close
close

Pasteleria-edelweiss

Real-time news, timeless knowledge

Willie Nelson’s new album is in his pot cookbook
bigrus

Willie Nelson’s new album is in his pot cookbook

Article content

NEW YORK (AP) — Young musicians seeking longevity would be wise to follow Willie Nelson’s wise words: Do what feels right, and if you’re lucky enough to have a statue erected in your honor in your city, remember that. it’s just something that “you have to go down and clear the (expletive) pigeon from time to time.”

Advertisement 2

Article content

On Friday, Nelson, 91, released his second studio album of the year, “Last Leaf on the Tree”; It was his 76th solo studio album and 153rd album overall, ranked by Hercules according to Texas Monthly’s prolific discography. So how many more are there in there? Nelson laughs into the phone, “I don’t know. I hope there are a few more.” Maybe he’ll get to 200? “Why!”

Article content

“The Last Leaf on the Tree” is an album of firsts and acquaintances; This is Nelson’s first album produced entirely by his son Micah; It features several originals and covers from Nelson notables like Neil Young, Nina Simone, and Tom Waits, as well as less-obvious additions like re-imaginings of the Flaming Lips. Are you aware??” and Beck’s “Lost Cause.”

Article content

Advertisement 3

Article content

“He’s a real artist,” Nelson says of his son. “He picked all the songs.”

“We surprised him,” Nelson jokes when asked how he broke the news to his producer, Buddy Cannon, of Micah’s takeover.

Micah Nelson’s artistic, alternative rock sensibility is present on the album not only in his choice of cover songs but also in his presentation. For example, in his cover of Young’s song “Are You Ready for the Country” he used sticks and leaves for percussion rather than traditional instrumentation. “I didn’t notice anything different,” Nelson laughs.

His wife, Annie Nelson, who joined Willie for the interview, adds: “He says this all the time. It’s great to play with your child. And if they are good, even better.”

After seven decades of songwriting, Nelson says the only way to define a good song is simply: “You know it when you hear it. When you hear something and say, ‘Damn, I wish I had written that,’ that’s a good song.”

Advertisement 4

Article content

“There’s no better songwriter alive than Kris Kristofferson,” Nelson once said of his Highwaymen bandmate at a 2009 awards ceremony. Kristofferson, 88, died last month at his home in Maui, Hawaii.

“He was a great songwriter. “He left a lot of great songs for the rest of us to sing while we’re here,” he reflects. “Kris was a great friend of mine. And, you know, we had a lot of fun together and made a lot of music together, videos, movies. I hated losing him. “It was a sad time.”

Although he has always experimented with different genres and styles, Nelson is the last of the Outlaw Country era in several respects. The title, “Last Leaf on the Tree,” taken from the cover of Waits’ book “The Last Leaf,” somehow resonates when one thinks of his contemporaries. “If you just take the music part of it and go back to Waylon (Jennings) and Kris and John (ny Cash) and the Highwaymen that we all worked with. And then I was the only one left. And it’s not funny at all.”

Advertisement 5

Article content

The album also deals with love and death; These are topics he knows a thing or two about.

“Well, I’m over 91, so I’m not worried about that. I don’t feel bad. No part of me hurts. I have no reason to worry about dying. “But I don’t know anyone who has lived forever,” he says. “I take pretty good care of myself. And I feel like I’m in pretty good shape physically. Mentally? That’s another story,” he says, laughing.

As for what he hopes his legacy will be, he has an answer for that: “I had a good time. “So I did what I came here to do: make music.”

He will continue to do this and more. He already has another album completed, he says, and in a few weeks, Willie and Annie Nelson will release “Willie and Annie Nelson’s Cannabis Cookbook,” an easy extension of the couple’s long-held belief that both marijuana and food have medicinal properties . Annie says the book was born out of necessity when Willie had pneumonia and couldn’t smoke, so she started making edibles to ease his night terrors.

“He was a great taste tester,” he says.

Without missing a beat, she jumps in, “I still am!”

Article content