38 Special - Wild Eyed Southern Boys - Special Deluxe Collector's Edition
38 Special - Wild Eyed Southern Boys - Special Deluxe Collector's Edition
Share
Digitally remastered and expanded edition includes four bonus tracks. Features 16 page full color booklet that includes 3,500 word essay, enhanced artwork, rarely seen photos and new interviews. Although the American marketplace was bursting with great Southern rock bands during the 1970s, many of them multi-platinum sellers such as Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Marshall Tucker Band and Molly Hatchet, there was always room for talented newcomers. For 38 Special this was manna from heaven, launching into a marketplace that was primed for regional music, shifting enormous quantities of records, and selling out big venues. Formed in Jacksonville, Florida, and fronted by Donnie Van Zant (brother of Skynyd's Ronnie and Johnny), the band secured a deal with cool independent label A&M and carved out a solid reputation as one of the best Southern rock bands. But the early 1980s the movement had to face some harsh realities, as musical trends were rapidly changing. 'Wild-Eyed Southern Boys', their fourth album, produced by Rodney Mills (Skynyrd, the Outlaws) and originally issued in 1981, showcased the band engaged in a wider musical palette; one that paid handsome dividends and, ultimately, prolonged their commercial shelf life by some considerable time. Focussing on sharper, more hook-laden songs, the band's sound was refined but not tampered with. They were still very much a gritty, guitar driven, down-home rock band, but with songs that could now be played on mainstream radio. Tracks like the title track, 'Throw Out The Line', 'Bring It On' and, with the help of Survivor's Jim Peterik, the hit single 'Hold On Loosely' helped to propel the album into the US top 20 securing them a platinum award and a reputation second to none.