Bobby Bare, Jr. may have begun his career when he was eight years old by the side of his dad, but as a grownup he's carved out a respectable niche with music that falls somewhere between hard rock, roots rock, indie rock, and alt-country.
Bobby Bare, Jr. was born on June 28, 1966 in Nashville, Tennessee; his father was the successful country singer
Bobby Bare, who'd scored hits with the songs "Detroit City," "500 Miles," and "Streets of Baltimore," among many others. The
Bare family lived just outside Nashville in Hendersonville, Tennessee, where their neighbors were
George Jones and
Tammy Wynette. In 1974,
Bare brought his son into the studio to record "Daddy, What If," a
Shel Silverstein tune that imagined a conversation between a father and son. The tune became a hit and went on to win a Grammy, and
Bare Jr. became a regular presence at his father's concerts, singing the tune with his dad; when he was too old to perform the song, he worked as part of
Bare's stage crew and at the merchandise table.
While
Bare Jr. attended the University of Tennessee and received a degree in psychology, by his own admission his goal was to "avoid working a real job at any cost," and he began playing out and writing songs, with
Silverstein offering to critique anything he wrote. In the mid-'90s,
Bare formed a tough but witty rock band called
Bare Jr., and the group scored a deal with Immortal Records, a hard rock label whose big acts were
Incubus and
Korn; as
Bare said, "It was awesome to be offered a deal with (noted roots music label) Lost Highway, but it meant more to have a record-deal offer from somebody that didn't know what my family background was."
Bare Jr. cut two albums for Immortal, 1998's
Boo-Tay and 2000's Brainwasher, but neither connected commercially and the group split up. In 2002,
Bare recorded a more personal and stylistically diverse independent album with a rotating cast of musicians; the band and the album were called
Bobby Bare Jr.'s Young Criminals Starvation League, and the album was
Bare's first for pioneering alt-country imprint Bloodshot Records.
The Young Criminals' Starvation League became
Bare's new ongoing project, releasing the
OK - I'm Sorry... EP in 2003 and the albums
From the End of Your Leash and
The Longest Meow in 2004 and 2006, respectively. In the 2009 EP
American Bread,
Bare and his friends attacked a handful of songs by two once-fashionable bands,
America and
Bread. In 2010, he released his first album simply as
Bobby Bare, Jr., a song cycle titled
A Storm, a Tree, My Mother's Head, which was inspired by a variety of personal crises and featured backing from members of
My Morning Jacket. The
Shel Silverstein tribute album
Twistable, Turnable Man, which was produced in part by
Bare, also arrived in 2010. In 2012,
Bare contributed vocals to an album by his father,
Darker Than Light, and in 2014 he returned with another Young Criminals' Starvation League effort,
Undefeated; it was preceded by a 7" vinyl EP from Fat Possum Records, Shame on Me. ~ Mark Deming