Monday, February 1, 2010
Wanted: The Outlaws (1976)
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Half Nelson (1985)
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Highwayman 2 (1990)
The highwaymen open this Chips Moman produced sequel singing “We’re gonna ride.” Constant motion on a “Silver Stallion.” Outrunning the wind, trouble, and time itself.
“Born and Raised in Black and White” gets at the paradoxical mix of gospel and outlaw in Willie’s and Johnny’s music. Again, Mickey Raphael on harp is the only road band member to join Willie on this album of quartets.
“Two Stories Wide” is one of two Willie-penned tunes on this album. This may be the best song on the album. “Life’s too long to worry, and it’s too short to cry, and it’s too deep to measure, and it’s two stories wide. There’s your side and my side…Both sides make you lonely.” Of course Willie can’t mean this at all. He has made his career by worrying and crying. And he has taken his time doing. And for someone who thinks too much--like Hamlet, like Proust, like Willie—for someone who sees that life is two stories wide, your side and my side, phases and stages, it can be very lonely indeed. But the artist, it seems, light a nightingale, can redeem the dark night of the soul with a song.
Johnny Cash’s tribute to the sixties, to Woodstock, or to songwriting in general, “Songs That Make a Difference,” is an interesting meditation on songwriting.
In “Living Legend,” the highwaymen are singing about their own history. “Was it better then with our backs against the wall?” They seem to be asking, were we better back then? Was the past really as good as we think it was? “Was he bitter then, with our backs against the wall…2,000 years ago.” They’re singing about Jesus. How do we know what to make of the past? How should we take? How should we feel about it? Should we live in it? Look what it did to Gatsby? Miss Havisham.
I wasn’t crazy about Willie’s “Texas” on “It Always Will Be,” and I like it less on this album, except for Mickey Raphael’s harp. I do appreciate the trippy, creepy, macabre, jazzy, jaunty, flamenco concoction that Willie has brewed. I don’t even know how to categorize it. So I respect it, but I don’t really enjoy it.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Highwayman (1985)
Thursday, January 28, 2010
City of New Orleans (1984)
“Just out of reach of my two empty arms” makes my hall-of-fame for country music turns of phrase.
“Good Time Charlie’s Got the Blues” gets at the time theme I keep hearing in Willie’s music. “They said this town will waste your time. I guess they’re right, it’s wasting mine.” Wasted time, lost time, killing time. There’s always something wrong with time. Whether Willie’s breaking meter or fighting with his memory, he’s obsessed with manipulating time.
“Why Are You Picking On Me” is the only Willie Nelson tune on this album. I have to say I actually admire Willie for his chutzpa in covering Michael Jackson’s “She’s Out of My Life.” He simply has no fear when it comes to covers or duets. So many of them fall flat, but he is always open to the one that just might be a homerun, like “Always on My Mind.” What other country artist could have pulled that off? I can’t believe Willie never finagled a duet with Michael Jackson in his prime. It would have been better than “Ebony and Ivory” or “The Girl is Mine.”
Without a doubt, “Cry” is the best song on this album. “If your heartaches seem to hang around too long, and your blues keep gettin’ bluer with each song.” Mickey Raphael’s harmonica kills me on this song. “So let your hair down and go on and cry.” Here we have the theme of crying over lost time. Willie is still taking every possible “Opportunity to Cry.” Here again we have heartaches and memories hanging around, loitering, lingering like locals at the cracker barrel. Memories are tangible, animate, personified. In fact, they are realer than real people, more poignant. Like Gastby’s perfect image of Daisy which she can never live up to. Why does absence make the heart grow fonder? “In a way I’ll be better off when you’re gone. In another way it turns me inside out.” Maybe we like the control we have over memories. As if our life were imported into IDVD and our mind is the film editing software that we can splice and rearrange any way we see fit. In “Until It’s Time For You to Go,” Willie sings, “Don’t ask forever of me.” And yet he’s always asking for forever and laughing when it slips away.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Just One Love (1995)
“Each Night at Nine,” an old Floyd Tillman song, fits into Willie’s repertoire perfectly. Setting a very specific time to remember an earlier time is a very Willie thing to do. Having a date with time. Making love with time.
Why does Willie, like Proust, always remember things “Better Left Forgotten”? “Why, oh, why won’t [his] mind let go of a love that used to be? Though [he tries]… Your memory will never set [him] free.” “Sometimes, right out of the blue, [he hears] a voice and [he turns] and [looks] for you.” Why is he so sensitive to the past, to memories, and, in so many ways, insensitive to the present? It reminds me of Gatsby.
“Smoke, Smoke, Smoke that Cigarette” is a different kind of song for Willie. It’s more of a Charlie Daniels kind of humorous story song. Willie’s vocals are strong and full and front and center on this album.
“I Just Drove By” to see if things had changed. That’s Willie. Get in the moving car and drive by to check on the passage of time. It’s a physics problem. If you are moving yourself, how can you possibly measure the passage of time, which is itself always moving? Something has to stand still in order for you to measure it. Something must be fixed. Maybe Willie’s music is a search for something fixed. An Augustinian “our hearts are restless till they find rest in thee.” Or a lament that nothing is or can be fixed. “Love is just a fragile thing.” “to see if love is still the way it was back then.” “Standing still is not time’s way.” And yet we want it to stand still. Or we want to outrun it.
It’s nice to hear Willie do country standards after hearing him do so many pop standard albums. Despite his success with Stardust, these seem a better fit. And the backing is solid and serviceable if not remarkable. It doesn’t get in the way. It does no harm.
Willie sings with Opry star “Grandpa” Jones on the last track. Not really my kind of song, but it is nice to hear Willie’s voice juxtaposed with Grandpa Jones’s, if for no other reason than it gives me a nice gauge of where Willie fits historically and stylistically in relation to the Opry stars of the past.