Bob Wills' songbook -- which, of course, includes tunes popularized, not written, by
Wills -- is one of the most resilient in country music, ranking alongside
Hank Williams in popularity and its ability to be reinterpreted in continuously fresh fashions. So, it comes as no surprise that
George Jones, one of the greatest singers in country, did a bang-up job with his tribute album, the 1962 platter
George Jones Sings Bob Wills. Where some
Wills tributes are faithful to a fault,
Jones, as produced by
Pappy Daily, plays these songs as hardcore honky tonk, occasionally informed by Western swing, but only as a coloring device. He is singing these songs in his signature pure country style, and the results are pretty terrific, not only because this is the hardest country he cut at United Artists, fueled by a crackerjack band playing at its peak, but because these are tremendous songs that are open to such a sly reinterpretation as given to them by
Jones and
Daily. Furthermore, in addition to the standards -- "Bubbles in My Beer," "Faded Love," "Roly Poly," "Take Back to Tulsa," "Time Changes Everything," and "San Antonio Rose" -- he finds a few obscurities in "The Warm Red Wine," "Worried Mind," and "Silver Dew on the Bluegrass Tonight," which help accentuate his own spin on
Wills' music. This record is so good, you're inclined to forgive
Jones for sitting out the last two songs and letting the bandmembers play since, after all, they, like
the Possum or any other musician, sound at their best when playing the music of
Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys. And that's why this is a small treasure in
George Jones' discography.