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Before rock & roll gave
listeners the Traveling Wilburys, country music spawned the Highwaymen,
a super group of mythic proportions that featured living legends Johnny
Cash, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, and Kris Kristofferson. The
foursome had worked together in various combinations over the years, but
teamed up under the Highwaymen umbrella in 1985. Their first single
together, "Highwayman," topped the country charts that year and spawned
an album of the same name on Columbia. The album also proved mightily
popular, hitting number one on the country listings and producing a Top
20 follow-up single in a cover of Guy Clark's "Desperadoes Waiting for a
Train." Afterward, the members returned to their individual careers for
a few years, but reconvened in 1990 to record a sequel, Highwayman 2. It
reached number four on the country album charts and spun off the minor
hit "Silver Stallion," but didn't cause quite the same stir overall as
its predecessor. Another layoff followed, and when the Highwaymen
returned for a third outing in 1995, they inked a new deal with
Liberty/Capitol. The Road Goes on Forever was produced by Don Was, but
proved a distinct commercial disappointment, and the group did not
record again prior to Jennings' death in 2002. ~ Steve Huey, All Music
Guide
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