KRIS KRISTOFFERSON : THE ESSENTIAL

 

Disc One (62:02)

  1. Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down
  2. To Beat the Devil
  3. Just the Other Side of Nowhere
  4. Me and Bobby McGee
  5. The Best of All Possible Worlds
  6. Casey's Last Ride
  7. Help Me Make It Throught the Night
  8. Darby's Castle
  9. Jody and the Kid
  10. Loving Her Was Easier (That Anything I'll Ever Do Again)
  11. For the Good Times
  12. Come Sundown
  13. From the Bottle to the Bottom
  14. Billy Dee
  15. Breakdown (A Long Way from Home)
  16. The Silver Tongued Devil and I
  17. The Taker
  18. The Pilgrim : Chapter 33

Disc Two (66:18)

  1. Border Lord
  2. The Sabre and the Rose
  3. Broken Freedom song
  4. Jesus Was a Capricorn (Owed to John Prine)
  5. Shandy (The Perfect Disguise)
  6. Sugar Man
  7. The Last Time
  8. Nobody Wins
  9. I'd Rather Be Sorry
  10. Highwayman
  11. Don't Cuss the Fiddle
  12. The Bigger the Fool, The Harder the Fall
  13. Stranger
  14. If You Don't Like Hank Williams
  15. Here Comes That Rainbow Again
  16. Once More With Feeling
  17. How Do You Feel About Foolin' Around
  18. Why Me
  19. Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends

Label : Columbia

Release Year : 2004

Review (AllMusic) : The two-CD Essential Kris Kristofferson compilation isn't a balanced retrospective of his lengthy career, heavily emphasizing his 1969-1971 recordings, which in fact comprise all of disc one. And it doesn't represent many of his albums at all (particularly the ones not done for Monument or Columbia), including just one post-1985 track. On the other hand, for the vast majority of Kristofferson listeners who want a best-of that offers more than a single-disc greatest-hits anthology can, it serves its purpose well. His best-known songs are here, in the original Kristofferson-sung versions: "Me and Bobby McGee," "Help Me Make It Through the Night," "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down," "Why Me," and "For the Good Times." His earliest Monument records are sampled particularly deeply, with no less than nine of the 12 songs from his 1970 debut, Kristofferson, appearing. Still, there's no doubt that his early work was his most popular and best, and the disproportionate representation allows for the appearance of good songs from the era that escape skimpier greatest-hits collections. And there's no doubt that disc two, devoted almost entirely to post-1971 material, is less impressive and consistent, not to mention more haphazardly organized in its chronology, with the 1972 track "Why Me" appearing as the second-to-last cut. Room's also made for a few songs Kristofferson recorded with others, those being "I'd Rather Be Sorry" (a duet with Rita Coolidge), "Highwayman" (done with Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash), and "How Do You Feel About Foolin' Around" (on which he paired with Willie Nelson).