Country and Americana occupy two sides of the same coin, but the latterโs boom in the 1990s would not have happened if it werenโt for country music that came before. Letโs look at just a handful of songs that heavily inspired 1990s (and beyond) Americana and alternative country tunes. If youโre a classic country fan, I bet you know these songs all too well.
โPancho And Leftyโ by Townes Van Zandt (1972)
Not only did this Townes Van Zandt classic inspire their plainspoken, narrative-driven storytelling in songwriting that 1990s Americana artists leaned into, but โPancho and Leftyโ also inspired country musicians in the decades after it was released. Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard released their own version of the song years later in 1983 to great acclaim. โPancho And Leftyโ continues to be covered to this day, and itโll probably never go out of style.
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โAre You Sure Hank Done It This Wayโ by Waylon Jennings (1975)
Outlaw country and late 20th-century Americana go hand-in-hand. Outlaw country was, in a way, a very punk rock response to the polished status quo of Nashville country music. Likewise, Americana and alt-country music in the 1990s, notably from Uncle Tupelo and The Waco Brothers, had a DIY ethos and attitude that was not unlike outlaw country music. โAre You Sure Hank Done It This Wayโ by Waylon Jennings is just one of many outlaw country songs that likely inspired the new eraโs musicianship. Plus, Iโm biased here. This is one of my favorite Waylon Jennings songs. Iโm sure many fans would agree, considering this song topped the Hot Country Songs chart back in 1975.
โDesperados Waiting For A Trainโ by The Highwaymen (1985)
โDesperados Waiting For A Trainโ by The Highwaymen was released just a few years before the 1990s Americana boom really took off. And itโs a country classic for the ages. A solid roots revival sort of track, โDesperados Waiting For A Trainโ was originally recorded by a ton of artists in the 1970s. Some include Jerry Jeff Walker to Rita Coolidge to David Allan Coe to Tom Rush. Guy Clark didnโt release his own version until 1975. And none of them were as successful as The Highwaymenโs version from 1985. That track peaked at No. 15 on the Hot Country Songs chart. Considering that the supergroup was made up of the finest country and Americana had to offer, Iโm not surprised this song was so influential among musicians in the 90s.
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