Outlaw Roots — The Hank Jr. Legacy (Week 9)

Feeling Better 🎶 Tuesday Gone..

For this week’s Hank post I picked two songs from very different moments in his career  “Feelin’ Better” comes from the album The New South (1977), a record that arrived not long after Hank’s near-fatal mountain fall in 1975 and marked the period where he really started breaking away from Nashville’s expectations and forging the Bocephus sound alongside the outlaw movement led by artists like Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. Ten years later came “Tuesday’s Gone” on the album Wild Streak (1987), a southern-rock-leaning cover of the classic originally recorded by Lynyrd Skynyrd in 1973. By that point Hank was in the middle of a huge 80s run where Wild Streak produced multiple country hits like “Young Country,” proving that the rebellious sound he started building in the late 70s had fully taken hold.

Also a cool fact about “Tuesday’s Gone”… it’s one of the first songs I ever learned on guitar back in 1988. I didn’t even know at the time that it was a Skynyrd song — I thought it was a Bocephus original haha. I think it was about a year later when I finally learned the truth. 😁… it’s a beautiful cover..

So let’s get into the music… yall have a great weekend. 🎸

© 2026 Bryan Loia Hudson. All Rights Reserved.

`’.,°~

6 Replies to “Outlaw Roots — The Hank Jr. Legacy (Week 9)”

  1. I’m loving the history of songs. Who wrote it? Who performed it first? It’s all so fascinating. Last week I was driving and heard Etta James singing an Eagles song. I literally looked at the Car Play screen and said how did that happen? When I got home later, I actually researched it. It turns out that Etta James loved the Eagles original and decided to record it for herself.. love this stuff!

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