To All the Girls...

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To All the Girls...
File:Willie Nelson - To All The Girls (album cover).jpg
Studio album by Willie Nelson
Released October 15, 2013 (2013-10-15)
Genre Country
Label Legacy Recordings
Producer Buddy Cannon
Willie Nelson chronology
Let's Face the Music and Dance
(2013)Let's Face the Music and Dance2013
To All the Girls...
(2013)
Band of Brothers
(2014)Band of Brothers2014

To All the Girls... is an album by country music singer-songwriter Willie Nelson, which was released on October 15, 2013, by Legacy Recordings. The tracks consist in a series of duets recorded by Nelson with prominent female country singers.

The week of its release, the album entered Billboard's Top Country Albums chart at number two, marking Nelson's highest position on the chart since 1989. It also entered at number nine on the Billboard 200.

Recording

The album consists of a collection of duets featuring Nelson along with prominent country music female singers. The performers featured on the eighteen tracks of the album were Dolly Parton, Miranda Lambert, Loretta Lynn, Carrie Underwood, The Secret Sisters, Rosanne Cash, Sheryl Crow, Wynonna Judd, Alison Krauss, Melonie Cannon, Mavis Staples, Norah Jones, Shelby Lynne, Emmylou Harris, Lily Meola, Brandi Carlile, Tina Rose; and his daughter, Paula Nelson. The album was released on October 15, 2013 on Legacy Recordings.[1]

Release and reception

The first single "From Here to the Moon and Back", a duet with Dolly Parton that she wrote for the 2012 movie Joyful Noise, was released on August 2, 2013.[2] It was followed by the release of the single "Grandma's Hands", with Mavis Staples, on August 6.[3] "It Won't Be Long", featuring the Secret Sisters was released on September 24;[4] while "Somewhere Between" with Loretta Lynn was released on October 1.[5]

Upon its full release, on October 15, 2013;[6] the album entered Billboard's Top Country Albums at number two. It marked Nelson's highest position on the chart since the release of his 1989 album A Horse Called Music, and it extended his record to a total of forty-six top ten albums on the country charts. Nelson scored as well his second top ten album on the Billboard 200, with the release entering at number nine.[7]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic (72/100)
Review scores
Source Rating
Seattle Post-Intelligencer Favorable
The Telegraph 4/5 stars
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars
Record Collector 4/5 stars
Associated Press Mixed.
Roughstock 4/5 stars

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer called the release "a wonderful album" composed by "great material", performed with "style and grace".[8] The Telegraph rated it with four stars out of five, qualifying the diversity of music genres contained on the recordings as "impressive". The review described Nelson's guitar playing "sweet and distinctive as ever", and remarked that his voice was "holding up well".[9] Allmusic delivered a favorable review, rating the album with three-and-a-half stars out of five. The website defined the tracks as "assured, easy, impeccably tasteful work from (Nelson) and his partners", but stated that the seventy-minute length "make(s) the album feel a little samey".[10]

Rolling Stone offered a mixed review, rating the album with three stars out of five. The review noted that "several of the pairings [...] lament unions that couldn't work", while it remarked that Nelson "holds his unmistakable own throughout".[11] Record Collector rated the release with four stars, calling it a "fine addition" to Nelson's collection of duets.[12] Associated Press felt that the duets were "custom-made for the download age", alleging that Nelson's usual audience would not "connect with all 16 songs", calling the set "too eclectic and too inconsistent". It also remarked that "plenty of gold nuggets shine through for those willing to pick through the miscues and throwaways".[13] Roughstock rated it with four stars and called the album "a delight" with "18 tracks of fantastic duets".[14] The review aggregator website Metacritic gave the album a Metascore of 72/100, based on six reviews.[15]

Track listing

No. Title Duet partner Length
1. "From Here to the Moon and Back"   Dolly Parton 4:01
2. "She Was No Good for Me"   Miranda Lambert 3:47
3. "It Won't Be Very Long"   The Secret Sisters 2:36
4. "Please Don’t Tell Me How the Story Ends"   Rosanne Cash 4:18
5. "Far Away Places"   Sheryl Crow 4:56
6. "Bloody Mary Morning"   Wynonna Judd 3:05
7. "Always on My Mind"   Carrie Underwood 3:55
8. "Somewhere Between"   Loretta Lynn 3:13
9. "No Mas Amor"   Alison Krauss 4:12
10. "Back To Earth"   Melonie Cannon 3:30
11. "Grandma's Hands"   Mavis Staples 3:10
12. "Walkin'"   Norah Jones 3:39
13. "'Til The End of the World"   Shelby Lynne 2:01
14. "Will You Remember Mine"   Lily Meola 4:34
15. "Dry Lightning"   Emmylou Harris 4:21
16. "Making Believe"   Brandi Carlile 3:16
17. "Have You Ever Seen the Rain"   Paula Nelson 4:38
18. "After the Fire Is Gone"   Tina Rose 2:43

Personnel

Chart performance

The week of its release, the album entered Billboard's Top Country Albums chart at number two, marking Nelson's highest position on the chart since 1989, as well as his second top ten album on the Billboard 200, entering at number nine. It is Nelson's 46th top ten debut, the most of any country singers on that chart. It sold 43,000 in its first week.[16] As of January 2014, the album has sold 114,000 copies in the US.[17]

In the UK, the album debuted at No. 72 on the album chart, selling 1,452 copies for the week.[18]

Chart (2013) Peak
position
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[19] 21
UK Albums (OCC)[20] 72
US Billboard 200[21] 9
US Top Country Albums (Billboard)[22] 2

References

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  19. "Willie Nelson – Chart history" Billboard Canadian Albums Chart for Willie Nelson.
  20. "Willie Nelson | Artist | Official Charts". UK Albums Chart
  21. "Willie Nelson – Chart history" Billboard 200 for Willie Nelson.
  22. "Willie Nelson – Chart history" Billboard Top Country Albums for Willie Nelson.