Uncut (p.98) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "No country titan has straddled both sides of Nashville's musical divide quite like Nelson....[With] covers and three Willie originals..."
Down Beat (p.81) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "He's at his best when ripping through twisted honky-tonk tunes like 'You Don't Think I'm Funny Anymore.'"
Mojo (Publisher) (p.102) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[Nelson is] grizzled, weary-voiced and all the more relevant for his ability to make every song sound like an integral part of his life."
At the age of 74, tireless country icon Willie Nelson sounds as committed to his work as ever on MOMENT OF FOREVER. Co-produced by none other than Kenny Chesney, the album is named after a richly reflective Kris Kristofferson song (also the title of a 1995 Kristofferson album) that provides one of the highlights here. Nelson settles into this and the rest of the tunes with a weathered voice heavy with accumulated wisdom. Even when venturing a little further afield for material, he sounds completely comfortable. Bob Dylan's born-again-era hit "Gotta Serve Somebody" and Dave Matthews's "Gravedigger" fit as well here as the handful of tracks that Nelson penned himself.
From the poignant balladry of Randy Newman's "Louisiana" to the funky country-soul grooves of "Takin' on Water;" with its greasy horn stabs and get-down, Stevie Wonder-style clavinet, Nelson makes it clear that even as he approaches his 50th anniversary as a recording artist, he still has a statement to make.