It’s About Pride is the new album from The Outlaws, a record 4 years in the making and perhaps 20 or more in the waiting. And for original Outlaws vocalist/guitarist Henry Paul, it’s a hard-fought revival whose success can be measured in old fans and new music. “Because The Outlaws have been out of the public eye for so long, it’s almost like starting over,” he explains. “But because of the band’s history, we’re seeing this as a new chapter. We’ve written and recorded this album on our own terms, and we’re out to make a significant impression. What our fans loved then they still love now, but most of all, they recognize the heart and sincerity we put in our music.” For co-founding drummer Monte Yoho, the journey is both bittersweet and jubilant. “I still think about the friends we made when we first came into this industry, how we struggled to define this thing that became known as ‘Southern Rock’,” Yoho says. “This new album embodies all the things we shared musically and personally, as well as the relationships we have with our fans to this day. It’s about where we’ve been, where we’re going, and why we still love to do this.”
History lesson: Formed in Tampa in 1972, The Outlaws – known for their triple-guitar rock attack and three-part country harmonies – became one of the first acts signed by Clive Davis (at the urging of Ronnie Van Zant) to his then-fledgling Arista Records. The band’s first three albums The Outlaws, Lady In Waiting and Hurry Sundown – featuring such rock radio favorites as “There Goes Another Love Song”, “Green Grass & High Tides”, “Knoxville Girl” and “Freeborn Man” – would become worldwide gold and platinum landmarks of the Southern Rock era. Known as ‘The Florida Guitar Army’ by their fans, The Outlaws earned a formidable reputation as an incendiary live act touring with friends The Allman Brothers, Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Marshall Tucker Band and The Charlie Daniels Band as well as The Doobie Brothers, The Who, Eagles and The Rolling Stones. Henry Paul left after the group’s third album to form The Henry Paul Band for Atlantic Records, and later the multi-Platinum country trio Blackhawk. Over the next 20+ years, The Outlaws would experience rampant personnel changes, tonal missteps, ill-fated reunions and bitter trademark battles that left fans – not to mention Paul and Yoho – frustrated and saddened. And with the tragic deaths of co-founding members Frank O’Keefe and Billy Jones in 1995, and especially vocalist/lead guitarist Hughie Thomasson in 2007, it was feared that The Outlaws’ trail had come to an end.
“The Outlaws were the one area of my career where I had regrets,” admits Paul. “More importantly, I think it was the one area in my career where I thought I still have something to prove. I felt compelled to stick my neck out and take a chance of putting this band back together. I knew we would be judged, but I hoped we would be judged on our abilities.” Along with founding members Paul and Yoho, the band features several of Southern Rock’s most respected veterans: Lead guitarist and longtime Outlaw Chris Anderson is well known for his collaborations with artists that include Dickey Betts, Lucinda Williams, Hank Williams Jr., and Skynyrd. Co-lead guitarist Steve Grisham - who joined the band in mid-2013 following the medical leave of guitarist Billy Crain - is a former member of the Soldiers of Fortune era Outlaws, a noted songwriter whose tracks include The Henry Paul Band's Top 40 hit "Keepin' Our Love Alive", and a co-founder of the Southern Rock all-stars, Brothers of the Southland. Keyboardist/vocalist Dave Robbins is a co-founding member of Blackhawk and has written hit songs for artists that include Restless Heart, Kenny Rogers and Eric Clapton. Bassist/vocalist Randy Threet has performed with Pam Tillis, Trisha Yearwood and Blackhawk, and is familiar to TV audiences from USA Network’s ‘Nashville Star’. “From the very beginning, our band had a heart,” Monte Yoho says. “And a lot of people who come out and see this incarnation of the band respond to the exact same things we used to put on that stage in the ‘70s and ‘80s.”
On that stage, the band burns hotter than ever: “The Outlaws helped define Southern Rock for me and for generations of fans,” wrote music journalist Bill Robinson in June 2012 in The Huffington Post. “Seeing them onstage with The Charlie Daniels Band, Marshall Tucker Band, Allman Brothers, Lynyrd Skynyrd or countless others was, for a long time, one of the best experiences I could have. And so it was again when I saw The Outlaws play recently.” The Outlaws’ live shows – more than 150 per year – are blazing 2+ hour tributes to the band’s rich history and fiery rebirth. Classic tracks and fan favorites from the first three albums – as well as The Henry Paul Band’s definitive “Grey Ghost” – share the spotlight with songs from the new disc that are already being embraced by audiences. “I think the new songs go back to those first three classic albums, when the band was proud of its influences from country, blues and jazz,” says Billy Crain. “Plus, Chris Anderson and I have honored and maybe even stepped up the legacy of the ‘guitar army’. Fans are coming away from shows feeling a part of the Outlaws experience.”
But it’s the new album – produced by Michael Bush and Henry Paul – that brings the experience home. The disc opens with “Tomorrow’s Another Night”, a scorching take on the band’s history complete with monster harmonies and a killer hook. “Hidin’ Out In Tennessee” delivers classic Outlaws country/bluegrass energy. “Born To Be Bad” is badass biker boogie and “Last Ghost Town” is kickass guitar rock. “Nothin’ Main About Main Street” is an affecting Springsteen/Seger style look at lost small-town life. “The Flame” – Hughie Thomasson’s nickname – is a potent tribute to the much-loved late Outlaw. Chris Anderson’s “Trail Of Tears” electrifies via bitter history, intense vocals and searing guitars. “Right Where I Belong”, “Alex’s Song” and “Trouble Rides A Fast Horse” could easily be lost tracks from any of the band’s first three albums. The disc’s closer, “So Long”, is a haunting re-recording of Henry’s 1979 classic. “It was the first song on the first Henry Paul Band album, and it’s the final song on this record,” explains Paul. “I wanted it to be a sort of coda to the new music, but I also want it to be a relevant part of the new Outlaws landscape. I think it’s one of the best songs I’ve ever written, and I think we’ve done an admirable job of giving it a new personality.” But the new album’s true centerpiece is its title track, co-written by Henry Paul and Billy Crain. “It’s About Pride” is both tribute and testimony from a band that has lived it all, played it all, and returns to reclaim it all.
“I’m proud to be a part of something that started long ago,” Henry Paul sings reflectively, “a Southern band of brothers bound together by the road/They came from Florida, Georgia, Carolina and Tennessee/With old guitars, tattoos and scars, straight from the heart of Dixie/And our rebel pride.” From its towering chorus to its searing guitar-onslaught finale, “It’s About Pride” is a fierce first-person anthem to the genre, delivered with the poignancy and power of absolute survivors. “It’s a very emotional song,” Paul says. “Depending on my mood and the night, sometimes it’s all I can do to get the words out without crying. It summons up a lot of images of people who are no longer with us, of times we shared standing tall together for the first time. When I first wrote the end of the second verse – ‘The reason ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ means so much to me/Is it’s about pride’ – I knew that people would feel a lot of those same emotions. It’s about an accumulated experience of separation, loss and success.” Almost instantly, the song – and the entire album – is classic Southern Rock and classic Outlaws.
Right now, The Outlaws are headed back on the road, back on the radio and back into the hearts of fans nationwide. “I’m seeing this thing we’ve had for four decades be exposed to whole new audiences,” Monte Yoho says. “We’re having a second life as a band, and it feels better than ever. Best of all, I’m still doing it with some of the same people I’ve known for most of my life.”
“I want people to hear this album and see our show and realize that The Outlaws are back,” says Henry Paul. “Our goal is to unite the fans and bring the band back into the light. In a way, this is like a second chance at my first love. It’s about finishing what we started.” For Henry, Monte, Chris, Steve, Dave and Randy, it’s about a band of brothers who love playing their own style of rock, and who 40 years ago first got the chance to take it from Florida to the world.
For The Outlaws, it’s still about the music. And now more than ever, it’s about pride.
Official Website: The Outlaws The Outlaws: The Legacy of Hughie Thomasson
There are other artist with the same name:
2) The Outlaws were an English instrumental band that recorded in the early 1960s. Among their ranks were notable musicians such as Ritchie Blackmore, Chas Hodges, Mick Underwood, Bobby Graham and Hot Chocolate's Harvey Hinsley and others.
Their name was originally conceived by Joe Meek, who needed a backing group for Mike Berry's "Set Me Free" in 1960.After that recording, they continued being one of the house bands of his recording studio at 304 Holloway Road, London. As such, they were used for recordings, demos and auditions. Many of their songs were written by Meek and credited to his pseudonym, Robert Duke. They appeared as themselves in the 1963 British film, Live It Up!.
3) From their archived info page
"Here is some more information about The Outlaws. They're Djs you know...
The Outlaws did a radio show every Friday night on Kiss 100 which some people said was the best thing ever - landing somewhere between Soulwax / 2 Many DJs and Coldcut’s Solid Steel. They were also given big features in The Face and Mixmag, so they must be really good.
The Outlaws played at Glastonbury 2003, nailing Lost Vagueness on the Saturday afternoon. In 2004 they played the Dance Tent and rocked it once again. They also found time to party at Shambala and The Glade.
You should check them out if you haven't yet: The kids go wild everywhere from New York to Ibiza, on the whole it's pretty lush. In Bristol you should look for the Outlaws nights at Bristol's best venue, The Arc."
They released one full-length DJ mix CD, Too Many Fools Following Too Many Rules, in 2004, and two EPs, From Beyond & Why Does No One Make Records Like This, in 2005, all on Love Recordings. Discogs page
The line-up included Steve Redux, as noted in this press release
Endless Ride
The Outlaws Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
And how echoes through the past
Of all the changes for the better
That I've come to know at last
No one said that it'd be easy
But I finally feel the change
And it moves me like the wind
Across this empty open range
THIS ENDLESS RIDE,
IS THE MARK OF A WANTED MAN
WITH EVERY TOWN THERE'S ALWAYS
ONE MORE ONE NIGHT STAND
RIDING OFF INTO THE SUNSET
BENEATH THE BURNING SKY
I'M JUST ANOTHER SHOOTING STAR
ON AN ENDLESS RIDE
Looking back on all the memories
And scenes that I've been through
Like the heart of this old guitar
It still sounds as good as new
But nothing's made to last forever
So, I play while I still can
But in my heart, I'm always going back
To where it all began
While the drummer summons thunder from the dark
I hear the voices bouncing off the walls
With lonely melodies that fill the halls
It's a legacy that always leaves its mark
The first paragraph sets the tone for the song, describing the singer's realization of the changes they have experienced in their life. They acknowledge that these changes have not come easily, but they have finally embraced them and feel a sense of movement and freedom, like the wind blowing across an empty open range. This opening sets the stage for the theme of the song, which is the endless ride the singer feels they are on.
The chorus emphasizes the idea of the endless ride, comparing it to the mark of a wanted man. It suggests that wherever the singer goes, they leave a mark and create a reputation as they move from town to town. Every new place brings another one-night stand, indicating a transient lifestyle. The mention of riding off into the sunset beneath the burning sky adds a romanticized image of a cowboy figure or an outlaw defying convention. The singer feels like a shooting star, shining brightly but constantly moving forward on this endless ride.
In the second paragraph, the lyrics take a reflective turn as the singer looks back on their memories and the scenes they have been through. They compare the durability of their experiences to the heart of an old guitar that still sounds as good as new. However, they also acknowledge that nothing is meant to last forever. The line "But in my heart, I'm always going back to where it all began" suggests a longing for the past and a desire to go back to their roots.
The final paragraph introduces a new element into the song, mentioning the drummer summoning thunder from the dark and the voices bouncing off the walls. This imagery paints a picture of a musical performance, possibly on stage, where the singer feels the weight of their legacy. The lonely melodies filling the halls leave a mark on the singer, signifying the impact of their music on people's lives. It implies that their legacy is not merely about their reputation as a transient figure but also about the emotional connection they create through their music.
Overall, "Endless Ride" by The Outlaws portrays the journey of a musician living a nomadic lifestyle, constantly moving from place to place and leaving their mark wherever they go. The song explores themes of embracing change, reflecting on memories, and the impact of music on the singer's life and the lives of others.
Line by Line Meaning
I hear the thunder in the distance
I perceive a sense of impending change or danger
And how echoes through the past
And it resounds through the memories of the past
Of all the changes for the better
Of every positive transformation
That I've come to know at last
That I have finally come to understand
No one said that it'd be easy
Nobody claimed it would be effortless
But I finally feel the change
But now I truly sense the transformation
And it moves me like the wind
And it affects me deeply, like a gust of wind
Across this empty open range
Across this vast, desolate expanse
THIS ENDLESS RIDE
This unending journey
IS THE MARK OF A WANTED MAN
Is the consequence of being pursued
WITH EVERY TOWN THERE'S ALWAYS
With every new place visited, there's always
ONE MORE ONE NIGHT STAND
Another fleeting encounter
RIDING OFF INTO THE SUNSET
Departing under the setting sun
BENEATH THE BURNING SKY
Underneath the scorching sky
I'M JUST ANOTHER SHOOTING STAR
I am merely another fleeting phenomenon
ON AN ENDLESS RIDE
On a never-ending journey
Looking back on all the memories
Reflecting upon all the experiences of the past
And scenes that I've been through
And the situations that I have encountered
Like the heart of this old guitar
Similar to the essence of this aging guitar
It still sounds as good as new
It continues to sound fresh and vibrant
But nothing's made to last forever
However, nothing is designed to exist indefinitely
So, I play while I still can
Therefore, I perform music while I am able
But in my heart, I'm always going back
Yet, deep within me, I am continuously returning
To where it all began
To the place of origin
While the drummer summons thunder from the dark
While the percussionist conjures a powerful sound
I hear the voices bouncing off the walls
I perceive the reverberation of voices
With lonely melodies that fill the halls
With pensive melodies that occupy the spaces
It's a legacy that always leaves its mark
It is a lasting impact left by a tradition
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Written by: Henry Paul, Dale Oliver, Billy Crain
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind