Willie Nelson - "He Was a Friend of Mine", C/D?

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It's his cover of the traditional ballad made famous by Bob Dylan's version, recorded for the Brokeback Mountain soundtrack and heard in the closing credits. It's my current obsession; it seems to encapsulate everything that's marvelous about Willie Nelson: his command of the demotic, expert guitar playing, and his gift for understatement.

Anyone heard it?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Sunday, 1 January 2006 21:26 (twenty years ago)

It's a great song and Willie does it justice. I like The Byrds one too. I've also heard it by Billy Bob Thornton - he doesn't really...er...add anything to it...

Ned T.Rifle (nedtrifle), Sunday, 1 January 2006 22:19 (twenty years ago)

cat power has a lovely version (all her dylan/trad numbers are ace), but i'm sure around these parts i'll get beheaded for saying so.

it was jody that killed the beast (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 1 January 2006 22:52 (twenty years ago)

cat power has a lovely version (all her dylan/trad numbers are ace), but i'm sure around these parts i'll get beheaded for saying so.

You shouldn't.

David A. (Davant), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 05:57 (twenty years ago)

Mercury Rev has a version as well.

Simon H. (Simon H.), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 08:23 (twenty years ago)

Is this a Dylan song or The Byrds song about the Kennedy assassination?

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 14:14 (twenty years ago)

It's a traditional folk song.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 14:35 (twenty years ago)

cat power has a lovely version (all her dylan/trad numbers are ace)

This is true. She once did a version of "Still in Love" (I think a Hank Williams song?) that slays me.

mcd (mcd), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 14:58 (twenty years ago)

It's a traditional folk song.

Ah, ok -- AMG has it listed as "McGuinn, Traditional". I'm guessing he modified it to include references to the Kennedy thing...

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 14:59 (twenty years ago)

Oh yeah Willie Nelson rules everything.

mcd (mcd), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 15:02 (twenty years ago)

Dave Van Ronk's version is magnificent (and probably where Dylan got it, too)...

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 3 January 2006 15:57 (twenty years ago)

Sounded nice on the end credits, but I'd have preferred an original titled "He Was a Stupendous Lay."

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 16:11 (twenty years ago)

I suppose Jimmy Somerville was unavailable.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Tuesday, 3 January 2006 16:28 (twenty years ago)

This was boring as piss.

Naive Teen Idol (Naive Teen Idol), Thursday, 5 January 2006 17:41 (twenty years ago)

I'll mention the Grateful Dead version of it just because they are my current obsession. It's sub-Byrds, though.

Tripmaker (SDWitzm), Thursday, 5 January 2006 18:47 (twenty years ago)

Dylan said his version was based on Blind Arvella Gray's, but there were other versions.(Van Ronk and some others said they couldn't remember having heard Gray do it.) Apparently, Gray never recorded it, but his recently reissued, expanded The Singing Drifter is a trip. It's his only album, though there are a few other tracks, which I haven't tracked down. I reviewed Drifter in the Voice. ("Barred Bards," not my choice of title.)

don, Friday, 6 January 2006 19:28 (twenty years ago)

I love the Van Ronk version, which can be downloaded here

Jason_Bell, Friday, 6 January 2006 20:29 (twenty years ago)

Thanks! Also, Dylan said that he, for one, was not doing the song re JFK in particular, which seems plausible, considering the (drunken)speech he gave while accepting an (earlyish-mid-60s)award from a civil liberties society, in which he said he (kinda) knew where Lee Harvey was comin' from. (See "Masters Of War," "I Will Not Go Down Under The Ground" [later for your Civil Defense, later for your Mutually Assured Destruction], and others from that era.) I put a link to the text(and an eyewitness account) on the Scorsese/Dylan thread last fall, no time to look it up now.

don, Saturday, 7 January 2006 03:11 (twenty years ago)

one month passes...
Country legends reach out to gays on Oscar-nominated movie soundtracks
By John Gerome
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Never mind that country music is considered bedrock conservative, the unofficial red-state soundtrack. This year, some of country’s most famous names are singing in movies with gay and transsexual themes.
Dolly Parton received an Oscar nomination for Travelin’ Thru, a song she wrote and sang for Transamerica, while Willie Nelson and Emmylou Harris are heard on the Oscar frontrunner Brokeback Mountain.
Nelson, always an iconoclast in his music and politics, even released a gay cowboy song on Valentine’s Day, Cowboys Are Frequently, Secretly (Fond of Each Other).
But don’t expect a wave of gay love songs to sweep across the heartland anytime soon.
Veteran country stars like Parton, Nelson and Harris are free to reach out to a gay audience because they already have loyal fans. Their careers aren’t driven by hit records because country radio already ignores them.
Parton, who has always embraced her large gay following, says she’s too stubborn to worry about a negative response.
“I’m old enough and cranky enough now that if someone tried to tell me what to do, I’d tell them where to put it,” Parton, 60, recently said.
Country station WXBX in Johnson City devoted two days of its morning show to letting listeners talk about Willie and Dolly’s “gay” songs.
“We got the sense that the audience was disappointed in these artists. For our purposes, we probably wouldn’t be interested in much airplay,” said operations manager Bill Hagy, noting that Parton and Nelson aren’t really mainstream country artists anymore.
“In my opinion,” said country fan Jamie Billman, who lives in Valley Springs, Calif., but was on vacation Thursday in Nashville, “it does kind of offend what country music stands for.”
Transamerica stars Desperate Housewives actress Felicity Huffman as a transsexual who learns a week before sex-change surgery that he has a son from a fleeting heterosexual encounter, then embarks on a cross-country road trip with the teenager.
Parton wrote the closing-credits song, which has a gospel flavour with references to God and redemption. She sings, “Like a poor wayfaring stranger that they speak about in song/ I’m just a weary pilgrim trying to find what feels like home.”
“I have a person who works in my organization who once was a woman and now is a man,” Parton said. “I didn’t know for years that this person had had a sex change. I know what a wonderful person he is, and I based some of my feelings (in the song) on my feelings for him and on knowing what he went through.”
While Nashville has had few openly gay stars (Canadian-born k.d. lang is a notable exception, though she shifted from country to pop by 1992), the city’s gay leaders say Music Row is more hospitable than many think.
“I expected men in hoods and burning crosses, but I found a lot of people on Music Row are very open-minded,” said Grammy-nominated songwriter and producer Larry Dvoskin, who’s worked with David Bowie, Van Halen, Ricky Martin and others. “But there’s still this sort of cultural barrier, like, ‘We all love it and accept it, but we don’t want to talk about it.”’
But country singers have little reason to go public if they’re gay, said Chris Sanders, president of the Nashville Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce.
“The question a gay or lesbian country star has to ask himself or herself is will the public accept me as a musician and not focus on the other issue?” Sanders said.
Parton appears in gay publications and her fans organize an annual gay and lesbian day at her amusement park, Dollywood, in her native east Tennessee. She said gay men in particular are drawn to her flamboyant appearance, highlighted by thick makeup, gaudy clothing and blonde wig.
She’s at ease bucking the Nashville norm. “I’ve always been a freak and different, oddball even in my childhood and my own family, so I can relate to people who are struggling and trying to find their true identity,” Parton said. “I do not sit in the seat of judgment. ... I love people for who they are. We’re all God’s children.”
Nelson, 72, has never cared much for the opinion on Music Row either. His fan base is much broader than the usual country audience and includes hippies, rednecks and outlaws young and old. He can record a vigilante song with tough guy Toby Keith (Beer For My Horses), or a reggae album with a marijuana leaf on the cover.
On the Brokeback Mountain soundtrack, Nelson sings the gentle He Was a Friend of Mine. Harris performs A Love That Will Never Grow Old, by Gustavo Santaolalla and Bernie Taupin. Her fragile voice fits the sparse, ethereal arrangement, evoking the wide-open Wyoming landscape. The song recently won a Golden Globe award.
Nelson’s gay cowboy song features his deadpan delivery of lines like, “What did you think all them saddles and boots was about?” Written by Texas-born singer-songwriter Ned Sublette in 1981, the song has “been in the closet for 20 years,” Nelson said in a statement.
“The timing’s right for it to come out,” he said. “I’m just opening the door.”

Huk-L (Huk-L), Friday, 17 February 2006 14:59 (nineteen years ago)

Wow, Sublette can use the royalties to research another volume of Cuban musical history?

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 22 February 2006 15:58 (nineteen years ago)

That new gay cowboy song is really stupid, liberal-humanist sentiments be damned.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 22 February 2006 16:26 (nineteen years ago)


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