Although Kristofferson’s recording career took a dip with the disappointing
Spooky Lady Sideshow, his acting career continued to ascend; after starring in
Sam Peckinpah’s
Pat Garret and Billy the Kid, he was cast in a supporting role in
Martin Scorsese’s
Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, which was a smash hit in 1975 and grossed more than $17 million nationwide. Some pointed to Kristofferson’s increased interest in acting as the reason for the decline in his musical success, a sentiment echoed when music publisher Bob Beckham cracked that the singer might want to go back to flying helicopters down to the
Gulf Coast, where he had written some of his early famous songs. Kristofferson later stated he was sure “there were some people that really started to get critical of what I was doing. It was as if I were spending so much creative energy on the wrong thing, performing and movies, that my songwriting was suffering. I don’t think it was. I don’t think I’d have done better if I’d been down there in the Gulf still. And certainly, the rest of my life was an exciting thing.” By 1975, the
outlaw country movement exploded with the release of
Willie Nelson’s
Red Headed Stranger, as well as with a string of successful LPs by
Waylon Jennings, including the seminal album
Honky Tonk Heroes. Although Kristofferson helped as much as any artist to sow the seeds of this new genre, which offered deeper, realistic lyrics rooted in pure country with a rock and roll attitude,
Who’s to Bless and Who’s to Blame continued his commercial decline that had started with 1974’s
Spooky Lady Sideshow. ==Recording and composition==