25th Anniversary of Willie Nelson's Teatro on 180g LP
Location is everything. When Willie Nelson and producer Daniel Lanois set out to create the cinematic-sounding album, Teatro (1998), they took over a disused movie theater in Oxnard, CA, and pictured its dusty glory on the LP sleeve. Recorded as-live in situ amid the red velvet seats, Teatro sees Nelson working extensively with his frequent collaborator Emmylou Harris, who joins him for duets and on backing vocals on 11 of the 14 tracks. The other major player is collaborator Lanois (producer of Bob Dylan's Time Out of Mind, Harris' Wrecking Ball), who produced the album, plays guitar and bass, took the cover photo and wrote one of the album's songs, "The Maker," a stunning performance with glacier-thick vibe where Red Headed Stranger masterfully meets the BrianEno/Lanois classic Apollo.
Reinvention is key on Teatro, with Nelson revisiting a number of songs he first wrote in the 1960s, including 1968's "I Just Can't Let You Say Goodbye" and 1962's "I've Just Destroyed the World" and "Three Days." Though the songs are familiar, the sounds aren't: Teatro found Nelson experimenting with rhythms and flavors as never before, from the Spanish-influenced "Darkness On The Face Of The Earth" to the double-drum-kit percussive groove of "My Own Peculiar Way." Accompanied by a 9-piece band that included Nelson's sister, Bobbie Nelson, on piano, the group conjure up an atmosphere informed by the howling harmonicas and distant mariachi bands of spaghetti western soundtracks, the end result being a Willie Nelson album quite unlike any other in his career, and one that reveals it widescreen vision through arresting sonic imagery.
- Ou Es-Tu, Mon Amour? (Where Are You, My Love?)
- I Never Cared for You
- Everywhere I Go
- Darkness On the Face of the Earth
- My Own Peculiar Way
- These Lonely Nights
- Home Motel
- The Maker
- I Just Can't Let You Say Goodbye
- I've Just Destroyed the World (I'm Living In)
- Somebody Pick Up My Pieces
- Three Days
- I've Loved You All Over the World
- Annie