T For Texas, Texas Blues-Willie
Nelson’s Milk Cow Blues (2000)-A CD Review
CD Review
By Zack James
Milk Cow Blues, Willie Nelson and
others, 2000
My old high school friend Seth Garth
whom I am still in close touch with reminded me the other day when he was over
at my house and I had the CD under review playing in the background, Willie
Nelson’s Milk Cow Blues, that back in
the early 1980s he recalled that I had had what he called my “outlaw country
cowboy moment.” I didn’t recall that I uttered that particular expression
although I did recall that I had for a brief period been drawn to the likes of
Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Townes Van Zandt and a number of other singer-songwriters
who broke out of the traditional stylized Nashville formula mold epitomized
then by guys like George Jones and gals like Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette. Just
then rock and roll was taking one of its various detours which I could not
follow, folk music, the social protest kind anyway that had attracted me in my
youth was fading fast even among aficionados and the blues was losing its star
performers by the day and the younger crowd was heading to what would become hip-hop
tradition so I was up for listening to something different. Willie, not
clean-shaven, pony-tailed, not shining sparkly suit Willie filled the
bill.
Yeah, Willie filled the bill with songs
about two-timing men, women too, lost love, the heartache of love relationships,
getting out from under some rock that was weighting him down but down in a soulful,
thoughtful way with a bit of a gravelly voice, a kind of voice that always had
the ability to draw me in, to make me stop what I was doing and listen up. Of
course I had remembered back then that Willie had written a song that Patsy
Cline whom I had always liked had made famous in the late 1950s, Crazy, which I had learned about when I
was at Cheapo Records over in Cambridge looking for some bluesy stuff back in
the 1960s.
Fast forward to 2000 and this CD. I had
expected that Willie, now ancient Willie if he had written Crazy back in the 1950s, would still be grinding out in his twangy
way the old classics which fill out this album. Would put his Texas touch on
these standards. Guess what-he switched up on me, made an album of well-known
covers made hits by some very famous like Cline, Bessie Smith, B.B. King (who
is featured on a couple of songs here), Jerry Lee but changed the tempo. Put
everything in a bluesy frame, and let the beat go on. Let the music carry the
day with whoever was singing along with him on each cut. Not a recognizable cowboy
sound in the house. Now part of that switch-up represented the hard fact that
age had like with Bob Dylan rusted up his voice and so he no longer tried, or
was capable of hitting the high white notes. Part of it was to let the other singers
or the musicians carry the force of the songs. But guess what if you, and Seth
agreed with me on this, need some nice jazzy, bluesy background music this one fills
the bill. Yeah, we all have come a long way from that old “outlaw country
cowboy moment” Seth claimed I was in thrall to. Enough said.
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