A Few Ole Country Boys

"A Few Ole Country Boys"
Single by Randy Travis featuring George Jones
from the album Heroes & Friends
B-side "Smokin' the Hive" (w/ Clint Eastwood)
Released November 21, 1990
Format CD single, 7" single
Genre Country
Length 3:37
Label Warner Bros. 19586
Songwriter(s) Troy Seals
Mentor Williams
Producer(s) Kyle Lehning
Randy Travis singles chronology
"He Walked on Water"
(1990)
"A Few Ole Country Boys"
(1990)
"Heroes and Friends"
(1991)

"He Walked on Water"
(1990)
"A Few Ole Country Boys'"
(1990)
"Heroes and Friends"
(1991)
George Jones singles chronology
"Radio Lover"
(1989) Radio Lover1989
"A Few Ole Country Boys"
(1990) A Few Ole Country Boys1990
"All Fall Down"
(1991) All Fall Down1991

"A Few Ole Country Boys" is a song written by Troy Seals and Mentor Williams, and recorded by American country music artist Randy Travis. It is a duet with country musician George Jones. It was released in November 1990 as the first single from his album of duets Heroes & Friends. "A Few Ole Country Boys" peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart[1] and reached number 4 on the Canadian RPM country Tracks chart.

Background

By 1990, Randy Travis was country music's hottest star and the face of the "new traditionalist" movement, a movement that sought to bring back the honky-tonk sound and classic vocals to country music that George Jones had done so much to pioneer. Ironically, artists like Travis, Dwight Yoakam, and Ricky Van Shelton were indirectly responsible for nudging older country artists off the charts during this time as country radio became obsessed with tapping into a younger market. The single was significant because it made Jones the only country artist in history to have a Top 10 song in five consecutive decades. Travis has always cited Jones as a primary influence and the song reflects this, alluding to the younger singer's troubled past (Travis had been a juvenile delinquent) and how he drew inspiration from Jones. George was equally complimentary in his 1995 memoir I Lived to Tell It All, singling out Travis for praise while lamenting how country radio had turned its back on older country artists: "If Randy Travis had come to town last month, he probably wouldn't have gotten a record deal. He's too good and too original...And he doesn't wear a cowboy hat or pimple cream. Today's labels are looking for pretty boys and girls." At the end of the song, Travis parodies Jones' idiosyncratic phrasing.

Chart performance

Chart (1990) Peak
position
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[2] 4
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[3] 8

Year-end charts

Chart (1990) Position
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[4] 63

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 351.
  2. "Top RPM Country Tracks: Issue 9177." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. November 24, 1990. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
  3. "Randy Travis – Chart history" Billboard Hot Country Songs for Randy Travis.
  4. "RPM Top 100 Country Tracks of 1990". RPM. December 22, 1990. Retrieved August 23, 2013.


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