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Ringo goes country, again. The ex-Beatle mixes peace and love with twang and heartache on new album

Country music comes naturally to Ringo Starr

Andrew Dalton
Friday 15 November 2024 09:36 EST

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Country comes naturally to Ringo Starr.

It's been a low-key part of his of his career since his Beatle beginnings, so it was not a serious swerve for him to make a whole country album, the forthcoming ā€œLook Up,ā€ a collaboration with the modern maestro of classic country and Americana, T Bone Burnett.

ā€œIā€™ve done 20 albums and thereā€™s always a track that's country-ish on each one,ā€ the 84-year-old Starr told The Associated Press recently.

His love of the music ā€” Hank Williams and Kitty Wells are favorites ā€” began in childhood, alongside his acquisition of affection for blues, swing and whatever else came to his hometown.

ā€œLiverpool, itā€™s the capital of country music in England,ā€ Starr said, ā€œbecause a lot of I think it stems from it being a port, and why we got rock ā€˜nā€™ roll music physically, was because the lads on the boats would be going to America, theyā€™d be going to Egypt, would be going all over. But they were bringing music in.ā€

Starr ā€” even his stage name has cowboy vibes ā€” had a star turn with the Beatles in 1965 when he sang the Buck Owens' honky-tonk classic, ā€œAct Naturally." Many of the Beatle originals the drummer sang, including ā€œWhat Goes Onā€ and ā€œDon't Pass Me By," had country undertones.

It would culminate with his second solo album, 1971's ā€œBeaucoups of Blues," going full country.

He kept dabbling ā€” he recorded an ā€œAct Naturallyā€ duet with Owens in 1989 ā€” but he didn't make a full country album again for decades.

Enter Burnett, the culture's chief curator of classic country for the last 25 years, the man behind the soundtracks to ā€œO Brother Where Art Thouā€ and ā€œInside Llewyn Davis," and the unlikely pairing of Robert Plant and Alison Krauss.

Starr had known Burnett for decades, but had never collaborated on an entire project with him.

ā€œIn the '70s I used to throw a lot of parties and, and he was always there and I never invited him once," Starr said. ā€œWe often laugh about that.ā€

The two were both at the Sunset Marquis last year for a poetry reading from Olivia Harrison, daughter of Starr's former bandmate George Harrison.

Starr had been doing a series of EPs with different writers and producers, including a recent release with Linda Perry, and suggested Burnett give him a song for the next one.

Burnett quickly came back with a country tune.

ā€œIt was beautiful. The most beautiful song Iā€™ve heard in a long time,ā€ Starr said. He began to think, "Iā€™m going to do a country piece.ā€

An inspired Burnett would write nine songs that along with two more, one of them written by Starr with his friend Bruce Sugar, turning the EP into an LP.

Starr played the drums and sang in Los Angeles, while Burnett recorded parts of the record in Nashville, bringing on young neo-classical country artists Billy Strings and Molly Tuttle for several tracks apiece.

And Krauss sings with Starr on the song he co-wrote, ā€œThankful,ā€ released Friday as the album's second single, in which he managed to smuggle his catchphrase, ā€œpeace and love,ā€ into a genre that's usually about anything but.

ā€œYeah, I put it in the song,ā€ he said with a smile.

ā€œLook Up,ā€ to be released in January, comes at a major country moment across music, with everyone from BeyoncĆ© to Post Malone pulling on cowboy boots and breaking out out the twang.

ā€œMine just came together. I mean, I didnā€™t think of any of that,ā€ Starr said. ā€œI just thought, Iā€™m going to do it.ā€

BeyoncƩ did come up at one point in Burnett and Starr's work.

ā€œHe asked, ā€˜what are you going to call the album?ā€™" Starr said. ā€œI thought, ā€˜BE-ON-SAY.ā€™ But nobody laughed.ā€

In January, he'll get to play one of his favorite places, Nashville's Ryman auditorium, former longtime home of the Grand Ole Opry, for a pair of concerts and a TV special.

ā€œIā€™m excited because weā€™re going to be doing like some of the other songs and some of the country songs,ā€ he said. ā€œWeā€™ll be doing ā€˜With a Little Help From My Friendsā€™ in a country fashion, country style. So letā€™s see.ā€

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