After the unqualified success of 
Hank Williams, Jr. & Friends, which included members of 
the Allman Brothers, 
the Marshall Tucker Band, 
Charlie Daniels, 
Waylon, 
Willie, and plenty of others, 
Hank Jr. had found his voice. 
The New South is part two of 
Williams' outlaw saga, one that would take him from being a great writer and interpreter of other people's songs to being a self-parody. 
Waylon is on board on this set as a guitarist, a backing vocalist, and, most importantly, as co-producer with Richie Aldright. The song selection is amazing. Opening with the original "Feelin' Better," 
Williams states his case for leaving his old stage persona behind convincingly with 
Jennings underlining every line on the refrain. The cover of 
Steve Young's classic "Montgomery in the Rain" is full of pathos and emotion and features some killer guitar work from Leon Sherrill. 
Williams also covers 
Young's "Long Way From Hollywood" to close the set. But the confidence 
Williams displays here is uncanny as he tackles with great tenderness 
Gordon Lightfoot's "Looking at the Rain," his pop's "You're Gonna Change (Or I'm Gonna Leave)" as a rock & roll song, and 
Bill Monroe's "Uncle Pen" pretty much straight up. 
Williams contributes two more songs to the set in the ballad "Once and for All," which spells out the wages of a life spent rambling, and the title track, a modern cracker anthem complete with fiddles, a pedal steel, and a slow- to mid-tempo strut. The highlight of the latter part of the set is 
Williams' read of 
Jessi Colter's "Storms Never Last," the most pure and simple country song on the entire album. And 
Williams sings the hell out of it. "Tennessee" is a poignant song considering 
Williams Jr.'s struggles with Nashville up to that point in wanting to get away from recording programs solely of his father's songs. The mold was broken on 
Hank Williams, Jr. & Friends, and this is a bit of comeuppance that sounds a bit like 
Toy Caldwell's "Can't You See." Like its predecessor, this is a winner all the way through, full of stomping outlaw music and beer-swilling ballads. ~ Thom Jurek