- CD: "The Best of Bobby Bare"
- CD: "All American Country" (Columbia)
- CD: "Pure Country" (SSP)
- (1983) Album: "Drinkin' from the Bottle"
- (1982) Album: "Aint' Got Nothin' to Lose"
- (1981) Album: "As Is"
- (1980) Album: "Drunk & Crazy"
- (1980) Album: "Down & Dirty"
- (1978) Album: "Sleep Wherever I Fall"
- (1978) Album: "Bare"
- (1977) Album: "Me and McDill"
- (1976) Album: "The Winner and Other Losers"
- (1975) Album: "Cowboys and Daddys"
- (1975) Album: "Hard Time Hungrys"
- (1974) Album: "Singin' in the Kitchen"
- (1973) Album: "Bobby Bare Sings Lullabys, Legends and Lies"
- (1973) Album: "I Hate Goodbyes/Ride Me Down Easy"
- (1972) Album: "High and Dry"
- (1972) Album: "What Am I Gonna Do?"
- (1971) Album: "I Need Some Good News Bad"
- (1971) Album: "Where Have All the Seasons Gone?"
- (1970) Album: "This is Bare Country"
- (1970) Album: "Real Thing"
- (1970) Album: "Your Husband My Wife" with Skeeter Davis
- (1969) Album: "(Margie's At) The Lincoln Park Inn (And Other Controversial Country Songs)"
- (1968) Compilation album: "The Best of Bobby Bare - Volume 2"
- (1967) Album: "The English Country Side" with The Hillsliders
- (1967 Album: "A Bird Named Yesterday"
- (1967) Album: "The Games of Triangles" with Norma Jean & Liz Anderson
- (1966) Album: "This I Believe"
- (1966) Album: "The Streets of Baltimore"
- (1966) Album: "Talk Me Some Sense"
- (1966) Compilation album: "The Best of Bobby Bare"
- (1965) Album: "Constant Sorrow"
- (1965) Album: "Tunes for Two" with Skeeter Davis
- (1964) Album: "The Travelin' Bare"
- (1963) Album: "500 Miles Away from Home"
- (1963) Album: "'Detroit City' and Other Hits"
- (2010) Covers the song "The Living Legend" on the CD compilation "Twistable, Turnable Man: A Musical Tribute to the Songs of Shel Silverstein"
- (1959) Single (as "Bill Parsons"): "All-American Boy" (Fraternity Records)
- (1976) Single: "Drop Kick Me, Jesus, Through the Goalposts of Life".
- (1974) Single (#1): "Marie Laveux"
- (1958) Single: "Vampira".
- (03/02/1971) This was a 20-act bill, a tribute to Harry Carlson, founder of Cincinnati-based Fraternity Records, headlined by comedian Henny Youngman and including Bobby Bare, Dee Felice's Mixed Feelings, Borrowed Thyme, Popeye Maupin, the Casino's, Lonnie Mack, Dave Dudley, Tom T. Hall, and Bob Braun.
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