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Billy Joe Shaver - I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal...But I'm Gonna Be a Diamond Someday '1981

I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal...But I'm Gonna Be a Diamond Someday
ArtistBilly Joe Shaver Related artists
Album name I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal...But I'm Gonna Be a Diamond Someday
Country
Date 1981
GenreCountry
Play time 34:00
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 205 MB
PriceDownload $1.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist:

1. Fit to Kill and Going Out In Style (02:48)
2. Blue Texas Waltz (04:04)
3. Saturday Night (03:06)
4. Ragged Old Truck (04:09)
5. I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal (But I'm Gonna Be a Diamond Someday) (02:01)
6. When the Word Was Thunderbird (03:30)
7. (We Are) The Cowboys (03:41)
8. Mexico (03:14)
9. It Ain't Nothing New Babe (04:06)
10. The Road (03:17)


 moreBorn in Corsicana, Texas in 1939, Shaver's early years seem like a
blueprint for the type of outlaw country fare he and other songwriters would
later immortalize. Largely raised by his grandmother while his mother worked in
a Waco honky-tonk, he dropped out of school after eighth grade to pick cotton
alongside his uncles, then enlisted in the U.S. Navy the day he turned 17. He
later bounced from job to job, trying his luck as a rodeo clown and then working
at a sawmill, where an accident claimed a pair of fingers from his right hand.
In a display of the tenacity he carried throughout his life, Shaver quickly
adapted and taught himself to play guitar without them. Around this same time,
he met and married Brenda Joyce Tindell, with whom he had a son, Eddy, in 1962.
In a strange twist of fate, he and Tindell divorced and remarried twice,
seemingly bound together until her death in 1999. Their first divorce
purportedly came about as a result of Shaver's decision to pursue a songwriting
career, and in 1966, after Tindell filed the papers, Shaver promptly hitchhiked
to Nashville in the back of a cantaloupe truck.

It took a couple of years and some retreats back to Texas, but his tenacity once
again paid off after an unannounced visit to Bobby Bare's Nashville office
(where he practically demanded to be heard) earned him a contract as a staff
songwriter. Bare went on to record a number of Shaver's songs, including the hit
"Ride Me Down Easy," but he wasn't the only one who heard potential in the
Texan. Shaver's own debut single, 1970's "Chicken on the Ground," may have sunk
without a trace, but he soon began landing other songs with big names like Tom
T. Hall ("Willie the Wandering Gypsy and Me"), Kris Kristofferson ("Good
Christian Soldier"), and Waylon Jennings. The latter was so taken by Shaver's
songs that he recorded an entire collection of them for his 1973 LP Honky Tonk
Heroes, a landmark record often cited as helping launch the outlaw movement.
That same year, Kristofferson produced Shaver's own debut, Old Five and Dimers
Like Me, which featured a number of originals already made famous by others,
while also yielding one of his own signature cuts in "Georgia on a Fast Train."

Despite his status as one of the original outlaw songwriters, Shaver's career as
a singer never blossomed in the same way as his more celebrated contemporaries.
Still, he remained in the thick of it and even appeared on the platinum-selling
1976 compilation Wanted! The Outlaws, playing a support role to Jennings,
Nelson, and Jessi Colter. During this period, he recorded two more solo albums,
When I Get My Wings and Gypsy Boy, for the Capricorn label, garnering yet more
industry respect without coming near star status. Meanwhile, his songs continued
to live on through other acts, with Johnny Cash recording a version of Shaver's
aspirational honky-tonk gem "I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal (But I'm Gonna Be a
Diamond Some Day)." Shaver's own version headlined a 1981 album of the same name
and marked his first release for Columbia Records.

Throughout the '80s, he remained a prolific writer, turning in a handful of
quality albums rife with the kind of hard-earned wisdom of the criminally
underrated. Flying under the radar for so long does have its advantages, though,
and by the early '90s, Shaver had achieved something of a vaulted cult-hero
status that also happened to line up with a career peak in creativity. Teaming
up with his guitar-slinger son Eddy, he recorded the 1993 classic Tramp on Your
Street under the family name Shaver. Eddy remained a part of his father's band
over the coming years and helped out on subsequent late-'90s highlights like
Highway of Life and Victory. In a catastrophic end to what had been a banner
decade, Shaver endured not only the 1999 death of his wife Brenda, but also of
his mother. Compounding these losses was the unexpected death of his son Eddy a
year later from a heroin overdose.

Turning to his music for comfort, Shaver entered one of the most prolific
periods of his career, kicking off an impressive five-year run with 2001's
excellent The Earth Rolls On and managing a new studio album each year, along
with a live release. Flirting with alt-country, folk, rock, and Americana, he
even turned to spiritual matters on 2007's gospel-inspired Everybody's Brother,
which earned him a Grammy nomination and featured duets with his old friends
Cash and Kristofferson. During this period, he also dabbled in acting, an
endeavor he'd begun in 1996, playing opposite Robert Duvall in The Apostle. His
mid-2000s roles included parts in Secondhand Lions and The Wendell Baker Story.
Additionally, his song "Live Forever" was featured in the 2009 film Crazy Heart,
sung by Duvall.

Shaver continued to tour regularly, releasing a couple more live albums before
returning to the studio for what would end up being his final LP. Released in
2014, Long in the Tooth was a lovingly crafted set of world-weary songs that
ironically marked the singer's first-ever appearance on the Billboard Country
Albums chart, peaking at number 19. Harking back to his outlaw days, it featured
a duet with longtime friend Willie Nelson on "It's Hard to Be an Outlaw." The
album and its long-overdue commercial performance served as a fitting swan song
from one of country music's most enduring and respected songwriters. Shaver died
on October 28, 2020 in Waco, Texas from a stroke. © Timothy Monger



Billy Joe Shaver - I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal...But I'm Gonna Be a Diamond
Someday.rar - 205.3 MB