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Yet, Nelson still plays with the same energy, delicacy, and passion as he always has.
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Nelson released this album at age 83 and the key shaped hole in the top of Trigger isn’t getting any smaller. One can’t help but be impressed by the duo. The stand out instrument on the record is by far the nylon rhythm guitar, which more than likely comes from Willie’s well worn gut-string Martin, “Trigger.” The nylon twang gives a special feel to the fills on “I Made a Mistake,” and the final notes of “Delete and Fast Forward,” which Willie plays rapidly in a gypsy jazz style, channeling his inner Django Reinhardt. The instruments all have a chance to breathe and Willie’s voice sits in the mix well. The mix is no issue on this album, every song sounds great. The topic may be considered a risk in the mind of country purists, as classic country instrumentation doesn’t seem like it would mix well with 21st century technology, but Willie knocks it out of the park with his signature delivery. Further proof of Nelson’s steadfast individualism can be found on “Still Not Dead,” a track which covers Willie’s false death reports on the internet. It’s an incredibly Willie move, and acts as reassurance that the country legend has yet to sell his soul to the business which has become of music. Willie forgoes a typical building block opener and in favor of addressing the topic which is closest to his heart first. “He Won’t Ever Be Gone,” an ode to his recently deceased friend Merle Haggard, starts the album off in an abrupt yet appreciated manner. God’s Problem Child gets to business straight away. He covers Willie topics in his own Willie way and brings his old friend Trigger along for the ride, scratching that Willie itch his fans never lost. The future candidate for country music’s Mount Rushmore does nothing to defy expectations on his newest work, putting all the Willie charm the world has come to expect into thirteen new songs. However, Willie Nelson’s newest release, God’s Problem Child, is an exception to the rule, for it can be appropriately addressed as just another Willie Nelson record, and there is nothing wrong with that. “We’re just a rock band”, “we’re just a blues trio,” or “I’m just a folk singer”, are all summaries echoing throughout every record store and guitar shop in America, in response to the question of “What kind of music do you play?” Artists or groups who describe themselves so ambiguously are typically quite dreadful they strive to create music which fits perfectly into a box which someone else created, and thus, offer nothing of substance or soul.
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There is nothing worse than musicians using the word “just” in describing their sound.