other titles...

WILLIE NELSON

The Border

very limited lp - £23.99 | Pre Order
very limited cd - £12.99 | Pre Order
WILLIE NELSON

The Words Don’t Fit The Picture (2024 Repress)

limited numbered 180g audiophile translucent blue lp (1500 only) - £29.99 | Pre Order
'The Words Don't Fit The Picture' is Willie Nelson's fourteenth studio album, and one of his last at RCA Records.
WILLIE NELSON

Long Story Short: Willie Nelson 90 - Live At The Hollywood Bowl

2lp - £32.99 | Buy
the definitive music release of the star-studded concerts celebrating Willie’s 90th Birthday.
WILLIE NELSON

Greatest Hits

2LP - £26.99 | Buy
CD - £13.99 | Buy
This new collection is a career spanner jampacked with 22 songs, with each era of Willie’s illustrious six decade career chronicled.
WILLIE NELSON

Bluegrass

limited electric blue lp - £25.99 | Buy
the 151st Willie nelson album finds Willie revisiting a dozen of the biggest hits and his best songwriting from across his career in bluegrass style with some o...
WILLIE NELSON

Teatro (2023 reissue)

limited 180g black lp - £28.99 | Buy
the 45th studio album, released in 1998, by American country music singer Willie Nelson.
Phases and Stages (RSD 24)

WILLIE NELSON

Phases and Stages (RSD 24)

rhino / atlantic
  • Record Store Day 2024 -140g 2LP

    Released: 20th Apr 2024

    £47.99
    out of stock

If Shotgun Willie played a bit like a concept album, Phases and Stages was a full-blown one, tracing the dissolution of a marriage and devoting one side to the wife's perspective, the second to the husband's….

Phases and Stages is easily the equal of its remarkable predecessor, a wonderful set of music that resonates deeply, as deeply as the words. Make no mistake -- the deceptively relaxed arrangements, including the occasional strings, not only highlight Nelson's clever eclecticism, but they also heighten the emotional impact of the album. And this is a hell of an emotional record, where even each side's celebratory honky tonk numbers (the medley "Sister's Coming Home/Down at the Corner Beer Joint" and "Pick Up the Tempo," respectively) are muted by sadness. Then, there are the centerpieces: "Walkin'," where the woman decides it's time to move on; "Pretend I Never Happened," perhaps the coldest ending to a relationship ever written; "Bloody Mary Morning," a bleary-eyed morning-after tale that became a standard; "It's Not Supposed to Be That Way," a nearly unbearably melancholy account of a love gone wrong; and "Heaven and Hell," a waltz summary of the relationship. Any two of these would have formed a strong core for an album, but placed together in a narrative context, their impact is even more considerable. As a result, this is not just one of Willie Nelson's best records, but one of the great concept albums overall.