DULUTH – “Willie Nelson for President 2024″ proclaimed the $5 bumper stickers in the official merchandise tent Thursday night at Bayfront Festival Park.
The country music legend came to Duluth for the first time since 2011, giving his usual stump speech, er, concert. He started with the pleading “Whiskey River” and ended with the tongue-in-cheek “It’s Hard to Be Humble.”
If you’ve seen Willie in recent years, you’ve likely heard these same songs before. But there were many first-timers on Thursday like singer/songwriter Geno LaFond from Grand Marais and mining heavy equipment operator Allen Pangrac from Embarrass, Minn.
“For 91, this is awesome,” Pangrac said mid-show of the nonagenarian’s performance.
It was first-rate, age notwithstanding. Willie was in fine form, singing with thoughtful phrasing more than talk-singing, which has been his default approach on some nights as he ages. He punched his words on the end of the back-to-back Peach State odes, the stirringly wistful “Georgia on My Mind” and the chugging “I Been to Georgia on a Fast Train.”
Willie’s acoustic guitar work was eloquently expressive, embracing jazz, Tex-Mex, flamenco and deep-note blues whether he was taking extended solos, offering introductory passages or playing filigree between vocal lines.
His ballads, including “Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground,” “Always on My Mind” and the aforementioned “Georgia,” seemed to resonate more deeply as you realize this might be the last time you witness Willie even if it was your first time.
Unlike many of his recent records on which he addressed mortality in his songs, that vibe didn’t permeate his lyrics on Thursday. Perhaps the closest he came was in the third selection, 1993′s “Still Is Still Moving to Me.”