Skip to main content alibris logo
The Bocephus Box [Curb] - Hank Williams, Jr.
Filter Results
Shipping
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. A Country Boy Can Survive
  2. Family Tradition
  3. To Love Somebody
  4. Old Flame, New Fire
  5. Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line
Show All Tracks
  1. A Country Boy Can Survive
  2. Family Tradition
  3. To Love Somebody
  4. Old Flame, New Fire
  5. Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line
  6. I've Got Rights
  7. I Just Ain't Been Able
  8. Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound
  9. Outlaw Women
  10. (I Don't Have) Anymore Love Songs
  11. O.D.'d in Denver
  12. Come and Go Blues
  13. The Conversation
  14. Old Habits
  15. Kaw-Liga
  16. If You Don't Like Hank Williams
  17. Dixie on My Mind
  18. Texas Women
  19. Ramblin' Man
  20. Waitin' on the Tables to Turn
  21. A Country Boy Can Survive
  22. Born to Boogie
  23. Honky Tonk Women
  24. All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down)
  25. I've Been Down
  26. La Grange
  27. Leave Them Boys Alone
  28. Blue Jean Blues
  29. Midnight Rider
  30. Now I Know How George Feels
  31. All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming over Tonight
  32. Major Moves
  33. Ain't Misbehavin'
  34. Lawyers, Guns and Money
  35. This Ain't Dallas
  36. Two Old Cats Like Us
  37. Country State of Mind
  38. Mind Your Own Business
  39. Secret Agent Man
  40. Wild Dogs
  41. My Name Is Bocephus
  42. Workin' for MCA
  43. I Really Like Girls/Rock & Roll Music
  44. House of the Rising Sun]
  45. The Blues Man
  46. Keep Your Hands to Yourself
  47. Walk This Way
  48. Heaven Can't Be Found
  49. Thanks a Lot
  50. All My Rowdy Friends (Have Settled Down) (Solo)
  51. A Country Boy Can Survive
  52. You're Gonna Be a Sorry Man
  53. Tuesday's Gone
  54. Mannish Boy
  55. Finders Are Keepers
  56. There's a Tear in My Beer
  57. Big Mamou
  58. Man to Man
  59. Stoned at the Jukebox
Show Fewer Tracks

The years covered on Curb's The Bocephus Box (1979-1999) are the 20 years where Hank Jr. was an American icon, the larger-than-life rowdy man of country. His rise began in the early '80s, when he hit upon a terrific blend of honky tonk, Southern rock, blues, and country that appealed to rock and country audiences alike -- rednecks of all persuasions, as less charitable critics would say. Throughout the '80s, he ruled the country charts, as every single one of his new albums went gold. For some observers, he slipped into ...

loading