Saturday , April 20 2024

Willie and Pals on TV Memorial Day

Legendary septuagenarian and dope smoker Willie Nelson (he sings and plays and writes songs and stuff too) returns for his third annual Memorial Day concert on the USA Network:

    USA NETWORK PRESENTS A SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY CONCERT EVENT

    WILLIE NELSON & FRIENDS: OUTLAWS AND ANGELS
    AIRING MONDAY, MAY 31st AT 9:00 PM (ET/PT)

    All-Star Line-up includes Performances by Jerry Lee Lewis, Toby Keith, Kid
    Rock, Keith Richards, Merle Haggard, Ben Harper, Al Green, Shelby Lynne,
    Rickie Lee Jones, Lee Ann Womack, Joe Walsh, Lucinda Williams, Los Lonely
    Boys, Toots Hibbert and The Holmes Brothers, among others

    NEW YORK, NY, May 3, 2004 ­ Country music legend and American icon Willie Nelson will be joined by some of the biggest names in music for the special concert event, Willie Nelson & Friends: Outlaws and Angels. An all-star line-up will come together for the third year in a row to perform in the 2-hour telecast to air exclusively on USA Network on Memorial Day, Monday, May 31st at 9:00 pm (ET/PT).

    ….Willie Nelson & Friends: Outlaws and Angels will tape Wednesday, May 5th at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, CA.

    he all-star musical lineup includes performances by Jerry Lee Lewis, Toby
    Keith, Kid Rock, Keith Richards, Merle Haggard, Ben Harper, Al Green, Shelby
    Lynne, Rickie Lee Jones, Lee Ann Womack, Joe Walsh, Lucinda Williams, Los
    Lonely Boys, Toots Hibbert (of Toots and the Maytals) and The Holmes
    Brothers, among others.

    Encore presentations of Willie Nelson & Friends: Outlaws and Angels will air on USA Network immediately following the premiere from 11:00-1:00 am (ET/PT), Saturday, June 5 from 3:00-5:00 am (ET) and Sunday, June 6 from 9:00 – 11:00 am (ET)/10:00 am-12:00 pm (PT).

These kinds of galas often get too diffuse and unfocused, but that’s a great gathering of various “roots” artists (I can personally always live without Kid Rock), and I find Willie’s pairing with Toby Keith to be both some kind of bizarre political triangulation AND musically satisfying, as I noted in a review of Willie’s last live celeb-fest, Live and Kickin’ (which also aired on the USA Network):

    Willie Nelson, who has shared the stage with everyone and the horses they rode in on, trots out a staggering array of musical friends on his 70th birthday celebration record, Live and Kickin’, a fascinating testament to Nelson’s place in American culture, but ultimately too much of an “event” to hang together musically, which is nonetheless nominated for the country album of the year Grammy.

    One of Willie’s greatest charms has always been his laconic looseness, the seeming casualness with which he conveys a song, but here he slips perilously close to indifference, as if showing up alone were enough this time. For most 70-year-olds simply being there would have been enough, but we have come to expect so much more from this particular one.

    Recorded live at New York City’s Beacon Theater last April, Nelson and a crack band led by the great drummer Kenny Aronoff, start off strong with the rollicking “I Didn’t Come Here (And I Ain’t Leaving),” but even here he hurries or talk-sings his way through lines in a way that lets you know that this is a revel rather than a musical document.

    Eric Clapton joins in next for a bluesy rendition of Nelson’s self-descriptive standard “Night Life,” and while Slowhand’s stinging electric guitar work takes the song places it has never before gone, his vocals are ragged and thin and Nelson’s are desultory at best.

    Perhaps it was just an off-night for Willie’s next guest Shania Twain, or perhaps her skittish, wavering performance on “Blues Eyes Crying In the Rain” reveals just how much help her producer-husband Mutt Lange provides in the studio. Nonetheless, despite Nelson’s best efforts on harmony vocals and his signature guitar picking, one of his most iconic songs (originally on his breakthrough “Red Headed Stranger” album), sadly, does not fare well at all.

    Things pick up greatly with a jolt both musical and conceptual: a live version of Nelson and Toby Keith’s number one smash “Beer For My Horses.” On the musical front, the band finally has something to sink its teeth into, which it does with relieved vigor, and Keith’s hale baritone is a great foil for Nelson on this anthem that both celebrates and pokes good-natured fun at core country symbolism. You have got to love a song with a chorus of:

    “We raise up our glasses against evil forces,
    Singin’, whiskey for my men,
    Beer for my horses”

    Besides being the centerpiece of this set, the tune is also up for the Best Country Song award, an award songwriters Keith and Scotty Emerick are likely to win against Twain’s “Forever and For Always,” Brad Paisley’s “Celebrity,” Alan Jackson and Jimmy Buffett’s “It’s Five O’ Clock Somewhere,” and Pat Green’s “Wave On Wave.”

    Not only is “Horses” an instant classic musically, but it also brings together country’s absolute political bookends: Keith, the Dixie Chick baiting pro-war patriot, and the iconoclastic, pot-smoking lefty Nelson, whose quixotic endorsement of Dennis Kucinich for president and release of the anti-war, anti-Bush song “Whatever Happened to Peace On Earth?” puts him squarely at odds politically and culturally with both Keith and the mainstream country music audience. If Keith can get this cozy with Nelson — and why shouldn’t he? — one wonders why he hates the Dixie Chicks so much.

    There are nice moments the rest of the way, even if it ultimately doesn’t all add up: Diana Krall and Elvis Costello on Nelson’s most famous composition, “Crazy,” a preposterously great rasta version of “To All the Girls I’ve Loved Before” with Wyclef Jean, and the sublime Norah Jones on “Wurlizter Prize.” The record is good but it could have been much more.

    Though this album could well win the Grammy on strength of its “event” status, Willie’s duet with Ray Price, Run that By Me One More Tme, is actually a better album.

About Eric Olsen

Career media professional and serial entrepreneur Eric Olsen flung himself into the paranormal world in 2012, creating the America's Most Haunted brand and co-authoring the award-winning America's Most Haunted book, published by Berkley/Penguin in Sept, 2014. Olsen is co-host of the nationally syndicated broadcast and Internet radio talk show After Hours AM; his entertaining and informative America's Most Haunted website and social media outlets are must-reads: Twitter@amhaunted, Facebook.com/amhaunted, Pinterest America's Most Haunted. Olsen is also guitarist/singer for popular and wildly eclectic Cleveland cover band The Props.

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