A Country Music Outlaw, Resurrected On his new album, Ray Wylie Hubbard serves up a mostly greasy plateful of growling, country-fried rhythm and blues, heavy on themes of sin and the South. But most notable is an exception to this mix, a soulful neo-gospel re-working of a late-'90s original called "Resurrection."

Review

A Country Music Outlaw, Resurrected

Resurrection

  • <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/5573820/5573829" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">

Ray Wylie Hubbard became a sort of Bard of the beer-joint jukebox in the '70s. hide caption

toggle caption

Monday's Pick

  • Song: "Resurrection"
  • Artist: Ray Wylie Hubbard
  • CD: Snake Farm
  • Genre: Roots-Rock

With his mane of gray hair and his purple John Lennon sunglasses, Ray Wylie Hubbard looks like one part Eastern mystic, two parts desert prophet — and not at all like someone who wrote one of the most durable honky-tonk anthems of the last 40 years. Although "Up Against the Wall Redneck Mother" made Hubbard a sort of Bard of the beer-joint jukebox back in the '70s, his work has matured considerably. He thanks a sobered-up Stevie Ray Vaughan for helping him get clean and serious about his music, and over the past 20 years, Hubbard has become one of roots music's most revered songwriters.

On his new album Snake Farm, Hubbard serves up a mostly greasy plateful of growling, country-fried rhythm and blues, heavy on themes of sin and the South. But its an exception to this mix, a soulful neo-gospel re-working of a late-'90s original called "Resurrection," that best illustrates why Hubbard is regarded a musical force nearly four decades after he first established himself as one of country music's finest outlaws.

Listen to yesterday's 'Song of the Day.'