Beginnings (1956–1971) Nelson was hired by
KVAN in
Vancouver, Washington, and appeared frequently on a television show. He made his first record in 1956, "
No Place for Me", that included
Leon Payne's "Lumberjack" on the B-side. The recording failed. Nelson continued working as a radio announcer and singing in Vancouver clubs. He made several appearances in a Colorado nightclub, later moving to
Springfield, Missouri. After failing to land a spot on the
Ozark Jubilee, he started to work as a dishwasher. Unhappy with his job, he moved back to Texas. After a short time in
Waco, he settled in Fort Worth, and quit the music business for a year. He sold Bibles and vacuum cleaners door-to-door, and eventually became a sales manager for the
Encyclopedia Americana. After his son Billy was born in 1958, the family moved to
Houston, Texas. On the way, Nelson stopped by the
Esquire Ballroom to sell his original songs to house band singer
Larry Butler. Butler refused to purchase the song "
Mr. Record Man" for $10, instead giving Nelson a $50 loan to rent an apartment and a six-night job singing in the club. Nelson rented the apartment near Houston in
Pasadena, Texas, where he also worked at the radio station as the sign-on disc jockey. During this time, he recorded two singles for
Pappy Daily on
D Records "
Man With the Blues"/"The Storm Has Just Begun" and "
What a Way to Live"/"Misery Mansion". Nelson then was hired by guitar instructor Paul Buskirk to work as an instructor in his school. He sold "
Family Bible" to Buskirk for $50 and "
Night Life" for $150. "Family Bible" turned into a hit for
Claude Gray in 1960. Nelson moved to
Nashville, Tennessee, in 1960, but was unable to find a label to sign him. During this period he often spent time at
Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, a bar near the Grand Ole Opry frequented by the show's stars and other singers and songwriters. There Nelson met
Hank Cochran, a songwriter who worked for the publishing company Pamper Music, owned by Ray Price and Hal Smith. Cochran heard Nelson during a jam session with
Buddy Emmons and Jimmy Day. Cochran had just earned a raise of $50 a week, but convinced Smith to pay Nelson the money instead to sign him to Pamper Music. On hearing Nelson sing "Hello Walls" at Tootsie's,
Faron Young decided to record it. After Ray Price recorded Nelson's "Night Life", and his previous bassist
Johnny Paycheck quit, Nelson joined Price's touring band as a bass player. While playing with Price and the
Cherokee Cowboys, his songs became hits for other artists, including "
Funny How Time Slips Away" (
Billy Walker), "
Pretty Paper" (
Roy Orbison), and, most famously, "
Crazy" by
Patsy Cline. Nelson and Cochran also met Cline's husband,
Charlie Dick at Tootsie's. Dick liked a song of Nelson's he heard on the bar's jukebox. Nelson played him a demo tape of "Crazy". Later that night Dick played the tape for Cline, who decided to record it. "Crazy" became the biggest
jukebox hit of all time. package show in 1965 Nelson signed with
Liberty Records and was recording by August 1961 at the
Bradley Studios in Nashville. His first two successful singles as an artist were released by the next year, including "
Willingly" (a duet with his soon-to-be second wife,
Shirley Collie, which became his first charting single and first Top Ten at No. 10) and "
Touch Me" (his second Top Ten, stalling at No. 7). Nelson's tenure at Liberty yielded his first album entitled
...And Then I Wrote, released in September 1962. In 1963 Collie and Nelson were married in
Las Vegas. He then worked on the west coast offices of Pamper Records, in
Pico Rivera, California. Since the job did not allow him the time to play music of his own, he left it and bought a ranch in
Ridgetop, Tennessee, outside of Nashville.
Fred Foster of
Monument Records signed Nelson in early 1964, but only one single was released: "I Never Cared For You". By the fall of 1964, Nelson had moved to
RCA Victor at the behest of
Chet Atkins, signing a contract for $10,000 per year.
Country Willie – His Own Songs became Nelson's first RCA Victor album, recorded in April 1965. That same year he joined the
Grand Ole Opry, and he met and became friends with
Waylon Jennings after watching one of his shows in
Phoenix, Arizona. In 1967, he formed his backing band "The Record Men", featuring Johnny Bush,
Jimmy Day,
Paul English and David Zettner. During his first few years on RCA Victor, Nelson had no significant hits, but from November 1966 through March 1969, his singles reached the Top 25 in a consistent manner. "One in a Row" (#19, 1966), "The Party's Over" (#24 during a 16-week chart run in 1967), and his cover of
Morecambe & Wise's "Bring Me Sunshine" (#13, March 1969) were Nelson's best-selling records during his time with RCA. By 1970, most of Nelson's songwriting royalties were invested in tours that did not produce significant profits. In addition to the problems in his career, Nelson divorced Shirley Collie in 1970. In December, his ranch in Ridgetop, Tennessee, burned down. He interpreted the incident as a signal for a change. He moved to a ranch near
Bandera, Texas, and married Connie Koepke. In early 1971 his single "I'm a Memory" reached the top 30. After he recorded his final RCA single, "Mountain Dew" (backed with "Phases, Stages, Circles, Cycles and Scenes"), in late April 1972, RCA requested that Nelson renew his contract ahead of schedule, with the implication that RCA would not release his latest recordings if he did not. Due to the failure of his albums, and particularly frustrated by the reception of ''
Yesterday's Wine'', although his contract was not over, Nelson decided to retire from music.
Outlaw country and success (1972–1989) Nelson moved to
Austin, Texas, where the burgeoning hippie music scene (see
Armadillo World Headquarters) rejuvenated the singer. His popularity in Austin soared as he played his own brand of country music marked by country, folk and jazz influences. In March, he performed on the final day of the
Dripping Springs Reunion, a three-day country music festival aimed by its producers to be an annual event. Despite the failure to reach the expected attendance, the concept of the festival inspired Nelson to create the
Fourth of July Picnic, his own annual event, starting the following year. Nelson decided to return to the recording business; he signed Neil Reshen as his manager to negotiate with RCA, who got the label to agree to end his contract upon repayment of $14,000. Reshen eventually signed Nelson to
Atlantic Records for $25,000 per year, where he became the label's first country artist. He formed his backing band,
the Family, and, by February 1973, he was recording his acclaimed
Shotgun Willie at Atlantic Studios in New York City.
Shotgun Willie, released in May 1973, earned excellent reviews but did not sell well. The album led Nelson to a new style, later stating that
Shotgun Willie had "cleared his throat". His next release,
Phases and Stages, released in 1974, was a concept album about a couple's divorce, inspired by his own experience. Side one of the record is from the viewpoint of the woman, and side two is from the viewpoint of the man. The album included the hit single "
Bloody Mary Morning". The same year, he produced and starred in the pilot episode of
PBS'
Austin City Limits. Nelson then moved to
Columbia Records, where he signed a contract that gave him complete creative control, made possible by the critical and commercial success of his previous albums. The result was the critically acclaimed and massively popular 1975 concept album
Red Headed Stranger. Although Columbia was reluctant to release an album with primarily a guitar and piano for accompaniment, Nelson and Waylon Jennings insisted. The album included a cover of
Fred Rose's 1945 song "
Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain", that had been released as a single previous to the album, and became Nelson's first number one hit as a singer. Throughout his 1975 tour, Nelson raised funds for PBS-affiliated stations across the south promoting
Austin City Limits. The pilot was aired first on those stations, later being released nationwide. The positive reception of the show prompted PBS to order ten episodes for 1976, formally launching the show. , Nelson, and
Waylon Jennings at the 1972
Dripping Springs Reunion|alt=Three men. From left to right, the first man has brown hair and beard. He wears a blue T-shirt and a white jacket and is looking at the man in the middle. The man in the middle wears a green cap and shades, and long red hair. He wears a brown T-shirt. The man at the right has brown hair, he looks at the man at the middle. He wears a white shirt and a black letter jacket. As Jennings was also achieving success in country music in the early 1970s, the pair were combined into a genre called
outlaw country, since it did not conform to Nashville standards. The album
Wanted! The Outlaws in 1976 with
Jessi Colter and
Tompall Glaser cemented the pair's outlaw image and became country music's first
platinum album. Later that year Nelson released
The Sound in Your Mind (certified gold in 1978 and platinum in 2001) and his first gospel album
Troublemaker (certified gold in 1986). In the summer of 1977, Nelson discovered that Reshen had been filing tax extensions and not paying the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) since he took over as his manager. In June, a package containing cocaine was sent from Reshen's office in New York to Jennings in Nashville. The package was followed by the
DEA, and Jennings was arrested. The charges were later dropped, since Reshen's assistant, Mark Rothbaum, stepped in and took the charges. Rothbaum was sentenced to serve time in jail. Impressed by his attitude, Nelson fired Reshen and hired Rothbaum as his manager. In 1978, Nelson released two more platinum albums. One,
Waylon & Willie, was a collaboration with Jennings that included "
Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys", a hit single written and performed by
Ed Bruce. Though observers predicted that
Stardust would ruin his career, it went platinum the same year. Nelson continued to top the charts with hit songs during the late 1970s, including "
Good Hearted Woman", "Remember Me", "
If You've Got the Money I've Got the Time", and "
Uncloudy Day". During the 1980s, Nelson recorded a series of hit singles including "
Midnight Rider", a 1980 cover of the
Allman Brothers song which Nelson recorded for
The Electric Horseman, the soundtrack "
On the Road Again" from the movie
Honeysuckle Rose, and a duet with
Julio Iglesias titled "
To All the Girls I've Loved Before". in 1978 In 1982,
Pancho & Lefty, a duet album with
Merle Haggard produced by
Chips Moman, was released. During the recording sessions of
Pancho & Lefty, Johnny Christopher, a session guitarist and the co-writer of "
Always on My Mind", tried to pitch the song to an uninterested Haggard. Nelson, who was unaware of
Elvis Presley's version of the song, asked him to record it. Produced by Moman, the single of the song was released, as well as the album
Always on My Mind. The single topped
Billboards Hot Country Singles, while it reached number five on the
Billboard Hot 100. The release won three awards during the
25th Annual Grammy Awards:
Song of the Year,
Best Country Song and
Best Male Country Vocal Performance. The single was certified platinum, while the album was certified quadruple-platinum and later inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2008. Meanwhile, two collaborations with Waylon Jennings were released:
WWII in 1982, and
Take it to the Limit in 1983. In the mid-1980s, Nelson, Jennings, Kristofferson, and
Johnny Cash formed
The Highwaymen, a supergroup who achieved platinum record sales and toured the world. Meanwhile, Nelson became more involved with charity work, such as singing on "
We Are the World" in 1984. In 1985, Nelson had another success with
Half Nelson, a compilation album of duets with a range of artists such as
Ray Charles and
Neil Young. In 1980, Nelson performed on the south lawn of the
White House. The concert of September 13 featured First Lady
Rosalynn Carter and Nelson in a duet of
Ray Wylie Hubbard's "Up Against the Wall Redneck Mother". Nelson frequently visited the White House, where, according to the biography by Joe Nick Patoski,
Willie Nelson: An Epic Life, he smoked marijuana on the White House roof.
Later career (1990s–2000s) In 1996, Nelson re-recorded the tracks "
Hello Walls" with the band
the Reverend Horton Heat, and "
Bloody Mary Morning" with the
Supersuckers, for
Twisted Willie, a tribute album featuring rock versions of Nelson's songs performed by artists such as
Johnny Cash,
Kris Kristofferson,
Jerry Cantrell,
Mark Lanegan,
L7,
the Presidents of the United States of America, and
Jello Biafra, among others. Proceeds from the sale of the record went to Nelson's Farm Aid. in 1993|left During the 1990s and 2000s, Nelson toured continuously, recording several albums including 1998's critically acclaimed
Teatro, and performed and recorded with other acts including
Phish, Johnny Cash, and
Toby Keith. His duet with Keith, "
Beer for My Horses", was released as a single and topped the
Billboard Hot Country Songs charts for six consecutive weeks in 2003, while the accompanying video won an award for "Best Video" at the 2004
Academy of Country Music Awards. A
USA Network television special celebrated Nelson's 70th birthday, and Nelson released
The Essential Willie Nelson as part of the celebration. Nelson also appeared on
Ringo Starr's 2003 album,
Ringo Rama, as a guest vocal on "Write One for Me". Nelson was featured on the album
True Love by
Toots and the Maytals, which won the
Grammy Award in 2004 for Best Reggae Album, and showcased many notable musicians including
Eric Clapton,
Jeff Beck,
Trey Anastasio,
Gwen Stefani, and
Keith Richards. In the following year of 2005, Nelson released a
reggae album entitled
Countryman which featured
Toots Hibbert of
Toots and the Maytals on the song "I'm a Worried Man". Nelson headlined the 2005 Tsunami Relief Austin to Asia concert to benefit the victims of the
2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, which raised an estimated $75,000 for UNICEF. Also in 2005, a live performance of the Johnny Cash song "
Busted" with Ray Charles was released on Charles' duets album
Genius & Friends. Nelson's 2007 performance with jazz trumpeter
Wynton Marsalis at the
Lincoln Center, was released as the live album
Two Men with the Blues in 2008; reaching number one in
Billboards Top Jazz Albums and number twenty on the
Billboard 200. The same year, Nelson recorded his first album with
Buddy Cannon as the producer,
Moment of Forever. Cannon acquainted Nelson earlier, during the production of his collaboration with
Kenny Chesney on the duet "
That Lucky Old Sun", for Chesney's album
Lucky Old Sun. In 2009 Nelson and Marsalis joined with Norah Jones in a tribute concert to Ray Charles, which resulted in the
Here We Go Again: Celebrating the Genius of Ray Charles album, released in 2011.
2010s In 2010, Nelson released
Country Music, a compilation of standards produced by
T-Bone Burnett. The album peaked at number four in
Billboards Top Country Albums, and twenty on the
Billboard 200. It was nominated for Best Americana Album at the
2011 Grammy Awards. In 2011 Nelson participated in the concert
Kokua For Japan, a fund raising event for the victims of the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan which raised $1.6 million. In February 2012,
Legacy Recordings signed a deal with Nelson that included the release of new material, as well as past releases that would be selected and complemented with outtakes and other material selected by him. With the new deal, Buddy Cannon returned to produce the recordings of Nelson. After selecting the material and the sound of the tunes with the singer, Cannon's work method consisted in the recording of the tracks with studio musicians, with the takes later completed on a separate session by Nelson with his guitar. Cannon's association to Nelson also extended to songwriting, with singer and producer composing the lyrics by exchanging text messages. Nelson's first release for the Legacy Recordings was
Heroes, that included guest appearances by his sons
Lukas and Micah of the band
Insects vs Robots, Ray Price, Merle Haggard,
Snoop Dogg, Kris Kristofferson,
Jamey Johnson,
Billy Joe Shaver and
Sheryl Crow. The album reached number four on
Billboards
Top Country Albums. His 2013 release
To All the Girls..., a collection of duets with all female partners, featured among others
Dolly Parton,
Loretta Lynn,
Rosanne Cash, Sheryl Crow,
Mavis Staples, Norah Jones,
Emmylou Harris,
Carrie Underwood and
Miranda Lambert. The album entered
Billboards Top Country Albums at number two, marking his highest position on the chart since the release of his 1989
A Horse Called Music, and extending 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. Nelson's following release was
Band of Brothers, in 2014, the first Nelson album to feature the most newly self-penned songs since 1996's
Spirit. Upon its release, it topped
Billboards Top Country albums chart, the first time since 1986's
The Promiseland, the last Nelson album to top it. The release reached number five on the
Billboard 200, Nelson's highest position on the chart since 1982's
Always on My Mind. In December 2014, a duet with
Rhonda Vincent, "Only Me", topped ''
Bluegrass Unlimited's
National Airplay chart. In June 2015, his collaboration with Haggard Django and Jimmie topped Billboard
s Top Country albums chart and reached number seven on the Billboard'' 200. In 2017, Nelson released ''
God's Problem Child. The release, consisting mostly of Nelson originals co-written with Cannon, entered the Top country albums at number one, while it reached number ten on the Billboard'' 200. In 2018, Nelson sang a song written by
Daniel Lanois called "Cruel World" for the
soundtrack of
Rockstar Games's action-adventure video game
Red Dead Redemption 2. Lanois wrote the song especially for Nelson. When a hurricane prevented Nelson from recording the song, the production team sent the track to
Josh Homme in the hopes that he could record it in time for the game's release. Nelson was ultimately able to record the song in time in Los Angeles; the team considered combining the two versions into a duet, but ultimately included both versions in the game. Also in 2018, Nelson was one of several artists on
Restoration, a cover album containing various country renditions of songs originally by
Elton John, on which he performed "
Border Song". His 2019 release
Ride Me Back Home charted at number two on the
Billboard Top Country Albums chart. For the title-track, Nelson received the
Grammy Award for Best Country Solo Performance.
2020s Following the
U.S. coronavirus pandemic lockdowns that began in March 2020, Nelson
livestreamed a series of
benefit concerts. The first two raised $700,000 for people who had suffered financial loss due to effects on the U.S. economy. The third, which was held on April 20, 2020, was a variety show titled
Come and Toke It. Some of the content was
cannabis-themed, and some of the proceeds will be used to support The Last Prisoner Project, a
restorative justice program relating to persons convicted of cannabis-related crimes. The same year, Nelson was approached by
Karen O of
The Yeah Yeah Yeahs to collaborate. They chose to perform
David Bowie and
Queen's "
Under Pressure." For his releases of
The Willie Nelson Family (2021) and
A Beautiful Time (2022), Nelson received four nominations for the
65th Annual Grammy Awards, winning in two categories: Best Country Solo Performance and Best Country Album. In December 2022, Mark Rothbaum announced a five-part documentary entitled
Willie Nelson and Family; it was released at the 2023
Sundance Film Festival. In 2023, Nelson performed at two concerts at the
Hollywood Bowl celebrating his 90th birthday and was inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 2024, Nelson was featured in the "Smoke Hour ★ Willie Nelson" and "Smoke Hour II" interludes of
Beyoncé's
Cowboy Carter album, the second album in her
trilogy project. With the death of
Kris Kristofferson in September 2024, Nelson became the last surviving member of
The Highwaymen. ==Other ventures==