Dont laugh, this album kicks ass. Nelsons duet on "Still is Still Moving to Me with Toots Hibbert on True Love last year cemented it: Willie Nelsons songs are of such a calibre that they can be drastically re-envisioned and still sound as strong as ever. A decade in the makinh, Countryman (a name coyly citing the Jamaican movie of the same name) offers steel guitars winding their way behind offbeat guitar chanks, harmonicas "chicka-chicka-ing along with thumping bass cycles and dub delays echoing into the distance behind Nelsons nasally crooning. Nelson covers a few of reggaes classics ("The Harder They Come, "Sitting in Limbo), a Johnny Cash song dueted with Toots ("Im a Worried Man), and gives us nine revised originals. His take on Jimmy Cliffs monumental "The Harder They Come is striking an acoustic western reggae complete with Dobro that highlights the common outlaw in both genres. This could, in fact, be one of the most intriguing covers ever. On Nelsons own songs he jumps into a swaying rocksteady for "Do You Mind Too Much if I Dont Understand, solos along to a one drop drumbeat in "Darkness on the Face of the Earth on his beat up classical guitar and treats "One in a Row as if it had been minted in Kingston circa 1975. Sure, some will balk at Nelsons reed thin voice and Nashville songwriting tackling fat grooves and dubby production, but reggae and country have a long (if lean) co-existence and, besides, the fastest one-handed joint roller in country music has a thing or two in common with Jamaican music.
(Lost Highway)Willie Nelson
Countryman
BY Brent HagermanPublished Aug 1, 2005