Songbird Willie Nelson

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 10/31/2006
  • Sales Rank: 31,823
  • Label: LOST HIGHWAY
  • UPC: 602498583531
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Songbird

1LISTENRainy Day Blues 5:33
2LISTENSongbird 2:41
3LISTENBlue Hotel 3:32
4LISTENBack to Earth 3:00
5LISTENStella Blue 6:24
6LISTENHallelujah 4:54
7LISTEN$1000 Wedding 3:06
8LISTENWe Don't Run 4:20
9LISTENYours Love 3:04
10LISTENSad Songs and Waltzes 3:18
11LISTENAmazing Grace 4:48

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Whether it's the presence of Ryan Adams as producer and Adams's band, the Cardinals, in support, or simply a sign of reinvigoration on his part, Willie Nelson comes to Songbird with palpable purpose -- you can feel his commitment to the moment in every song, from the boozy kickoff of his own reconstituted "Rainy Day Blues" to a stunning, album-closing treatment of "Amazing Grace" as an ironic blues ballad. In between those bookends, Willie does nothing less than remind us of what a great singer can do with a lyric by dint of intellect and heart -- the shading and nuance of his readings here rival the depth he achieved on the Daniel Lanois-produced Teatro. The Cardinals back him on their own terms, sensitive to the unfolding drama in each song and adding evocative twang and sludge to the soundscape; of Willie's usual "family," only harmonica master Mickey Raphael is present, but every time he shows up it's memorable. From his own rich catalog Willie delivers "Sad Songs and Waltzes," then ventures forth to turn Jerry Garcia-Robert Hunter's "Stella Blue" into a country tear-jerker. Unlike Jack White, who had to be sure everyone knew he was on Loretta Lynn's Van Lear Rose, Adams is a benign presence on Songbird: his voice comes through when Willie explores the melancholy beauty of Adams's "Blue Hotel" (a song the producer wrote especially for his artist), and in a foreboding sonic setting rife with pedal steel moans and Raphael's heart-rending harmonica punctuations. The coup de grace is a version of Leonard Cohen's venerated "Hallelujah," to which Willie brings Brechtian drama by way of his understated irony and a vocal approach clearly indebted to Cohen's own parched reading. A masterpiece. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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