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Willie Nelson Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray)

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(Sony) 39 Tracks, Digipack Willie Nelson is probably the greatest living country star of our...more

Willie Nelson: Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray)

(Sony) 39 Tracks, Digipack
Willie Nelson is probably the greatest living country star of our time. The Texan has been an institution of the genre for decades and is revered by generations of colleagues and fans. So it's no wonder that countless well-wishers celebrated this legend's 90th birthday with a one-off concert. "Long Story Short: Willie Nelson 90 Live At The Hollywood Bowl" now brings this historic event to your living room.

On two evenings at the end of April in the famous Hollywood Bowl, greats from a wide variety of styles joined forces. Country stars such as Kris Kristofferson, Rosanne Cash and George Strait paid homage to their friend Willie Nelson. As did the next generation of this original American music, represented by artists such as Billy Strings and Chris Stapleton.

Rock stars such as Beck, Warren Haynes and even Keith Richards pay tribute. The guitarist joins the jubilarian on the Stones song "We Had It All". And Stephen Stills and Neil Young will not miss the opportunity to ask "Are There Any More Real Cowboys?" with Willie.

Norah Jones, Lyle Lovett, Dave Matthews, Snoop Dogg, Sheryl Crow and many more are also represented. In total, the deluxe double CD of "Long Story Short: Willie Nelson 90 Live At The Hollywood Bowl" contains almost 40 songs. The Blu-ray, which is also included, contains three hours of video footage of the concert and three bonus videos. The vinyl edition contains selected highlights from this unforgettable celebration on two LPs.

Article properties:Willie Nelson: Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray)

  • Interpret: Willie Nelson

  • Album titlle: Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray)

  • Label Sony Music

  • Genre Country

  • Artikelart CD

  • EAN: 0196588530722

  • weight in Kg 0.15
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 1
01Whiskey RiverBilly Strings
02Yesterday’S WineCharley Crockett
03Seven Spanish AngelsAllison Russell & Norah Jones
04Remember Me (When The Candle Lights Are Gleaming)Edie Brickell & Charlie Sexton
05Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond Of Each OtherOrville Peck
06Me And PaulDwight Yoakam
07Die When I’M High (Halfway To Heaven)Particle Kid & Daniel Lanois
08Georgia On A Fast TrainMargo Price & Waylon Payne
09It Ain’T Over YetRodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris, Waylon Payne & Mickey Raphael
10Hello WallsLyle Lovett
11Hands On The WheelBeck
12Midnight RiderWarren Haynes
13Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’Ll Ever Do Again)Rosanne Cash & Kris Kristofferson
14Funny How Time Slips AwayDave Matthews
15Angel Flying Too Close To The GroundLukas Nelson
16City Of New OrleansNathaniel Rateliff
17StardustWillie Nelson & Booker T Jones
18Will You Remember MineWillie Nelson & Lily Meola
19Something You Get ThroughWillie Nelson & Buddy Cannon
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 2
01California SoberWillie Nelson & Billy Strings
02Still Is Still Moving To MeZiggy Marley
03Down YonderNorah Jones
04Pick Up The TempoThe Avett Brothers
05Pretty PaperThe Lumineers
06Time Of The PreacherTyler Childers And The Food Stamps
07Night LifeLeon Bridges & Gary Clark Jr
08Texas FloodGary Clark Jr
09Opportunity To CryTom Jones
10Blue Eyes Crying In The RainBobby Weir
11Willie Got Me StonedJack Johnson
12Georgia On My MindJamey Johnson, Warren Haynes & Booker T Jones
13Mammas Don’T Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be CowboysMiranda Lambert
14Always On My MindChris Stapleton
15Are There Any More Real Cowboys?Willie Nelson, Stephen Stills & Neil Young
16Far Away PlacesWillie Nelson & Sheryl Crow
17Pancho & LeftyWillie Nelson & George Strait
18Roll Me Up And Smoke Me When I DieWillie Nelson & Snoop Dogg
19We Had It AllWillie Nelson & Keith Richards
20On The Road Again/Happy BdayAll Sing
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 3
01Whiskey RiverBilly Strings
02Yesterday’S WineCharley Crockett
03Seven Spanish AngelsAllison Russell & Norah Jones
04Remember Me (When The Candle Lights Are Gleaming)Edie Brickell W Charlie Sexton /
05Die When I’M High (Halfway To Heaven)Particle Kid & Daniel Lanois
06Georgia On A Fast TrainMargo Price & Waylon Payne
07It Ain’T Over YetRodney Crowell, Emmylou Harris, Waylon Payne
08Hello WallsLyle Lovett
09Hands On The WheelBeck
10Midnight RiderWarren Haynes
11Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’Ll Ever Do Again)Rosanne Cash & Kris Kristofferson
12Funny How Time Slips AwayDave Matthews
13Angel Flying Too Close To The GroundLukas Nelson
14City Of New OrleansNathaniel Rateliff
15StardustWillie Nelson & Booker T Jones
16Will You Remember MineWillie Nelson & Lily Meola
17Something You Get ThroughWillie Nelson & Buddy Cannon
18California SoberWillie Nelson & Billy Strings
19Down YonderNorah Jones
20Pick Up The TempoThe Avett Brothers
21Pretty PaperThe Lumineers
22Time Of The PreacherTyler Childers & The Food Stamps
23Night LifeLeon Bridges & Gary Clark Jr
24Texas FloodGary Clark Jr
25Opportunity To CryTom Jones
26Blue Eyes Crying In The RainBobby Weir
27Willie Got Me StonedJack Johnson
28Georgia On My MindJamey Johnson, Warren Haynes & Booker T Jones
29Mammas Don’T Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be CowboysMiranda Lambert
30Always On My MindChris Stapleton
31Are There Any More Real Cowboys?Willie Nelson, Stephen Stills & Neil Young
32Far Away PlacesWillie Nelson & Sheryl Crow
33Pancho & LeftyWillie Nelson & George Strait
34Roll Me Up And Smoke Me When I DieWillie Nelson & Snoop Dogg
35We Had It AllWillie Nelson & Keith Richards
36On The Road Again/Happy BirthdayAll Sing
37Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond Of Each Other [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]Orville Peck
38Me And Paul [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]Dwight Yoakam
39Still Is Still Moving To Me [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]Ziggy Marley
Willie Nelson Born on 30 4th 1933 in Abbott, Texas, USA. Willie Nelson played as a child and... more
"Willie Nelson"

Willie Nelson

Born on 30 4th 1933 in Abbott, Texas, USA.

Willie Nelson played as a child and teenager in country bands. He is one of the biggest stars of the genre at all and was represented until today with over 100 singles on the U.S. country charts. Following the release of his debut 45er 'Lumberjack' in 1956, he moved to Nashville, where he sold his own demos and thus ushered in his career authors. In 1961 he played with Ray Price at the Cherokee Cowboys.

He wrote his first hits for Roy Orbison, Patsy Cline and Faron Young. Nelson settled after his marriage to Shirley Collie as a pig farmer in Ridgetop, Tennessee, down. He stepped up today with stylistically different colleagues such as Bob Dylan, Carlos Santana, Neil Young and Julio Iglesias in duet on.

With Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson he plays in addition to his solo career, under the name of The Highwaymen. 1978 founded his own label, Lone Star. Nelson was the early 90s with around $ 16 million debt to the IRS in the Cretaceous. 1991: marriage to Annie D'Angelo. The number of Nelson rehearsed songs beyond the 1000 mark.

From the Bear Family Book - 1000 pinpricks of Bernd Matheja - BFB10025 -

Willie Nelson


1964 through 1972 were eight of Nashville’s more unsettled years.The pop-oriented ‘Nashville Sound’ pioneered by Chet Atkins and Owen Bradley had been adopted by much of the industry. In the late 1950s, after rock ‘n’ roll knocked the entire Nashville music industry off its shaky foundation, that smoother, more sophisticated sound had saved Nashville by expanding country records to grab pop record buyers. It made Don Gibson, Jim Reeves and Patsy Cline greater stars than they’d been singing hard country alone. By 1964, that initial rush of creativity had slowed. Plane crashes claimed two top exponents, Cline in 1963, Reeves in the summer of 1964. At that point, Eddy Arnold, whose string of massive hits diminished in the wake of Elvis, was about to make a dramatic comeback with elaborately orchestrated ballads like Make The World Go Away, light years from the intimate dignity of his 1940s hits. Ray Price had already begun to occasionally wrap a string quartet around the Cherokee Cowboys on many of his recording sessions, attracting new fans but sending many older ones stomping off in disgust.

Not even a honkytonk giant of George Jones’s stature was immune from Nashville sound production. Onstage, it was Texas honkytonk business as usual, the fiddle and steel whining behind him. The recording studio was another matter. Pappy Daily, his discoverer and only producer, forced Jones into the softer mold at United Artists and later at Musicor Records. He continued in that mode with Billy Sherrill after joining Epic in 1970.

A few wild cards counteracted the syrupy side of things, since the country audience divided as it expanded. As Price slithered out of his rhinestone skin into tuxes, a West Coast honky-tonk cyclone, unstoppable as the dust storms that drove Texans and Okies to California in the first place, roared out of Bakersfield. The success of Buck Owens, followed by the rise of Merle Haggard, reflected the belief of many fans that some of the pop stuff was going too far afield, that Nashville needed an alternative. A second alternative came from within Music City with the rise of Johnny Cash. Popular for nearly a decade, his no-frills music and phenomenally successful 1967 ‘Folsom Prison’ LP weren’t as surprising to Nashville as his acceptance by pop audiences.

On 16th Avenue South, Atkins and Bradley continued setting the pace. At Columbia, Don Law was retiring, and though Bob Johnston was his immediate successor, the label’s rising star was clearly Billy Sherrill, the former R&B musician and Sam Phillips’ engineer who took over much of the production for Columbia’s Epic subsidiary. Nearly all Nashville producers saw the softer sound as the strongest and simplest formula for putting across a new artist quickly. It explained why artists were counseled to trust their producer, who usually picked material (unless the singer was one potent writer) and offered ‘direction’. If a producer happened to have written some of the recommended songs, or at least own an interest in publishing songs they pushed on artists, it was a conflict of interest routinely winked at around 16th Avenue South.

There was one huge problem. Assuming that one sound could fit any singer was an idea that didn’t always work out in practice. Convincing the men in the control room that ooh-aah choruses and muted strings just didn’t work with everyone was quite another matter.

That was the world Willie Nelson faced in 1964.

At 31, he was one of Nashville’s top writers, whose songs had been hits for many, including Patsy Cline, Billy Walker and Faron Young. Like other writers of his generation, Harlan Howard and Hank Cochran among them, his recording career had been less impressive. He’d started his singing career before Hank Williams died. His early recordings in Washington State and Houston went unnoticed. Only after moving to Nashville in 1960 and crafting such standards as Crazy, Funny How Time Slips Away and Hello Walls did he land a major label deal with Liberty. After a Top Ten duet single and a solo Top Ten hit, both in 1962, his success on records quickly faded while he continued writing brilliant songs for others.

Song royalties gave Willie a farm in Ridgetop, Tennessee, northwest of Nashville, where he played the eccentric artist, living with an extended family, sustained by writers’ royalties and frequent touring. That would have satisfied many. But he still believed he had potential as a singer if someone gave him a chance. He still wanted to record, knowing he had it in him to succeed, even if many in Nashville regarded his weird vocal phrasing and unconventional attitude, disdain for spangled suits and mile-high pompadours, as a bit off base.It wasn’t like a successful, eccentric songwriter couldn’t become a recording star on his own terms. In 1964, Willie’s longtime pal Roger Miller had done just that, scoring big with Dang Me and Chug-A-Lug that year after unsuccessful stints on Mercury, Decca and RCA. King Of The Road in 1965 would take Roger far beyond the country crowd.

Willie spent a brief two-session period with Monument in 1964 before beginning eight years with RCA. Over those years, he’d enter the RCA Nashville studios for 44 solo sessions. Guitarist Chet Atkins, RCA’s Vice President in charge of Nashville Operations, probably understood unconventionality better than just about anyone in Nashville at the time. He appreciated Willie’s uniqueness. His challenge was to sell Nelson to a wider audience by integrating that uniqueness into the usual trends to make it acceptable, just as he had with Gibson and Reeves.

In Willie’s case, Atkins admittedly didn’t do very well. During those years, with himself or Felton Jarvis producing, a total of 15 Willie Nelson RCA singles charted, only two, One In A Row in 1965 and Bring Me Sunshine in 1968, breaking into ‘Billboard’s’ country Top Twenty. Eight of his LPs made it to the magazine’s Top Country Albums chart, only three rising into the Top Ten. At the time, the only area Willie enjoyed consistent popularity with his records was his home state of Texas.

Those eight years would leave the singer frustrated, a frustration that would ferment and expand, drilling into his mind the idea that he could produce better records on himself than anyone in Nashville could. He was not alone among RCA artists sick of the label’s assembly-line approach. His friend and fellow RCA artist Waylon Jennings, another who’d enjoyed only moderate success, had a similar idea. In the mid-1970s, Nashville would call it ‘Outlaw’, then act as if it were their idea all along and package old Waylon and Willie material with newer recordings. They’d also give country music its first platinum LP with the 1976 release ‘Wanted! The Outlaws’. Today, it's easy to see he and Waylon were right, and just as easy to blame Atkins and Jarvis for not knowing how to produce either one.

Would Willie have fared any better at any other major label in those years? That’s doubtful. Atkins correctly characterized Willie as being “ahead of his time.” From 1964 through 1972, Nelson hadn’t a snowball’s chance in hell of being understood anywhere but Texas. Today, the world understands the Lone Star State’s quirky musical eclecticism at the heart of Willie’s repertoire. 30 years ago, few outsiders and most of Nashville didn’t get it at all. True, Nashville accepted Texas singers, but ignored the culture that produced them, preferring to shove them into the mold.

That’s why it isn’t likely that results would have been any better for Willie artistically or commercially, had he been recording with Don Law at Columbia, for Ken Nelson or Marvin Hughes at Capitol, for Billy Sherrill at Epic, Owen Bradley at Decca or Jerry Kennedy at Mercury. The only Nashville producers in that era who stood a remote chance of understanding him would have been mavericks like Bob Johnston, who produced Johnny Cash at Columbia or Jack Clement, with his lifelong flair for the unconventional. Would an independent label have been the answer? Hardly, given the non-results during his brief stay at Monument.

Taken in the context of that era, Willie didn’t break a couple of Nashville rules. He broke a slew of them. At RCA, production of his records was usually formulaic even if his songs were unconventional. While recording his own tunes wasn’t a reach, at RCA he laid down a crazy quilt of material, mostly Nelson originals with country and pop standards mixed in. He occasionally covered others’ hits, with a few contemporary pop and rock songs and whatever else he liked thrown in for good measure. After he became an established force in both country and popular music, Willie’s varied repertoire and musical settings would be viewed as marvelous eclecticism. When he was recording for RCA, such variety was seen as eccentric at best.

Willie Nelson Nashville Was The Roughest..(8-CD)
Read more at: https://www.bear-family.com/nelson-willie-nashville-was-the-roughest..8-cd.html
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Tracklist
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 1
01 Whiskey River
02 Yesterday’S Wine
03 Seven Spanish Angels
04 Remember Me (When The Candle Lights Are Gleaming)
05 Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond Of Each Other
06 Me And Paul
07 Die When I’M High (Halfway To Heaven)
08 Georgia On A Fast Train
09 It Ain’T Over Yet
10 Hello Walls
11 Hands On The Wheel
12 Midnight Rider
13 Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’Ll Ever Do Again)
14 Funny How Time Slips Away
15 Angel Flying Too Close To The Ground
16 City Of New Orleans
17 Stardust
18 Will You Remember Mine
19 Something You Get Through
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 2
01 California Sober
02 Still Is Still Moving To Me
03 Down Yonder
04 Pick Up The Tempo
05 Pretty Paper
06 Time Of The Preacher
07 Night Life
08 Texas Flood
09 Opportunity To Cry
10 Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain
11 Willie Got Me Stoned
12 Georgia On My Mind
13 Mammas Don’T Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys
14 Always On My Mind
15 Are There Any More Real Cowboys?
16 Far Away Places
17 Pancho & Lefty
18 Roll Me Up And Smoke Me When I Die
19 We Had It All
20 On The Road Again/Happy Bday
Nelson, Willie - Long Story Short - Wille Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl (2-CD, Blu-Ray) CD 3
01 Whiskey River
02 Yesterday’S Wine
03 Seven Spanish Angels
04 Remember Me (When The Candle Lights Are Gleaming)
05 Die When I’M High (Halfway To Heaven)
06 Georgia On A Fast Train
07 It Ain’T Over Yet
08 Hello Walls
09 Hands On The Wheel
10 Midnight Rider
11 Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’Ll Ever Do Again)
12 Funny How Time Slips Away
13 Angel Flying Too Close To The Ground
14 City Of New Orleans
15 Stardust
16 Will You Remember Mine
17 Something You Get Through
18 California Sober
19 Down Yonder
20 Pick Up The Tempo
21 Pretty Paper
22 Time Of The Preacher
23 Night Life
24 Texas Flood
25 Opportunity To Cry
26 Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain
27 Willie Got Me Stoned
28 Georgia On My Mind
29 Mammas Don’T Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys
30 Always On My Mind
31 Are There Any More Real Cowboys?
32 Far Away Places
33 Pancho & Lefty
34 Roll Me Up And Smoke Me When I Die
35 We Had It All
36 On The Road Again/Happy Birthday
37 Cowboys Are Frequently Secretly Fond Of Each Other [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]
38 Me And Paul [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]
39 Still Is Still Moving To Me [Blu-Ray Bonus Video]