Latest Release

- NOV 3, 2023
- 25 Songs
- Waylon & Willie · 1978
- Ultimate Waylon Jennings · 1978
- Pancho & Lefty · 1983
- Ultimate Waylon Jennings · 1977
- Willie Nelson - 16 Biggest Hits · 1980
- Willie Nelson - 16 Biggest Hits · 1982
- 35 Biggest Hits · 2002
- Unleashed · 2002
- Ultimate Waylon Jennings · 1971
- Shotgun Willie · 1973
Essential Albums
- Though for the first two decades of his career Willie Nelson was known more as a writer of hits for other people, he was always an incredibly gifted interpretive singer himself. This 1993 collection features several Nelson originals alongside his twist on an eclectic collection of modern day songwriters from Paul Simon (“American Tune,” “Graceland”), Lyle Lovett (“Farther Down the Line,” “If I Were the Man You Wanted”) and Bob Dylan (“What Was It You Wanted?”) to Peter Gabriel, whose “Don’t Give Up” is sung as a duet with Sinead O’Connor and stands as the album’s unexpected triumph. Nelson does not adhere to country settings and uses whatever best serves the song. As a singer, Nelson enjoys nothing more than teasing a line for its innuendo and subtle meaning, stretching a syllable or putting in a less than dramatic pause to draw attention. He adds an uneasy alienation to “American Tune” and sounds almost overwhelmed by the tangled wordplay and conscience of John Hiatt’s “The Most Unoriginal Sin.”
- 1983
- In 1982 Willie Nelson opened a new chapter in his career as a master interpreter with Always On My Mind. With understated, almost-invisible production by Chips Moman, the album focuses on pop and soul ballads from the post-rock ‘n’ roll era. Witness Nelson’s unique approach to the show-stopping R&B ballads “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” and “A Whiter Shade of Pale.” While these songs typically require a male singer to belt it out, Willie uses a voice that is both sly and restrained — a perfect example of the softer blow making a greater impact. “Always On My Mind” had been a smash just three years earlier for John Wesley Ryles, and before that, for Elvis Presley in 1972. Nonetheless, Nelson repossessed it and made the song completely his. His wistfulness and regretful, heartfelt delivery complemented the song’s dramatic arrangement, and it spent 21 weeks on the charts. It's one of Willie’s career performances, but don’t allow it to overshadow the outstanding “Last Thing I Needed First Thing This Morning,” which is hidden at the end of the album.
- When Willie Nelson approached Columbia Records about making an album of classic American songs, they told him he was crazy. He was a writer, they said—why not write? Plus, they added, why would his young, country audience care about old Broadway and Hoagy Carmichael songs, anyhow? They wouldn’t, Willie said, but older people would, and the young ones would just figure he had written them in the first place. Ten songs, each of them a favorite from Willie’s childhood, a handful of them dating to before his birth in 1933. Recorded in a living room with a mobile studio in the Hollywood Hills. No touch too heavy, no tempo above a resting heartbeat. The arrangements—by Memphis soul legend Booker T. Jones, who also produced—are spacious, the sound ethereal (“Stardust,” “Georgia on My Mind”). All feelings, however big, are rendered with sweetness and distance, as though being looked back on from a point beyond life (“Unchained Melody”). Willie reaches for melodies the way one might reach to pet the family dog: lovingly, without drama or strain. There’s a folk quality to it, but also a sophistication. Just as Ella Fitzgerald’s mid-’50s recordings of Cole Porter helped prove the artistic validity of jazz to white audiences skeptical of its working-class Blackness, Stardust proved that a country scrub from Texas could sound as poised as Frank Sinatra and twice as subtle too (“Moonlight in Vermont”). With Stardust, Willie sketched a constellation of music that collapsed country and jazz, Black and white, Broadway and Nashville, highbrow and low. Some things are just plain old—Stardust is timeless.
- The leading lights of ‘70s outlaw country came together as a twosome for this 1978 album, crafting the musical equivalent of a classic Western buddy movie. As the duo delivers tongue-in-cheek anti-anthems like “Mammas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys” or Kris Kristofferson’s “Don’t Cuss the Fiddle,” you can picture Willie and Waylon riding down the dusty old road together, leaving a trail of broken hearts and empty whiskey bottles behind them.
Artist Playlists
- Now 90, the country legend finally gets his Hall of Fame nod.
- Icon. Outlaw. Songwriting treasure. Willie's influence spans generations.
- He had a singular ability to handle others' songs.
- Meet the songwriters and C&W stylists who shaped Willie's brilliant career.
- 2022
- 2006
Appears On
- Billy Strings
- Jake Shimabukuro
- Nathaniel Rateliff
- Titty Bingo
- Edie Brickell
More To Hear
- Kate Bush, Willie Nelson, and RATM broke the rules—and the mold.
- The story behind his Top 10 hit “Always on My Mind.”
- Dierks and friends celebrate Willie Nelson, the ultimate dude.
- Zane talks with Willie Nelson about his album, First Rose of Spring.
- Interviews with Kevin Gates, Ellie Goulding, & Willie Nelson.
- A cover by an icon. Faves from Alma & Queens Of The Stone Age.
- A celebration of incredible music from around the world.
About Willie Nelson
Even before he became the Red Headed Stranger, Willie Nelson was already a Nashville songwriting legend, providing Patsy Cline with her 1961 signature tune, “Crazy.” But as a fledgling performer in his own right, the clean-cut honky-tonker’s humble approach and conversational croon was increasingly at odds with mainstream country music’s tilt toward variety-show glitz. Upon joining the post-hippie roots-music radicals taking over the Austin scene (and swearing off barbers forevermore), the Texas-born Nelson became an icon of the ’70s outlaw-country movement, favoring a stripped-down style that could both evoke desert-highway vistas (“On the Road Again”) and initiate the most intimate of conversations (“Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain”). But Nelson’s brand of down-home simplicity shouldn’t be confused with dogmatic purism (he’s also no stranger to adult-contemporary crossovers, like his duet with Julio Iglesias, “To All the Girls I've Loved Before”). Rather, he’s always searching for the most direct route to the soul of a song, whether he’s elevating the country standard “Always on My Mind” to the realm of modern hymn, or bringing a wistful, lived-in wisdom to Great American Songbook perennials like “Georgia on My Mind.” In the 21st century, Nelson’s outlaw ethos has continued to manifest itself in all sorts of surprising ways: He’s become America’s most visible pro-marijuana activist and Snoop Dogg’s unlikeliest duet partner.
- HOMETOWN
- Abbott, TX, United States
- BORN
- April 30, 1933