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The full Fenixon recording was finally released by Jennings' label Black Country Rock in 2014. Some of the material was remastered and used for the album Waylon Forever. They called it Fenixon (a play on the words "phoenix" and "son") but could not find a label to distribute it. In 1996, Jennings and his father recorded an album together. In 2011, he released the KilRaven track "Only You" on the album "Missed The Boat". In high school Jennings fronted an industrial rock band called KilRaven for his high school's talent show. He started playing guitar at 14 and on occasion he'd play percussion in his father's band. At 8 years old, he began taking piano lessons. He lived the first few years of his life in a crib on his parents' tour bus surrounded by the likes of Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson. "I love my mom," says Jennings, "but I like Dad's version better. But his father said he came up with the name when, moments after the newborn emerged from his mother's womb, the boy sprayed a nurse before anyone could put on his first diaper. There are two different accounts regarding how he got his nickname "Shooter." His mother cited her, and husband Waylon Jennings', love of western culture and cowboy art for inspiring the gun-derived moniker. Jennings was born in Nashville, Tennessee, on May 19, 1979. Marilyn Manson argued against Jennings's work being classified as country music, saying "southern" was a more appropriate classification, noting the latter "also drags in a bit of the Stones, in a way". Jennings's musical style encompasses southern rock, country, hard rock or heavy rock, outlaw country, country rock, electronica, blues rock, rock and roll, industrial rock, psychedelic metal, alternative country, alternative rock, arena rock, avant-pop, blues, Eurodisco, heavy metal, neotraditional country, progressive metal, progressive rock, rhythm and blues, roots rock, stoner rock, swamp rock and Texas blues. The song ends with Daisy (Catherine Bach) saying 'we love you Waylon' as the music fades out.Shooter Jennings's influences include David Bowie, Pink Floyd, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Hank Williams Jr., Nine Inch Nails, Guns N' Roses, Rage Against the Machine and Marilyn Manson. They also made a video for the song which is on the 7th season Dukes of Hazzard DVD set. Waylon composed the theme song Theme from 'The Dukes of Hazzard' (Good Ol' Boys) and was also the Balladeer (narrator) on the show.Schneider, Wopat and Bach reworked the theme song, added to it and re-recorded it. Shooter also plays his father in a scene set several years previously for this scene he did cut his hair and shave, heightening the resemblance to Waylon.On March 22, 2006, Jennings' mother Lorene Beatrice (n?e Shipley) Jennings died in Littlefield, Texas, at the age of 84.On July 6, 2006, Jennings was inducted to Hollywood's Rock Wall in Hollywood, California along with former bandmate Kris Kristofferson.In 2006 Jennings received a tribute from John Schneider, Tom Wopat and Catherine Bach (Bo, Luke and Daisy Duke). He is interred in the Mesa City Cemetery, Mesa, Arizona.In the 2005 Academy Award-winning Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line, Waylon was portrayed by his son, Shooter, as a tribute to him, though the younger man's shoulder-length hair and beard made him look nothing like how his father had appeared at the time (circa 1966) when Cash and Jennings shared an apartment outside Nashville.

Atlantic Records had signed Nelson when the time was right, and they were looking to sign Jennings as well. Waylon finally had a rock star recording contract, and he looked the part Reshen had advised him to keep the beard he had grown in the hospital, in order to cultivate a more rock and roll image.By 1973, Nelson had returned to the music industry under the auspices of Atlantic Records, and was on his way to music superstardom.Now based in Austin, Texas, Nelson had made inroads into the rock and roll press by attracting a diverse fan base that included the young rock music audience. Re-negotiations of his touring contracts yielded similar positive results, and he began turning a profit from his touring (almost unheard-of in Nashville at that time). Nevertheless, the title track is often considered the first song of the outlaw country movement.Reshen drove a hard bargain, but RCA finally agreed to his terms: a $75,000 advance and near-complete artistic control. Also in 1972, RCA issued Ladies Love Outlaws, an album that Jennings never wanted released.

He wanted similar freedom for himself?an unprecedented move in 1972 Nashville.
