willie 
        not to check our luggage as I went to change my clothes. I came back and 
        our luggage was checked with the airline. My briefcase was part of my 
        luggage with my passport in it. I told him they will lose it for sure. 
        Yeah-it got lost. They all knew me and Willie at customs, stamped some 
        papers and let us go to my boat. After two days, Willie thought we should 
        go get out luggage at the airport. I told the captain of the boat to take 
        us to Treasure Key and wait for us to return. If anything happens send 
        someone for us. 
         
        The luggage had come in and the guy sat Willies' bag up on the counter. 
        He asked Willie if that particular bag was his. He asked when pulling 
        a bag out of Willie's jeans that were in the bag, "Mr. Nelson, what 
        does this look like to you?" Willie said,  
         
        "Kinda looks like marijuana to me."  
         
        The gentleman then said, "Mr. Cochran, what does this look like to 
        you" and I said, "Looks like I need a drink". They had 
        to call the police from Cooperstown-only ten miles away.  
         
        The customs officer said, "I didn't know this was Willie's bag and 
        I have already called police in Cooperstown. Well, they took us to Cooperstown. 
        I asked if they were going to put us in jail. The policeman replied, "No, 
        but you will have to make bail." Neither Willie nor I had any money 
        on us. We stood around outside and a friend of mine, Donny, went to the 
        boat for me and got the $800.00. While we were waiting on Donny with the 
        money we stood around and had a beer. Finally, Donny came back with the 
        money. One of us made a mistake after they released us and asked if they 
        would give us the marijuana back! Willie jumped over a rail as we were 
        going down the street back to the boat and sprained his ankle! The next 
        day he was flying to the White House. He did a network TV show with Barbara 
        Walters soon after the trip. One of the questions she asked if he had 
        ever had a problem with smoking, Willie looked right in the camera and 
        said, "No." 
       BEDSIDE 
        SINGING SESSIONS 
      "I've 
        got a new car and it drives just like a dream/ I've got money and I can 
        buy most anything/ I've got places to go and things to do/ I've got everything, 
        everything but you." - Everything But You - Hank Cochran-Willie 
        Nelson.  
      Willie uplifts 
        the Buddy Cannon-Dale Dodson produced CD Living For A Song, released 
        October 16, and sequel to Johnson double disc The Guitar Song in 
        2010. 
         
        Johnson duetted with Billy Joe Shaver on Hero on Willie album Heroes released 
        on May 15. 
      
         
            | 
          He also 
            joined Kristofferson and Snoop Dogg on the satiric Roll Me And 
            Smoke Me When I Die.  
             
            "Shortly after he first met Jamey, Hank was diagnosed with pancreatic 
            cancer," said his widow, Suzi Cochran.  
             
            "So for the two years he lived after that, Jamey would get off 
            the road and pull his bus right up to the hospital, run up and see 
            Hank and raise Hank's spirits. The last time Jamey saw Hank was the 
            night before Hank died." Johnson, born in Enterprise, Alabama, 
            joined producer Cannon and Billy Ray Cyrus at Cochran's bedside as 
            they handed the guitar back and forth while singing Cochran's songs. 
             | 
         
       
      Cochran died 
        about six hours later and inspired the tribute album.  
         
         
      
         
            | 
           
             "We 
              all met at the house one day and sang some songs," Johnson 
              said. "Bobby Bare was introducing me to a bunch of songs that 
              when I thought I heard it all, I hadn't heard anything yet. All 
              the best stuff was the stuff I didn't know about yet. An entire 
              list of songs was created, not because I knew these songs existed 
              and wanted to cut them, but because the other person did. Everybody 
              got to pick their own, and so for me, it was just as much of a journey 
              as it was for the band or anybody else involved."  
            "Hank 
              adored Jamey," Suzi Cochran said.  
               
              "Hank loved Jamey. Jamey was a constant in the last chapter 
              of Hank's life. This is incredible. I wish Hank had been here to 
              see it. He wouldn't believe it. He would have cried.  
               
              He'd be happy. It's exactly like Hank would have done it." 
               
           | 
         
       
      Cochran has 
        joined the equally prolific writing partners Harlan Howard, Vern Gosdin, 
        Mack Vickery and Dave Kirby in that posthumous palace for iconic writers. 
         
        Surviving peers including Johnson explain the impact of those songs - 
        we have the unedited dialogue below.  
         
         
      Livin' 
        For a Song: A Tribute to Hank Cochran 
        The Songs and Their Stories 
      1. MAKE 
        THE WORLD GO AWAY (Hank Cochran) 
        Jamey Johnson & Alison Krauss 
      Hank Cochran 
        was inspired to write this because of a line he heard an actor say in 
        a movie.  
         
        Song publisher Hal Smith told Cochran that it was the worst song he'd 
        ever written, because he didn't believe that anyone really wanted to make 
        the world go away. Cochran was determined to prove Smith wrong. Although 
        it is now considered to be a country classic, the song was first introduced 
        by pop torch singer Timi Yuro in the summer of 1963. 
         
        That same year, Ray Price made the song a country hit. Just two years 
        later, Eddy Arnold sang it on a thematic album of "world" songs. 
        This 1965 version became both a country and a pop smash. Dean Martin, 
        Elvis Presley, Tom Jones and Martina McBride are among many who have subsequently 
        recorded Make the World Go Away. It is Hank Cochran's most-recorded song. 
      "Hank's 
        favourite singer was Alison Krauss," says his widow, Suzi Cochran. 
        "He always used to listen to Alison Krauss and every new CD that 
        came out, Hank had, but he never met her. When I heard she was doing Make 
        the World Go Away. I was thrilled to death. Hank would have been thrilled. 
        It turned out wonderfully, just the way it would have been if Hank would 
        have produced it. Perfect." 
         
        2. I FALL TO PIECES (Hank Cochran/Harlan Howard) 
        Merle Haggard & Jamey Johnson. 
      "Grand 
        Ole Opry star Jan Howard, co-writer Harlan Howard's then-wife, sang the 
        first demo of this song. Producer Owen Bradley brought it to Patsy Cline, 
        who initially hated it, because she thought it was too pop sounding. Cochran 
        gleefully reported that Cline liked it just fine when it became her first 
        No. 1 record. It was also Cochran's first big hit as a songwriter. Since 
        that 1961 version I Fall to Pieces has been recorded by Linda Ronstadt, 
        Conway Twitty, Crystal Gayle and many more. A duet version of the song 
        by Trisha Yearwood and Aaron Neville earned them a Grammy Award in 1994. 
      "I always 
        loved Patsy's recording of it," Haggard says. "I was just hoping 
        I could do that. 
         
        "Hank was unique," Haggard says. "He wrote the kind of 
        music that we needed. He understood what each artist was and he was able 
        to tailor a song for you and usually brought it to you in person. 
         
        "Hank was a lot of fun to be around. Usually when you were around 
        Hank, you wound up writing a song. He was always writing, always writing. 
        That's really who he was: he was the songwriter. 
         
        "He was really an artist who chose not to be an artist. All the artists 
        respected his ability to perform a song. One of the things that was a 
        secret about him getting so many good cuts was that the singers wanted 
        to see if they could just sing that good. He had a real light, timid voice, 
        but if you got down close to it, it was really good. Singers that understood 
        wanted to sing his songs right. I know I did." 
      Adds Suzi 
        Cochran, "It's great that Merle sings I Fall to Pieces. To 
        hear Merle sing it is wonderful. That was a special song to Hank because 
        of Patsy. He and Patsy were really close. They were really good friends." 
      3. A WAY 
        TO SURVIVE (Moneen Carpenter/Hank Cochran) 
        Jamey Johnson, Leon Russell & Vince Gill 
      During his 
        early Nashville years, Hank Cochran wrote for Pamper Music. The company 
        was co-owned by Ray Price so he often got the first crack at new Cochran 
        tunes. Price introduced A Way to Survive in 1966, and it has proved 
        to be an evergreen song. In 1997 Gene Watson made it the title tune of 
        an album.  
         
        "I told Buddy that Leon would be a good one to do one of these Hank 
        songs with because of the obvious connection," Johnson says. "Leon 
        and I met at a studio in Nashville that's meant a lot to me over the years. 
        It's where I recorded Lonesome Song and a lot of The Guitar Song. He came 
        by that studio right there to do that part." 
      4. DON'T 
        TOUCH ME (Hank Cochran) 
        Emmylou Harris & Jamey Johnson 
      Future Grand 
        Ole Opry star Jeannie Seely was working as a secretary at Liberty Records 
        on the West Coast when Hank Cochran was recording for the label.  
         
        After hearing her music, he suggested she move to Nashville. He wrote 
        the torchy Don't Touch Me for her, and it earned Seely a 1966 Grammy 
        Award. They were married to one another between 1969 and 1979. Seely's 
        emotional singing led to her billing as Miss Country Soul and Don't 
        Touch Me subsequently became a 1969 R&B hit for Bettye Swann and 
        was also notably recorded by soul singer Etta James in 1997.  
      5. YOU 
        WOULDN'T KNOW LOVE (Hank Cochran/Dave Kirby) 
        Ray Price & Jamey Johnson 
      By the time 
        Ray Price introduced You Wouldn't Know Love in 1970, his Pamper 
        Music had been sold to Tree International Publishing. Cochran went to 
        Tree with the company. By that time, Price had scored on the popularity 
        charts with five previous Cochran songs, so he was still eager to find 
        a sixth, wherever it was published. 
      "Ray 
        is a good definition of an old Marine, a rock-solid spirit," Johnson 
        says. "A guy whose direction is so strong and whose will can't be 
        bent. I hear that his dogs don't even come when he calls!" 
      6. I DON'T 
        DO WINDOWS (Hank Cochran) 
        Jamey Johnson & Asleep at the Wheel 
      This is one 
        of Jamey Johnson's favourite Cochran songs. Cochran introduced it, himself, 
        on a 1980 solo album titled Make the World Go Away. When Willie 
        Nelson cast him for a part in country-music movie Honeysuckle Rose, 
        Cochran reprised the song on the film's soundtrack that same year. The 
        Honeysuckle Rose soundtrack album has sold more than two million copies. 
      "I like 
        the song because it's so irreverent, which is certainly one of Hank's 
        qualities," says Ray Benson of Asleep at the Wheel. "Recording 
        the song was so simple because Buddy Cannon and Jamey just said they cut 
        a demo of it in Nashville. Asleep at the Wheel has a very distinctive 
        style. I said to Buddy and Jamey, 'You know, the cut you did in Nashville 
        of the demo is fantastic. Nashville has the best players in the world. 
        We don't really want to just copy that because you've always done it as 
        good as it could be done.' 
         
        "Buddy said, 'No, I just want you to do what y'all do.' So it was 
        like falling off a log. We went in and did it in two or three takes maybe. 
        First of all, it's live. We all sit there and we play it. It's got a good 
        little slide kind of feel."  
      7. SHE'LL 
        BE BACK (Hank Cochran/Dale Dodson/Red Lane) 
        Elvis Costello & Jamey Johnson 
      She'll 
        Be Back was originally recorded as He'll Be Back by Lee Ann 
        Womack on her 2002 album Something Worth Leaving Behind. She also 
        re-recorded it on film for the 2012 Cochran bio-documentary Livin' 
        For a Song. When Elvis Costello recorded his Almost Blue LP 
        in Nashville in 1981, he included a version of Cochran's He's Got You 
        on the collection. 
         
        So the British pop star has long been a fan of traditional country music 
        and is thus a longtime fan of Hank Cochran.  
      8. WOULD 
        THESE ARMS BE IN YOUR WAY (Hank Cochran/Vern Gosdin/Red Lane) 
        Jamey Johnson 
      During his 
        brief life as a recording artist, Keith Whitley performed several Hank 
        Cochran songs. Would These Arms Be in Your Way became a Top-40 
        hit for the singer in 1987. A decade later, co-writer Vern Gosdin released 
        his version of the song. It has also been recorded by Mark Chesnutt.  
         
        "That's a fantastic song," says Willie Nelson. "It's great, 
        just the title of it. He could have just sold titles." 
      9. THE 
        EAGLE (Hank Cochran/Red Lane/Mack Vickery) 
        George Strait & Jamey Johnson 
      Waylon Jennings' 
        1991 recording of The Eagle became Hank Cochran's last Top-40 hit 
        as a tunesmith, to date. 
      "I was 
        introduced to Hank by my friend Dean Dillon," says George Strait. 
        "They wrote one of the most clever songs which I was lucky enough 
        to get to record called The Chair. I wish I had known Hank better, 
        but unfortunately our paths only crossed a few times. Those times, however, 
        were very special.  
         
        "I remember him coming to my office in Nashville one time with Dean. 
        I was in the process of recording a Christmas album and they had just 
        written For Christ's Sake, It's Christmas. They played it live 
        for me there and it just blew me away. I recorded it that day. The 
        Eagle was a song I wasn't that familiar with, but what a message it 
        sends, especially in this day and time. I had thought about Jamey and 
        me doing The Chair together, but after he played me The Eagle 
        it was so obvious. I'm very proud of Jamey for doing this and am so glad 
        I was able to be included." 
         
        Suzi Cochran says, The Eagle was written about the Gulf War. It's 
        a war cry, the eagle representing the U.S." 
      10. A-11 
        (Hank Cochran) 
        Ronnie Dunn & Jamey Johnson 
      Although 
        never a giant hit, this Cochran song is something of a honky-tonk standard 
        and is performed by many. Johnny Paycheck did the original version in 
        1965, and it has also been recorded by Buck Owens, Clinton Gregory, Norma 
        Jean and Darryle Singletary among others. 
         
        "Buddy Cannon sent the song to me," Ronnie Dunn says. "I 
        think Buddy was probably doing the casting there and did it because it's 
        just hard-core honky-tonk. It's from an era when country music was pretty 
        much confined to beer joints and clubs. It refers to a jukebox. I mean, 
        for him to be able to write stuff that goes from the gamut of I Fall 
        to Pieces and Make the World Go Away to a song like A-11, 
        which is pretty primal straight forward - I call it beer-joint music - 
        is pretty cool." 
         
        Haggard says, "'A-11 is a wonderful song, one of the all-time 
        greats. I guess you can call it a standard." 
      11. I'D 
        FIGHT THE WORLD (Joe Allison / Hank Cochran) 
        Bobby Bare & Jamey Johnson 
      After Hank 
        married Suzi Cochran in 1982, she took him home to meet her folks in Pittsburgh. 
        He told them he'd written this song just for her, and everyone cried when 
        he sang it. She found out a decade later that the song was, in fact, more 
        than 20 years old. Among its many recordings, the one by Jim Reeves is 
        probably the best known. Although Bobby Bare never had a major hit with 
        a Hank Cochran song, the two were lifelong friends. In fact, Cochran was 
        the best man at the wedding of Bobby and Jeannie Bare in 1964. Bare previously 
        recorded I'd Fight the World on his hit Detroit City album 
        of 1963.  
      "The 
        song I did was a song that I had recorded back in the early sixties," 
        Bare says. "I chose that song because, number one, I wouldn't have 
        to learn a new song. Number two, I've always loved that song. I was living 
        in L.A. in the sixties and Hank would come to L.A. and he'd be out at 
        my house and we would go over songs and that was one of them. 
         
        "Actually, Hank didn't play this song for me. Eddy Arnold recorded 
        it. I learned it on one of his albums and I just loved it. Hank didn't 
        play it for me, but Hank taught it to me. His phrasing, of course, is 
        always impeccable.  
         
        "This current cut compared to the one that I did back in the sixties 
        is better really, in my opinion, because it's simpler, not as tricky. 
        It's straight-ahead. The one I did, of course, I was selling millions 
        of records to kids, so they had to sweeten it up with strings and stuff 
        like that. This one is just straight-ahead good. Good feeling. I think 
        we did Hank justice on this one." 
      12. DON'T 
        YOU EVER GET TIRED OF HURTING ME (Hank Cochran) 
        Willie Nelson & Jamey Johnson 
      This song 
        was Cochran's favourite of his many compositions. It has been a big hit 
        three times, most recently in 1989 for Ronnie Milsap. Willie Nelson has 
        previously recorded it as a duet with Ray Price, who sang the original 
        version of the song in 1966. 
      "I learned 
        some new things," Nelson says. "I learned Hank wrote some songs 
        that I hadn't heard before. I thought I knew all of Hank's songs. But 
        I chose the one that I really liked Don't You Ever Get Tired of Hurting 
        Me. Ray Price had such a fantastic record of that and so that was 
        the one that I thought I would want to do. There's a lot of great songs 
        on there." 
      Adds Haggard, 
        "I recorded that, but Ray Price, I think, had the best well-known 
        record on that. I even wrote a line on that song, so I know Hank didn't 
        write that line. When I said it, I did it at the session. When the take 
        was over, Hank hit the button and he said, 'I'd a thought of it eventually.'" 
      Says Bobby 
        Bare, "My favourite Hank song is Don't You Ever Get Tired of Hurting 
        Me. I love that song. Who besides Hank could come up with a line like, 
        'You make my eyes run over all the time?" That's classic. 
         
        "The reason Hank wrote so simple was because he didn't know any big 
        words," Bare says.  
         
        "Hank was not an educated person; he wrote strictly from emotion, 
        and that's what I love.  
        The people who use big words are just trying to cover the fact that they're 
        afraid to put their emotions on the line. Hank was the most fearless person 
        I ever met when it came to writing a song. He would lay it out and say, 
        'Here it is.' Unbelievable. That nerve doesn't exist anymore." 
      13. THIS 
        AIN'T MY FIRST RODEO (Max D. Barnes/Hank Cochran /Vern Gosdin) 
        Jamey Johnson & Lee Ann Womack 
      The song 
        was born when Cochran was having a recording studio built in his garage. 
        Co-writers Vern Gosdin and Max D. Barnes were at the house when Cochran 
        overheard one contractor say to another, "This ain't my first rodeo." 
        The three began working on the song instantly.  
      "Man, 
        I'm not going to do a duets record and not call Lee Ann," Johnson 
        says. "To me, she's one of the finest singers out there. If it's 
        country music, it's a good fit for her. That was just a given. I know 
        she's a fan of all kinds of Hank songs over the years because it's the 
        same stuff I listen to. Ain't nobody better, and I can say that for everybody 
        on this record too."  
      14. LOVE 
        MAKES A FOOL OF US ALL (Hank Cochran/Glenn Martin) 
        Kris Kristofferson & Jamey Johnson 
      Hank Cochran 
        introduced this poignant song on his 1980 LP Make the World Go Away. 
        The song gained further prominence when Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard 
        recorded it on their 1987 duet album Seashores of Old Mexico. 
         
        "It's probably one of his least-known songs," Nelson says. "It's 
        a really great song." 
        "Kris Kristofferson picked that one out," Johnson says. "It's 
        one of my favourites." 
      15. EVERYTHING 
        BUT YOU (Hank Cochran / Willie Nelson) 
        Willie Nelson, Jamey Johnson, Leon Russell & Vince Gill 
      This song 
        dates back to Hank Cochran and Willie Nelson's earliest days together 
        in Nashville.  
         
        Nelson recorded a demo tape of it and six other tunes in 1961. They were 
        stored in a suitcase and forgotten until Nelson's parents re-discovered 
        them nearly 15 years later. After that Everything But You and its 
        song-demo companions were released on an obscure triple LP called Willie 
        Treasures. When Nelson activated his own Lone Star Records label, 
        he re-issued these same demos on his 1978 LP Face of a Fighter. 
      16. LIVIN' 
        FOR A SONG (Hank Cochran/David Holster/Bo Roberts) 
        Jamey Johnson, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson & 
        Hank Cochran 
      Suzi Cochran 
        says, "This is my version of how this song got on the album and why 
        it's so wonderful. Hank and two friends wrote that song. Somebody brought 
        it to Hank and Hank wrote the second half of the song, then he gave it 
        back to them. But Hank always considered that his biography.  
         
        "They were in the studio and I kept saying, 'You have to listen to 
        'Livin' For a Song.' Well, I knew every time I was handing it to 
        them, they weren't listening to it. So there was one thing they needed 
        and I sent down the master of Livin' For a Song. About 20 minutes 
        later, Buddy called me up and said, 'Who owns that?' 'I do.' He said, 
        'We're going to use it.' Then it came back just how I saw it in my head 
        because of all of his dear friends on that. It's unbelievable how it came 
        out." 
         
        Haggard says, "Hank's ability to perform comes across right there. 
        I mean, he's in there with some of the best singers in the world and he 
        gets it across better. That's just the way he was: he was a great entertainer. 
        He entertained the entertainers." 
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