Showing posts with label Kris Kristofferson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kris Kristofferson. Show all posts

Kris Kristofferson - Jesus Was A Capricorn (1972)

Kris Kristofferson is an American country music singer-songwriter.

Jesus Was A Capricorn was Kris Kristofferson's second album release of 1972. It presented a collection of ten new songs in his distinctive story-telling style. By this time he was in a relationship with singer Rita Coolidge, and one of the songs he performed as a duet with her. Another guest vocalist was singer-songwriter Larry Gatlin, who sang his own "Help Me" with Kristofferson (the one non-original song on the album). With a similar spiritual theme was "Why Me", which was released as single and became a big hit, reaching #1 on the country chart and #16 on the Billboard Hot 100. It turned out to be the one and only #1 hit of Kristofferson's career, and the album marked the high point for him in terms of commercial success - his subsequent albums would all sell in increasingly smaller quantities.

Border Lord (1972) <|> Spooky Lady's Sideshow (1974)
More from Kris Kristofferson

Download

Kris Kristofferson - Border Lord (1972)

Kris Kristofferson is an American country music singer-songwriter.

In 1971 Kris Kristofferson made his acting debut in the film The Last Movie, and then starred in Cisco Pike in 1972. The same year he released his third album. Unlike his first two, which had both featured songs that had already been recorded by other artists (many of which had been hits), Border Lord featured entirely new songs. Also when compared to the first two (which featured strings and rather lush arrangements in places), the sound of the album was notably dry and gritty. Sales were slow overall, but the song "Josie" did break into the Top 100 when released as a single, charting #63. A modest position, but with his songwriting successes and new burgeoning acting career Kristofferson was doing fine.

The Silver Tongued Devil And I (1971) <|> Jesus Was A Capricorn (1972)
More from Kris Kristofferson

Download

Kris Kristofferson - The Silver Tongued Devil And I (1971)

Kris Kristofferson is an American country music singer-songwriter.

In the late 60s and early 70s Kris Kristofferson had emerged as one of the most successful new songwriters in country music, penning songs that became huge hits for artists including Johnny Cash, Ray Price, Bobby Bare, Sammi Smith and Waylon Jennings. His own brilliant solo debut had not been much of a commercial success, but by the time he brought out the follow-up in 1971 his songwriting successes (capped by Janis Joplin's #1 pop cover of "Me & Bobby McGee") had pepared people to take notice of him as a recording artist in his own right.
The Silver Tongued Devil And I featured a similar collection of wonderful story-songs. There were some great new songs, alongside a couple of older ones ("Jody & The Kid" had been recorded by Roy Drusky in 1968, and "The Taker" had been a hit for Waylon Jennings in 1970) and a cover of Bobby Bare's "Good Christian Soldier" (Bare himself recorded a lot of Kristofferson songs in '70 and '71). It perhaps wasn't as consistent as his debut (where arguably every song was a masterpiece), but it turned out to be a bigger success. "Lovin' Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again)" gave Kristofferson his first hit single of his own, reaching #26 on the pop chart.

Kristofferson (1970) <|> Border Lord (1972)
More from Kris Kristofferson

Download

Kris Kristofferson - Kristofferson (1970)

Kris Kristofferson is an American country music singer-songwriter.

Kris Kristofferson was born in Brownsville, Texas in 1936. In his youth he attempted a career as a writer, studying at both Pomona and Oxford, and it was whilst in England that he first started writing songs. He also first recorded there under the name Kris Carson, but was unsuccessful. After graduating in 1960 he married and joined the army, becoming a helicopter pilot and being stationed in West Germany. When he was discharged in 1965 he decided to pursue songwriting further, and moved to Nashville.
For his first few years he struggled, and worked both as a janitor at Columbia Studios (where he first met Johnny Cash) and as a commercial helicopter pilot. He did manage to get his song "Viet Nam Blues" recorded by Dave Dudley, who took it to #12 on the country charts. He also released a single of his own on Epic Records, but it went nowhere. However over the next few years his songwriting began to go places, and soon many established country artists were having hits with his songs. He was also introduced by Johnny Cash at the Newport Folk Festival.
In 1970 he signed to Fred Foster's Monument Records, and released his first album. It was a splendid record, Foster's production working brilliantly with Kristofferson's gravelly vocals to create a unique sound. It featured many of the songs that other artists had already recorded, along with some excellent new material. By then his songs were being recorded by numerous top country stars, including Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Bobby Bare, Ray Price, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Drusky, Faron Young and Roger Miller. The album itself was not an initial commercial success, but at the same time he won awards for 'Song Of The Year' from both the Academy Of Country Music (for Ray Price's "For The Good Times") and the Country Music Association (for Johnny Cash's "Sunday Morning Coming Down"). Both songs were #1 country hits, and Sammi Smith's version of "Help Me Make It Through The Night" took the number of country chart toppers he had written to three. Price and Smith also took his songs into the pop charts, the former peaking at #11 and the latter at #8. Kristofferson's ultimate success as a songwriter came in 1971, when Janis Joplin's recording of "Me & Bobby McGee" was released as a single shortly after her death, resulting in a #1 pop hit.
Though the album sold poorly upon its first release, it was soon re-iussed under the title Me & Bobby McGee, following the success of his second album and Joplin's hit. It was soon certified Gold. Looking at it now, it's surely a masterpiece, containing some of the finest country songs of the era. Kristofferson's sound and writing style happily broke free of the conservative constraints of the Nashville country music industry, and made him a forerunner of the 'Outlaw Country' movement.

|> The Silver Tongued Devil And I (1971)
More from Kris Kristofferson

Download