Released in 1989 just three years after his debut, Just Lookin' for a Hit may have been a bit premature for a greatest-hits album, but it did the trick and sold better than any album
Dwight Yoakam had thus far issued. This set is chock-full of the definitive
Dwight -- at the time -- from the opener, a hard rocking version of the
Dave Alvin & the Blasters' "Long White Cadillac," to his self-penned honky tonk soul jam "Little Ways," before moving into hardcore barroom twang with
Johnny Horton's "Honky Tonk Man" and the rockabilly country kicker "I Got You." Just how closely
Yoakam walked the line between hard country and soulful rockabilly is nowhere more evident than it is on his cover of
Doc Pomus' "Little Sister." Thankfully his theme "Guitars, Cadillacs" is here as is his duet with
k.d. lang on
Gram Parsons' "Sin City." Add "I Sang Dixie," "Please, Please Baby," and his duet with
Buck Owens on "Steets of Bakersfield." When one considers that these are merely highlights -- and some of them arguable choices -- from his first three records, the true value of
Yoakam as a recording artist who single-handedly revitalized traditional country music becomes evident. This is a smoking hits collection but is only a taste of the treasures that lie within the individual albums themselves. ~ Thom Jurek