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David Allan Coe

Penitentiary Blues(Shout! Factory/Hacktone)

By John Nova Lomax

Published on September 15, 2005

What country music needs is a few more young guys like elder statesman David Allan Coe, one of the last of the last dangerous men in C&W. A couple of weeks ago, rerelease specialists Shout Factory dusted off Penitentiary Blues, the 30-years-out-of-print debut Coe penned while in the joint in the early 1970s. Songs such as the rave-up "Cell No. 33," the hilarious "Death Row," the laconic "Oh Warden" and the intensely bluesy title track (All that marijuana/Sellin' cocaine/Now they're takin' blood tests/From my heroin veins) blaze with hard-won authenticity. Hell, this special edition even comes with an extra feature Snoop Dogg probably wishes he had thought of first: a 20-page Coe-penned pamphlet called "How to Pull Time (and Parole)." "When some guy puts his hands on you," Coe writes, "then you should do everything in your power TO KNOCK HIS FUCKING BRAINS OUT." Even though the expletive is prudishly crossed out in the notes, that's still pretty damn gangsta.


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