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The Essential Kris Kristofferson

The Essential Kris Kristofferson
Kris Kristofferson

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down
  2. To Beat the Devil
  3. Just the Other Side of Nowhere
  4. Me and Bobby McGee
  5. Best of All Possible Worlds
  6. Casey's Last Ride
  7. Help Me Make It Throught the Night
  8. Darby's Castle
  9. Jody and the Kid
  10. Loving Her Was Easier (That Anything I'll Ever Do Again)
  11. For the Good Times
  12. Come Sundown
  13. From the Bottle to the Bottom
  14. Billy Dee
  15. Breakdown (A Long Way from Home)
  16. Silver Tongued Devil and I
  17. Taker
  18. Pilgrim: Chapter 33 [Live]

Disc 2:

  1. Border Lord
  2. Sabre and the Rose
  3. Broken Freedom Song
  4. Jesus Was a Capricorn (Owed to John Prine)
  5. Shandy (The Perfect Disguise)
  6. Sugar Man
  7. Last Time
  8. Nobody Wins
  9. I'd Rather Be Sorry - Rita Coolidge, Kris Kristofferson
  10. Highwayman - Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson
  11. Don't Cuss the Fiddle
  12. Bigger the Fool, The Harder the Fall
  13. Stranger
  14. If You Don't Like Hank Williams
  15. Here Comes That Rainbow Again
  16. Once More With Feeling
  17. How Do You Feel About Foolin' Around - Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson
  18. Why Me
  19. Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6724 in Music
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 2004-03-02
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Original recording remastered

Customer Reviews

Songs that make us feel good4
Essentialness is defined as the basics, the necessary listening to fully capture and appreciate a musician's career. Born the son of an air force general in Texas in 1936, Kris Kristofferson's first gig in Nashville was as a janitor cleaning ashtrays and "go-fer" at CBS Studios in the mid-60s. Encouraged by Johnny Cash who helped him "beat the devil," Kris had his first own real big on-the-road hit with "Me and Bobby McGee," especially after it was covered by Cash, Janis Joplin and Roger Miller. Songwriter Kristofferson fully established himself with "Help Me Make it Through the Night" and "Sunday Morning Coming Down" (which also got covered by Ray Stevens). His songs have now been covered by at least 500 artists from Elvis to Dylan.

A great many of these 37 tracks come from his early albums, "Kristofferson" (ten tracks) and "The Silver Tongued Devil and I" (six tracks). I could also argue that some of his followup records from 1972-74 were less than monumental. I certainly question this collection's inclusion of five cuts from the insipid album "Jesus was a Capricorn" and two from the lackluster "Spooky Lady's Sideshow." The #1 country hit, "Why Me," would have been enough from the former. Kristofferson once questioned that song's hit status in Music City News - "It's too slow. It's sincere and it's pretty, but it's about a personal, religious thing. It's not what I ever thought a hit was."

His 1978 album "Easter Island" was definitely better, and we see "The Bigger the Fool, the Harder the Fall" and "The Sabre and the Rose" included on this compilation. But why is there nothing from his 1986 "Repossessed" album, for example? That recording was highly-acclaimed and presented a body of new material after a five-year album hiatus. In fact, the only song on this collection that was recorded after 1984 is "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends," from the late 1990s. However, "The Essential Kris" does give us over two hours of music.

Of special note are those songs that Kristofferson recorded with others. "I'd Rather Be Sorry" is a duet with Rita Coolidge, his wife from 1973-79. Title cut from the album, "Highwayman," is sung with Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash. A duet with Willie Nelson, "How Do You Feel About Foolin' Around" was recorded in 1983.

Most reviewers agree that Kris Kristofferson's early compositions were his best, and those songs are certainly essential listening. Since this 2-CD collection does not follow a rigid chronological presentation, perhaps more from his earliest albums should have been included on the second disc to balance the hits. Kristofferson has been recognized as a tender singer/songwriter who has a knack for making lyrical statements that people can personally relate to. Many of his songs simply make us feel good. To relive "the good times" that Kristofferson's music has brought us, this double album will nostalgically take us back. (Joe Ross, staff writer, Bluegrass Now)

+1/2 -- Weighted to seminal early work4
An artist as prolific as Kristofferson is necessarily difficult to capture in compilation, not least of which because his songs and singing are half his artistic story. Without the hits that others launched from Kristofferson's pen, you can't assemble a full view of his impact on Nashville and pop music in general. Still, Kristofferson's own recordings, especially those of songs made popular by others, are intimate and revealing in ways that no one else's could ever really be. Jopin sung the hell out of "Me and Bobby McGee," but she lost some of the down-and-out brokenness Kristofferson laid into it. Similarly, for "Help Me Make it Through the Night" and "For the Good Times" the hits became icons for Sammi Smith and Ray Price, respectively, but Kristofferson's own versions are perhaps even more unforgettable for his earthier, less-polished voice.

These two discs lean heavily on Kristofferson's earlier work, which, for most listeners will be the right mix. As a recording artist, Kristofferson hit the ground in full sprint on his debut album, "Kristofferson." The follow-up, "The Silver Tongued Devil and I" was just as strong. These two albums alone contribute 16 of disc 1's 18 tracks. Disc 2, on the other hand, samples a dozen different albums, stopping for more than once at any particular release only a few times. The result is a highly consistent disc 1, and a more erratic disc 2. To be fair, one can't help but draw heavily upon Kristofferson's early pair, but given that disc 2 already fails to keep a linear timeline, it might have helped to add a few of the earlier tracks to disc 2.

That said, what's here is magnificent, and shows off Kristofferson's lyrical poetry to great effect. Disc 1 is only bettered by buying Kristofferson's first two albums as reissues (something that any serious fan is highly recommended to do). Disc 2 does an adequate job of surveying the work that followed Kristofferson's initial burst of genius. Included are tracks recorded throughout the '70s, including "Highwayman" with Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and Johnny Cash, and duets with Willie Nelson, and then-wife Rita Coolidge.

This is a good starter set, though anyone bitten by the works on disc 1 will want to pick up the full first two albums. Disc 2 provides a good sense of the path Kristofferson's work took, with good hints as to which albums listeners might wish to examine in full. 4-1/2 stars, if allowed fractional ratings.

Essential? You betcha!5
Kris Kristofferson is not just a songwriter--he's a friggin' poet. "The Essential" is a 2 CD collection of some of his best songs ever, sung in his ragged country voice, spanning pretty much his entire career (although 2003's "Broken Freedom Song" gets left out; but that's forgiveable).

I won't bore you by going song-by-song; there're too many, and they're all too good. Let me hit the highlights (my favorites):

"To Beat the Devil," about a man who refuses the Devil's advice, then "steals his song"; "The Best of All Possible Worlds," a sarcasm-laced story of a noncomforist in a small town; "Help Me Make It Through the Night," a song of desperation and lonliness that's probably the best Kristofferson tune ever (though I'm willing to argue that).

"Loving Her Was Easier" is a beautiful poem; "From the Bottle to the Bottom" is a witty toe-tapper; "Highwayman" features Cash, Waylon, and Willie (the four of them together being the all-star Highwaymen); "Don't Cuss the Fiddle," about the toils of songwriting; "If You Don't Like Hank Williams" (you can kiss his, and my, a**); "Here Comes that Rainbow Again," based on THE GRAPES OF WRATH, about the kindness of strangers; and "How Do You Feel About Foolin' Around," a rockin' little number with Willie.

There're more songs; all of them are good, though some are better than others. And yes, I've heard better versions of these tunes ("Sunday Morning Coming Down" will always belong to Johnny Cash, and other sungs--such as "Shandy", "Broken Freedom Song", and "The Pilgrim"--appear on other albums in different versions), but they are all good.

Could Kris Kristofferson write a bad tune? Probably. But he'd have to try pretty damn hard.

Buy "The Essential Kris Kristofferson." It is ESSENTIAL that your ears--and heart--hear it.