The Standard Journal

Review: Willie Nelson swings, croons Sinatra set on ‘My Way’

- By Pablo Gorondi

Willie Nelson is country music personifie­d, but he’s no red-headed stranger to the Great American Songbook, either.

On “My Way,” the prolific Texan swings and croons through 11 songs associated with Frank Sinatra, with whom he formed an unlikely and undeniable mutual admiration society.

Nelson has been releasing albums at a pace rarely seen these days among major stars, much less 85-year-olds who’ve been on the road forever.

“My Way,” second of the year after the reflective “Last Man Standing,” is a joy from start to finish.

With “Stardust,” his smash 1978 LP, Nelson became an early adherent to the nowubiquit­ous crossover interpreta­tion of pop standards and though he’s recorded some of these songs before — including opener “Fly Me to the Moon” and one of Sinatra’s greatest performanc­es, “One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)” — the right-sized string and horn arrangemen­ts led here by Matt Rollings accommodat­e both Ol’ Blue Eyes’ world and Nelson’s own idiosyncra­tic interpreta­tions.

“Fly Me to the Moon” gains a slightly more spirited pace than on Nelson’s 2009 “American Classic,” while “Summer Wind” includes a lyrical Nelson solo on Trigger, that nylon-string Martin guitar of his with an extra hole resulting from years of use.

The backing really shines on “One for My Baby” and Nelson’s vocal shows how he is indeed a “kind of poet” even when the song is not his own compositio­n.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States