Much like the successful seventies album Wanted! The Outlaws, Walking the Line features duets and solo cuts taken from various albums and repackaged as a single album. Jones and Haggard had recorded a duet album, A Taste of Yesterday's Wine in 1982 (the title cut having been by Nelson) while Haggard and Nelson had collaborated on Pancho & Lefty the same year. It reached number 39 on the Billboard country albums chart.[1] All three artists had been under contract to CBS Records in the early eighties. The album does not feature a song with all three singing.
- "I Gotta Get Drunk" (Willie Nelson)
- "No Show Jones" (George Jones, Glen Martin)
- "Pancho & Lefty" (Townes Van Zandt)
- "Yesterday's Wine" (Nelson)
- "Half a Man" (Nelson)
- "Big Butter and Egg Man (Armstrong, Venable)
- "Heaven and Hell" (Nelson)
- "Midnight Rider" (Gregg Allman)
- "Are the Good Times Really Over (I Wish a Buck Was Still Silver)" (Merle Haggard)
- "A Drunk Can't be a Man" (Jones, Earl Montgomery)