Red Headed Stranger

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Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 33:37

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Andy Beta

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Andy Beta has written about music and comedy for the Wall Street Journal, the disco revival for the Village Voice, animatronic bands for SPIN, Thai pop for the ...more »

06.30.09
A haunting and subtle song cycle that remains a touchstone to this day
1987 | Label: Columbia Nashville

Music critics are a notoriously lazy bunch. Take the critical shorthand that accompanies Willie Nelson's stark and trailblazing Red Headed Stranger. Often referred to as both the first "Outlaw Country" album and the first conceptual country album, in reality, it's neither. For the former claim, Willie's riding partner Waylon Jennings beat him to the punch with 1973's Honky Tonk Heroes. As for the latter, hell, it's not even Willie's first concept album (see the he said/she said of 1974's Phases and Stages, 1971's cosmic-tinged Yesterday's Wine, or even the gimmicky country fair fare of 1968's Texas in My Soul).

Even shorn of such hyperbole, Red Headed Stranger remains a classic, not just for country music but singer-songwriters the world over who always seek to strip things to essentials. His first album recorded for Columbia (after two classic and genre-expanding albums Shotgun Willie and Phases for Atlantic — not to mention an early career toiling in the country-politan salt mines of RCA and Liberty), Willie made a risky gambit right out of the gate. Rather than embellish his already polished songcraft or put down more of the fine soulful country songs he had steadily been releasing throughout the decade, Willie took… read more »

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A must have..

DigMe

Truly a classic, timeless album that is bigger than any genre and should be in every collection. If you want to get into Willie I say start here instead of a greatest hits album.

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One of the Greatest Country Albums of All Time

blake0102

A true gem. If you're a fan of Willie and don't have this album, you're missing out. Definitely my fave of his... well this or Phases and Stages.

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Willie's First Concept Album

pbrownie

Some great ones got their start here. This album is a little raw and less refined than others later in his career. The back up is a little sketchy.. but it is pure outlaw. Its really nice to see it available for download!

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One of the best

mommax2

This is a classic. It's a cliche, but in this case it is true. If you are only going to download one Willie album, this is the one. If you wanted to put together a list of the top ten country albums, this would have to be on the list. The whole album hangs together as a concept & of course it includes one of the all time great songs in Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain.

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Landmark Willie

KDP

A favorite of mine from long ago. Lent my vinyl version out and never got it back. A testimony to Willie's ataying power and the beauty of country music. Blue Eyes Crying in the rain is my favorite but I love it all. So happy to be able to add it back to my collection

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The Real Deal

JWillie

If you are looking for one Willie Nelson album start here. Honest, compelling, this album is truly timeless and is Willie to the "T" in Texas. Love it!

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Michael Jackson Who?

emperorofdirt

This one album is worth more than many entire careers. Anybody who says they don't like Willie needs to listen to this. A true national treasure of a songster.

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Perhaps the Best Line Ever

TheDarkSavant

If not the best line in all of music, at least the best in all of country music: "ya can't hang a man, fer killin' a woman, who's tryin' ta steal his horse."

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Back when

Splanky

a record not only contained music but also documented the artist and who he or she was. A fantastic effort by Nelson! A must hear for any lover of music!

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They Say All Media Guide

Willie Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger perhaps is the strangest blockbuster country produced, a concept album about a preacher on the run after murdering his departed wife and her new lover, told entirely with brief song-poems and utterly minimal backing. It’s defiantly anticommercial and it demands intense concentration — all reasons why nobody thought it would be a hit, a story related in Chet Flippo’s liner notes to the 2000 reissue. It was a phenomenal blockbuster, though, selling millions of copies, establishing Nelson as a superstar recording artist in its own right. For all its success, it still remains a prickly, difficult album, though, making the interspersed concept of Phases and Stages sound shiny in comparison. It’s difficult because it’s old-fashioned, sounding like a tale told around a cowboy campfire. Now, this all reads well on paper, and there’s much to admire in Nelson’s intimate gamble, but it’s really elusive, as the themes get a little muddled and the tunes themselves are a bit bare. It’s undoubtedly distinctive — and it sounds more distinctive with each passing year — but it’s strictly an intellectual triumph and, after a pair of albums that were musically and intellectually sound, it’s a bit of a letdown, no matter how successful it was. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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