"Honeysuckle Rose" is like another 1980 Warner Brothers movie, "One Trick Pony", in which Paul Simon pretends to be a stuck-in-limbo singer-songwriter, Jonah Levin, who makes the rounds of small clubs with Simon's real-life band, but Simon's self-written screenplay and score presents an alternate artistic life for Levin. He doesn't sing "The Boxer." Bonham sings "Blue Eyes Cryin' In The Rain," "Whiskey River," and "Bloody Mary Morning." As a document of where Nelson and his band were at the end of the '70s, "Honeysuckle Rose" is as lively and varied as you'd want, with the bonus of performances by Hank Cochran, Johnny Gimble and Emmylou Harris. There are also vocal contributions by Dyan Cannon and Amy Irving, Nelson's co-stars in the film.
To the extent that "Honeysuckle Rose" has a plot, it's borrowed liberally from the 1939 film "Intermezzo," in which married violinist Leslie Howard falls for his young pianist, Ingrid Bergman. So substitute Willie for Leslie, Kris Kristofferson songs (Nelson duets with each of his ladies on a Kris tune) for Edvard Greig's Concerto in A minor, throw in Slim Pickens, and buy into the notion that Willie, beard, braids, bandana and all, is this magnetic romantic hero, caught between Cannon's blouse-bursting bombshell and Irving's dewy hero-worshipping ingénue. The arc of the movie is predictable, but director Jerry Schatzberg takes a leisurely approach, doesn't demand much of Nelson-as-actor (he doesn't need to: unlike Paul Simon, Willie doesn't seem at all anxious on screen; it's just another gig), and allows the music to pick up the dramatic slack.
Each of the four sides of the "Honeysuckle Rose" original double-LP soundtrack is like a separate act of the film. With the Oscar-nominated song "On The Road Again" (it, as well as Dolly Parton's "9 to 5," lost to the title theme from "Fame"), the movie and the album bring us into Bonham's world, to the tour bus, the hours between gigs, the moments on stage. It's what film critic Robin Wood, writing about director Howard Hawks, called "the lure of irresponsibility": the all-male troupe, just out there doin' their job, unencumbered and untangled. "Like a band of gypsies we go down the highway," Willie sings. "Insistin' that the world keep turnin' our way." Even though he has Dylan Cannon (who'd have been a perfect Hawksian woman) waitin' at home, and a kid, he just can't wait to get on the road again. "Pick Up The Tempo," he sings, and Johnny Gimble plays "Fiddlin' Around," and Jody Payne takes lead vocal on "Working Man Blues." That's what they are: men at work.
On side two, Buck/Willie plays the audience favorites "Whiskey River," "Bloody Mary Morning" (both from Nelson's pre-breakout period on Atlantic Records), and Nelson and Cannon sing their couples-song, Kristofferson's "Loving You Was Easier." Side three commences with Amy Irving's siren song, "If You Want Me To Love You I Will"; she and Willie do their Kris number "You Show Me Yours And I'll Show You Mine"; and Nelson sings his beautiful "Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground." You know where this is heading: there's a big concert at the end, the inevitable showdown between the rivals for Buck's favors (on the LP cover, there's an illustration of the two women sizing each other up, while the guy stares off into the distance, and his bandmates wait patiently by the bus until this whole kerfuffle passes). Cannon sings "Two Sides To Every Story," and the penultimate song is Willie, alone on guitar, singing Leon Russell's "A Song For You": happy ending, with a gospel "Uncloudy Day" climactic kicker.
Willie Nelson in 1980 was well on the way to becoming an American Institution, a figure like Bing Crosby, Ray Charles, or Louis Armstrong. With "Stardust," his 1978 album of standards, he'd earned a licence to take his music anywhere, to show that he owed as much to Django Reinhardt and Hoagy Carmichael as to Harlan Howard and Hank Williams. He used his clout to collaborate on albums with Leon Russell and Ray Price; to do a whole album of Kristofferson songs, a Christmas album ("Pretty Paper"), a gospel album ("Family Bible"), and a breezy "Stardust" sequel ("Somewhere Over The Rainbow"), all between 1979 and 1981, with "Honeysuckle Rose" smack in the middle. In the midst of all this, he made his movie debut in Sydney Pollack's "The Electric Horseman" (1979), and his songs in that film - including a hit version of the Allman Brothers Band's "Midnight Rider" - made up one side of the soundtrack album.
"Honeysuckle Rose," the album, was a huge success (#1 country), and the film did okay, but about six weeks before it opened in theaters, another country-music movie, "Urban Cowboy," came out and offered a different angle. What "Honeysuckle Rose" feels like is a summing-up, a last hurrah for the Outlaw Country movement that shook up the Nashville establishment in the '70s, when Willie and Waylon Jennings and the boys took over. As the 80s began, John Travolta put on a cowboy hat, Debra Winger straddled a mechanical bull. Outlaws? What Outlaws? Welcome Anne Murray, Kenny Rogers, Johnny Lee, and Mickey Gilley. And Willie? He just kept rollin' down the highway. And rollin', and rollin'...
But before we get to the main feature, let's enjoy...
The Pre-Show:
Last week's offering was exclusively occupied by Mamie Van Doren (not going to play any obvious jokes here). Today the Pre-Show will be shared by our two main characters, which in reality are one: "Trigger" (Willie Nelson's guitar and long time friend), plus Willie Nelson himself. There are ten "mini-documentaries" in total, four dedicated to the figure of not just a guitar but the familiar sound that we can immediately identify as being "Willie's sound". The other six, somehow, help us peek into this man's soul, through interviews, question answering and his silences, which speak volumes.
The Main Feature:
Title: Honeysuckle Rose
Director: Jerry Schatzberg
Cast: Willie Nelson / Dyan Cannon / Amy Irving / Slim Pickens
Release Date: 18th July 1980
Country: United States Of America
On Your Way Out:
Hoping the evening has been to your liking, what's left is for you to open your "farewell presents", with the knowing that there'll be, at least something of interest, to any Willie Nelson fan or country music enthusiast in general.
Cheers, Shade.
Note: Password for all files: Shade'sVintageRadio
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