1985 Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee Kris Kristofferson has always identified himself first and foremost as a writer, and true writers know that what works best is giving a piece of themselves to the listener. With his latest album, This Old Road, Kristofferson lays a chunk of his own soul on every track.
Kristofferson’s story is fairly well known: he had a dream along with the necessary talent and ambition-to become a songwriter. After turning down a teaching position at West Point, the Rhodes Scholar hoped to get his foot in the door of the music business by taking a job as a janitor at Columbia Records. It wasn’t long after arriving in Nashville that he was receiving armloads of acclaim and being hailed as one of America’s clearest and most important voices, having penned such classics as “Me and Bobby McGee,” “Sunday Morning Coming Down,” “For the Good Times,” and many others.
Now Kristofferson has reached living legend status, but that hasn’t changed or hindered his skills. This Old Road contains eleven gems that explore love, gratitude, aging, war, and his ever-present theme of freedom. “If you took freedom out of the songs, you’d have very few Kristofferson songs,” he laughs. “If I had to describe it in one word, I’d say it’s honest,” he says of This Old Road. “It’s all pretty close to the bone, about my own personal journey. It’s about what sense I’ve made of my life up to now.”
Kristofferson says a recent return to the road without his band helped to put a focus on the songs. “There’s an honesty in the sparseness. It feels like direct communication to the listener,” he says. “I still have more fun when I’m with the band, but being alone is freer, somehow. It’s like being an old blues guy, just completely stripped away.”
The album pays tribute to those who have gone before Kristofferson - particularly on “The Last Thing to Go,” wherein he salutes “those of us who took things seriously, who were trying to move people;” and on “The Show Goes On,” a song he calls “a fond look back at the way we were putting ourselves out there and trying to create something special.” On “Wild American” he reminds listeners of some personal heroes; people like Native American activist John Trudell and others who “happen when you need ‘em” like Merle Haggard and Steve Earle.
He gives a nod to music-lovers on “Final Attraction,” a song that was inspired by watching the communication between Willie Nelson and a large crowd of listeners. “It’s a special thing, that relationship between the singer and the audience,” he says. The song ends with the words Guy Clark said to him when he was going out on stage one night: “Go break a heart” instead of the standard “Go break a leg.”
“In the News” takes a hard look at modern-day life with the refrain of “I want nothing but the endin’ of the war,” while the prayer-song “The Burden of Freedom” focuses on “the fact that freedom is a double-edged sword,” Kristofferson says. “When I wrote it back in the late 60s, it was about leaving the path I had been prepared for-West Point and all that-but it’s mostly about doing what you believe is right whether that makes you enemies or not.”
All of the songs are intensely personal, but one of his favorites is the bluesy “Chase the Feeling,” which he calls “a meditation on what destructive behavior feels like, what it does to you.” Although unfailingly modest, even Kristofferson can’t deny that “Holy Creation” is one his most beautiful compositions. He says the song was inspired by his eight children, whom he calls his “greatest legacy.” Kristofferson also pays homage to his family on “Thank You for a Life.” However, the song is multi-layered. “The best love songs can be taken on a couple different levels, so that song is being sung to my wife but also to God,” he says. “In the end, it’s all love.”
And in the end, this album is all about love, freedom, and about Kristofferson giving a piece of himself to the listener. After all, that’s the thing he’s always been best at. And on this, the most intensely personal album of his career, he goes the extra mile, creating a thing of rare beauty, grace, and eloquence.