featured-image

Willie Nelson has never in his long life not wanted to be making music. After 2023 saw him celebrate his 90th birthday with an epic two-night concert celebration at the Hollywood Bowl, get inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and release two studio albums along with the usual constant touring, 2024 finds him as unretired as ever, with the release of “The Border.” It's his 152nd album, counting live collections and collaborations, according to Texas Monthly, which recently took on the titanic task of ranking them (“The Border” is No.

55). While his last studio album, “Bluegrass,” explored the music of Kentucky, the new one — produced by longtime collaborator Buddy Cannon and released by Sony's Legacy Recordings on streaming, CD and vinyl — is firmly planted in his native Texas and its stark southern borderlands. Inflections of Mexican music have run through almost all of Nelson's work, but he occasionally leans into it, as he did with the 1998 masterpiece “Teatro.



” He does the same — sort of — with “The Border," whose best tracks have heavy doses of the sounds of Mexico. That includes the stark, dark, title track, written by Nelson favorite Rodney Crowell with Allen Shamblin and sung from the perspective of a Border Patrol agent. It begins like a Western with a standoff between the law and the cartels.

“There’s a price on the head of every Border Patrol," Nelson sings. But then comes a shift, when the agent despairs for his life and his f.

Back to Entertainment Page