Bartender Song (Sittin' At a Bar) [Nashville Country Version]
Rehab & Hank Williams, Jr.
Are You Ready For the Country (feat. Eric Church)
Hank Williams, Jr.
A Country Boy Can Survive
Hank Williams, Jr.
There's a Tear In My Beer
Hank Williams, Jr. & Hank Williams
My Name Is Bocephus
Hank Williams, Jr.
All For The Love Of Sunshine (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, November 8, 1970)
Hank Williams, Jr.
That's How They Do It In Dixie
Hank Williams, Jr., Big & Rich, Gretchen Wilson & Van Zant
Come On Over To the Country
Hank Williams, Jr.
Don Juan D'Bubba
Hank Williams, Jr.
Hog Wild
Hank Williams, Jr.
Artist Playlists
Hank Williams Jr. Essentials
Expanding from traditional twang into a rowdy cocktail of country, rock, and blues.
Hank Williams, Jr.: Deep Cuts
The untamable star gets political in these country gems.
Artist Biography
He was born into the family business, but Hank Williams Jr. was always intent on burning it down and building it anew. At age eight, the boy nicknamed Bocephus was entrusted with keeping the legacy of his late father—country-music pioneer Hank Williams—alive through faithful cover renditions that endeared him to the country establishment but left him creatively stifled. “It was fun for the little boy to be doing Hank Williams,” he once said, “but it was hell for the man.” The Shreveport, Louisiana–born Williams found liberation in Southern rock: its renegade attitude inspired his 1975 outlaw-country bellwether Hank Williams Jr. and Friends. A near-fatal hiking accident that same year prompted him to cover up his resulting facial scars with the beard, sunglasses, and cowboy hat that became his signature bad-boy look. Since then, Hank Jr. has come to embody Southern culture, amassing a deep repertoire of raucous, boogie-woogie chart-toppers that celebrate debauchery and survival below the Mason-Dixon line. (His 1984 single “All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight” was adapted into the theme song for the ultimate beer-can-crushing ritual: Monday Night Football.) But that brash bonhomie has always been tempered by a deep-seated Dixie pride, one that’s let successors like Kid Rock, Gretchen Wilson, and Hank Jr.’s own metal-loving son, Hank III, unapologetically flaunt their roots.