"Angel from Montgomery" | ||||
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Song by John Prine from the album John Prine | ||||
Released | 1971 | |||
Recorded | American Recording Studios, Memphis, Tennessee | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 3:43 | |||
John Prine track listing | ||||
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"Angel from Montgomery" is a country song written by John Prine,[1] originally appearing on his self-titled 1971 album John Prine.
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John Prine wrote "Angel from Montgomery" after a friend suggested writing "another song about old people" referring to Prine's composition "Hello In There." Although Prine had "said everything I wanted to [about seniors] in 'Hello In There'" he was intrigued by the idea of "a song about a middle-aged woman who feels older than she is...[Eventually] I had this really vivid picture of this woman standing over the dishwater with soap in her hands....She wanted to get out of her house and her marriage and everything. She just wanted an angel to come to take her away from all this." Prine believes he was likely drawn to Montgomery as the song's setting by virtue of being a fan of Hank Williams who had ties with that city.[1] ("Angel from Montgomery" is a concert staple of Holly Williams, Hank Williams' grand-daughter.)
Introduced on Prine's 1971 self-titled debut album, "Angel from Montgomery" was recorded in 1972 by Carly Simon in her first session for Elektra Records which was produced by Paul Buckmaster. Simon recalls: "Elektra rejected [the tracks from that session] and...asked me to work with Richard Perry. [Elektra] didn't think Buckmaster would produce a hit record for me."[2] Simon's version of "Angel from Montgomery" was first issued in 1995 on the box set release Clouds in My Coffee.
Recorded by Bonnie Koloc for her 1972 album Hold on to Me, "Angel from Montgomery" had its first high-profile artist cover in 1973 when John Denver included the song on his Farewell Andromeda (as "Angels from Montgomery") but it was via the version by Bonnie Raitt on her 1974 album Streetlights that the song first attained wide recognition. In a 2000 interview Raitt stated: "I think 'Angel from Montgomery' probably has meant more to my fans and my body of work than any other song, and it will historically be considered one of the most important ones I've ever recorded. It's just such a tender way of expressing that sentiment of longing - like 'Hello In There' - without being maudlin or obvious. It has all the different shadings of love and regret and longing. It's a perfect expression from [a] wonderful genius."[3]
On her 1995 live disc Road Tested on which "Angel from Montgomery" serves as concert finale, Raitt is joined on the song by Bryan Adams, Jackson Browne, Bruce Hornsby and Kim Wilson. Besides duetting on "Angel from Montgomery" with John Prine at a 1989 tribute concert to Steve Goodman (Prine and Goodman, along with Bonnie Koloc, had been considered the "trinity of the Chicago folk scene" ), Raitt has performed the song with Rickie Lee Jones at the original Farm Aid benefit concert held 22 September 1985 in Champaign, Illinois and at the We the Planet Festival on 20 April 2003 at the Golden Gate Park in San Francisco Raitt duetted on "Angel From Montgomery" with Tracy Chapman.
"Angel from Montgomery" is performed in the film Into the Wild by the characters Tracy Tatro (Kristen Stewart) and Christopher McCandless (Emile Hirsch). It does not appear on the soundtrack album. The chorus is also sung briefly in the film Courage Under Fire by the character Captain Karen Emma Walden (portrayed by Meg Ryan) during one of the flashback sequences.
The song was also heard on the live television benefit broadcast on CMT May 12, 2011 performed by Gretchen Wilson. The "Music Builds" concert and fundraiser was to benefit the American Red Cross in the wakes of disaster relief pursuant to the floods and tornadoes throughout the Southeastern United States in April and May 2011.
Gram Parsons
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