Teatro Willie Nelson

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/01/1998
  • Sales Rank: 18,516
  • Label: ISLAND
  • UPC: 731452454829
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Before he became a legendary Texas outlaw, Willie Nelson hung around Nashville just long enough to show Music City how country songwriting should be done. On TEATRO, the redheaded stranger revives several of his Nashville classics of love and loss, demonstrating that good songs survive. In fact, they thrive: Willie's rarely sounded this powerful, his songs gaining new strength from producer Daniel Lanois's haunting soundscapes on "I Never Cared for You" and "Darkness on the Face of the Earth." Slow, sliding guitars and processed drums ride high in the mix, imbuing even love songs such as "Three Days" and "I've Loved You All Over the World" with a mood both melancholy and menacing. When the subject turns to murder in "I Just Can't Let You Say Good-bye," a chill creeps up the spine as Lanois's swirling, subtle mix sets off the dramatic detachment of Nelson's voice. Emmylou Harris, TEATRO's third partner in crime, contributes angelic backing vocals to Nelson's best album in years. Karl Hagstrom Miller Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

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Teatroby Anonymous

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March 05, 2000: Willie Nelson and Daniel Lanois must have felt the Latin Invasion coming. In Teatro (Spanish for ?theater?), released in 1998, Nelson's traditional country sound is supplemented with a generous helping of Latin arrangements and instrumentation. Producer Lanois, however, puts the spotlight on Nelson?s vocals, keeping them front and center in what sounds like a huge, empty, and echoing theater hall. At first this struck me as a sparse and emotionless setting, but upon closer listening, I heard the warmth of Nelson?s trademark nasal voice within the echo, delivered with just the right touch of warble and impeccably phrased. Then, I began to appreciate the elegant interplay of the instruments: shimmery wurlitzer, souful harmonica, and homey mandolin provide the accents to Nelson?s mostly acoustic guitar playing. Emmy-Lou Harris turns in supporting vocals on 10 of the songs. While they are important to the mix, Lanois keeps them in the background and lagging just a touch behind Nelson?s, almost as if she is singing in the upper mezzanine of this imagined theater, to lovely and understated effect. This is a superb artistic collaboration, and well deserves the repeated listening it may take to truly appreciate it.