The Borneo Post

Voice strong as mind fades, Glen Campbell says ‘Adios’

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NEW YORK: His mind succumbing to Alzheimer’s disease, country legend Glen Campbell can still summon strength through his voice and he has seized on it to bid farewell to the world.

A fixture on country music charts since the 1960s, the 81year-old on Friday released what with near certainty will be his final album, aptly entitled “Adios.”

With Campbell’s memory fading, he turns to music to rekindle a life’s worth of souvenirs on songs such as “Arkansas Farmboy,” which recalls his hardscrabb­le youth as one of 12 children of a sharecropp­er in the southern state.

Yet Campbell, his voice clutching onto its sturdiness, is neither melodramat­ic nor melancholy on “Adios,” instead throwing himself a bitterswee­t farewell party.

Campbell, who achieved crossover success on the US and British pop charts with hits such as “Rhinestone Cowboy” and “Wichita Lineman,” recorded his latest album as a sort of last testament just as his Alzheimer’s was becoming more severe.

He went into the studio in Nashville after in 2012 completing a difficult final tour, which was documented by the movie “Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me.”

The film, which generated the Grammy-winning song “I’m Not Gonna Miss You,” showed the star still instinctiv­ely fluent on the guitar yet struggling to remember lyrics and setlists and, by the time of his final show in Napa, California, barely able to lead his band.

Campbell’s family released the final album as the singer enters the late stages of Alzheimer’s, the disease most commonly experience­d by seniors who lose their memory and gradually their bodily functions.

Kim Campbell, the singer’s fourth wife who has become an advocate for Alzheimer’s caregivers, in March told The Tennessean newspaper that the artiste had lost most of his ability to speak and understand language.

‘Adios’ with lightness and joy

Like many of Campbell’s hits, the 12 songs on “Adios” — primarily covers — straddle the boundaries of country, incorporat­ing the gentle arrangemen­ts of soft rock.

A cello brings a new romanticis­m to “Postcard From Paris” as Campbell, the twang in his voice forceful and bright, recalls the City of Lights in a song by his longtime collaborat­or Jimmy Webb that was most famously performed by John Denver.

Willie Nelson appears on “Adios” to duet with Campbell on “Funny How Time Slips By,” which country music’s premier outlaw had written early in his career for Patsy Cline.

Together Nelson and Campbell infuse the song with the feel of pop standards as they are jogged by lesser memories that they struggled to remember, like pillow talk with a former lover.

On the title track, also originally by Webb, Campbell again says goodbye not with sorrow but wistfulnes­s as he recalls the sunset on the California coast.

Campbell, even aware of his own mortality, brings a light optimism to “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right,” the oft-interprete­d Bob Dylan tune whose original was a minimalist guitar confession­al.

Rollicking with a folksy band instead, Campbell picks up the tempo as he updates Dylan’s words: “I’m headed down that long, lonesome road, babe / Where I’m bound, I can’t tell.

“But ‘adios’ is just too good a word now / So I’ll just say, fare thee well.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Campbell performing at the Staples Centre during the 54th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California, on Feb 12, 2012. — AFP file photo
Campbell performing at the Staples Centre during the 54th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, California, on Feb 12, 2012. — AFP file photo

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