Sings the Ballads of the True West was re-issued in 2002 (see
2002 in music) through
Legacy Recordings, with two bonus tracks, one of which is an instrumental version of a track available on the album. The original album was included on the
Bear Family box set Come Along and Ride This Train.
Baltimore based creative folklore/music ensemble
Television Hill have recorded a 6-song concept EP called
My Name's Hardin, the title of which pokes fun at
Bob Dylan's misspelling of outlaw
Wes Hardin's name on his 1967 release John Wesley Harding and paying homage to Dylan's record and
Johnny Cash's double concept LP Sings the Ballads of the True West. The EP is a biographical work exploring Wes Hardin's life and draws from Hardin's autobiography, Letters from Prison and an assortment of other biographical and relevant source material.
Mean as Hell!
In March, 1966 (see
1966 in music), Columbia released Mean as Hell! : Ballads From The True West, a single LP distillation of Sings the Ballads of the True West. It peaked at #4 on the top country albums chart. It has not been released on CD.