Hillbilly Deluxe appeared in April 1987, a mere thirteen months after his debut LP. Producer Pete Anderson later recalled: The result was a second album of remarkable high quality, with
AllMusic noting, "
Hillbilly Deluxe is proof that beyond a shadow of a doubt, Dwight Yoakam's
Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc. was no fluke. There's no sophomore slump here…In fact, it can be heard and viewed as Yoakam and producer/guitarist Pete Anderson cementing the commitment to
Bakersfield-styled honky tonk music." The album opens with the newly-written "
Little Ways," which peaked at No. 8 on the country singles chart. (It topped the country charts in Canada.) In the "Beyond Nashville" episode of the 2003 documentary
Lost Highway, Yoakam admits the elongated opening vocal was an approximation of Buck Owens trademark singing style on songs like "
I've Got a Tiger By the Tail". "Little Ways" is distinctly an homage to Buck, a signature combination of the drawn-out phrasing and hard-twang guitar that had distinguished so many of his hits. (In the liner notes of the LP, Yoakam wrote: "VERY SPECIAL THANKS: to Buck Owens for all his records that still serve as an inspiration for the California honky-tonk sound.") Additional musical influences can be found in the cover songs Yoakam chose to record for the album, including
Stonewall Jackson’s 1959 hit "Smoke Along the Tracks," a radical reworking of
Lefty Frizzell’s "
Always Late with Your Kisses," and
Elvis Presley’s 1961 song "
Little Sister," which would be the album's first single and biggest hit, peaking at No. 7. As on his debut LP,
Hillbilly Deluxe contains seven original songs that display a depth and maturity on par with any country music songwriter at the time, especially the ballads "Johnson’s Love" and "1,000 Miles." Clocking in at nearly four-and-a-half minutes, the former tells the mournful story of a man named Johnson who pines for his lost love Maureen, calling her name "deep in the night or sometimes right at dawn." In his book
A Thousand Miles from Nowhere, biographer Don McLeese states the song is steeped in the Kentucky memories of Yoakam's coal-mining grandfather Luther Tibbs, and quotes the singer, "My grandfather is the central character in ‘Johnson’s Love,’ but not him literally. It's just the tool that allows the writer to move beyond himself to something larger than himself. That's the task at hand. And that's what the best writing can be, using what you know to move beyond yourself." McLeese contends the song "sounds like Yoakam’s version of
George Jones’s classic ‘
He Stopped Loving Her Today.’" However, the main character in that song is finally set free from his heartbreak by his own death, but In "Johnson’s Love" there is no such deliverance, with the narrator observing: :
I heard the preacher at the service :
Say from love he’s finally free :
But I say love it knows no season :
It haunts the soul eternally Anderson's production on the ballad is irretrievably country, as it is on the foreboding "1,000 Miles," which finds a man boarding "flight 209" and ruminating on his broken marriage. The song's elusive lyrics are filled with self-pity and self-loathing ("I owe so much to pride, it’s true: it brought an end to me and you...") and it features Yoakam's stellar singing and unique phrasing. Faster in tempo but no less dark is the suicidal "This Drinkin' Will Kill Me," a tune Yoakam demoed in Los Angeles in 1981 and chose to close the album with. Similarly, the rollicking "
Please, Please Baby", which boasts impressive guitar work from Anderson, and the jaunty "Throughout All Time" are upbeat numbers with despairing, regretful lyrics. On
Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc., Yoakam paid tribute to his roots with songs like "Miner’s Prayer" and "Bury Me," and he includes another tribute on
Hillbilly Deluxe with the poignant "Readin', Rightin', Rt. 23," which describes the migration of a younger generation from the Kentucky homes of their coal-mining parents to the factories of the city, not knowing "that old highway would lead them to a world of misery." Sounding wistful, joyful, and cynical all at the same time, the tune is a brilliant display of songwriting, with Yoakam using simple language to create vivid pictures of a people and a way of life with deep family roots and ‘sweet hillbilly charm." ==Critical reception==