Remembering Kris Kristofferson

 Posted by at 6:21 pm on September 29, 2024
Sep 292024
 

Photo Credit: Peter Yang

Sad news to report, as we’ve gotten the below press release announcing the passing of Kris Kristofferson.  Scroll down to the bottom to see what his peers are saying in remembrance of his passing:

Artist, singer, songwriter, actor and activist Kris Kristofferson passed away peacefully in his home in Maui, Hawaii Saturday, September 28, surrounded by family. He was 88 years old.

Born Kristoffer Kristofferson in the border town of Brownsville, Texas on June 22, 1936, Kristofferson changed the language of country music, with extraordinary internal rhymes, Shakespearean iambic pentameter, and socially progressive subject matter that found the personal within the political.

He was a Rhodes Scholar in Oxford, a defensive back, a bartender, a Golden Gloves boxer, a gandy dancer, a forest firefighter, a road crew member, and an Army Ranger who flew helicopters. He was a peacenik, a revolutionary, an actor, a superstar, a sex symbol, and a family man. He was commissioned to teach English at West Point, though he gave that up to become a Nashville songwriting bum.

Sam Peckinpah cast him as Billy the Kid. Willie Nelson recorded an entire album of his songs, then joined him in supergroup The Highwaymen, with Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings. Muhammad Ali sat side-stage at his concerts. Mama Cass Elliot called him “No Eyes.” Atlantic Monthly published his short stories.

He believed that songwriting is a spiritual communion of mind, body, and soul, and he believed that William Blake was correct in asserting that anyone divinely ordered for spiritual communion but buries his talent will be pursued by sorrow and desperation through life and by shame and confusion for eternity.

“(Blake) is telling you that you’ll be miserable if you don’t do what you’re supposed to do,” Kristofferson said in the Ken Burns’ documentary Country Music.

Kristofferson’s devotion to spiritual communion brought much in the way of sorrow, desperation, and misery, but it led to triumph.

His work ethic was evident from an early age, celebrated by his parents and, when he was a teenager, a construction supervisor on Wake Island said he was the best worker on the construction crew.

“I took pride in being the best laborer, the guy that could dig the ditches the fastest,” he said. “Something inside me made me want to do the tough stuff . . . Part of it was that I wanted to be a writer, and I figured that I had to get out and live. I know that’s why I ran in front of the bulls in Pamplona.”

The son of a major general and a philanthropic mother, Kristofferson spent his childhood learning lessons in honor and civility, though he arrived at different notions of these things than did his parents. He graduated high school in San Mateo, California, in 1954, then attended Pomona College, where he played football (“I was pretty slow, but I was small,” he said) and studied writing under Dr. Frederick Sontag, who pushed him to apply for a Rhodes scholarship. At Oxford, he wrote stories and examined the works of William Blake.

Kristofferson earned his master’s from Oxford in 1960, then returned to California, married his high school sweetheart, joined the Army, and learned to fly helicopters. In the Army, he wrote funny songs inspired by Hank Williams, until he fell under the sway of folk maestro Bob Dylan.

“The direction Dylan was pointing in made it a respectable ambition, a respectable thing to do,” Kristofferson said.

The Army assigned Kristofferson to teach literature at West Point, a duty that frightened him once he found that he’d have to turn in lesson plans, explaining to superiors exactly what he’d be teaching in class. He said, “It sounded like hell to me.”

And so, in 1965, he came to Nashville to visit with Marijohn Wilkin, the songwriter of “Long Black Veil” and a relation of Kristofferson’s Army platoon leader. On Kristofferson’s first Nashville night, he met Cowboy Jack Clement, a renegade creative who would become a lifelong friend. Soon after that, Wilkin helped Kristofferson get a backstage pass to the Grand Ole Opry, where he met a pacing panther named Johnny Cash. In less than two Music City weeks, Kristofferson decided to resign his Army post and move to Nashville to write songs. Soon after, he met successful songwriter Tom T. Hall in a Nashville bar. Kristofferson introduced himself to Hall, who said “Good to see you . . . It’s a hairy-legged town.”

Kristofferson scuffled for more than four years in Nashville, entering his 30s as what his parents considered a ne’er do well who was dragging down the family name. He worked as a janitor at CBS’s Nashville studio, happy to empty trash cans and make coffee in exchange for access to recording sessions by Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, and others. He rode around on a well-bruised Honda motorcycle, and neglected family matters in ways that came to haunt him and that doomed his first marriage. He was heartened by praise from the people whom he hoped would become peers. When his “From the Bottle to the Bottom” was recorded by Grand Ole Opry star Billy Walker in 1969, Tom T. Hall said, “God, that’s a great song” and quoted lines back to the fledgling talent.

“That kind of thing was enough to keep me going back then,” Kristofferson said.

After more than four years in songwriting purgatory, things began to roll Kristofferson’s way. Ray Stevens recorded his “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down,” and Johnny Cash recorded the same song and took it to the top of the country charts. Cash performed “Sunday Mornin'” on his ABC television show, and, despite the cries of network censors, refused to change Kristofferson’s line “Wishing, Lord, that I was stoned” to “Wishing, Lord, that I was home.” That song was voted the Country Music Association’s song of the year in 1970.

Roger Miller, one of Kristofferson’s songwriting heroes, recorded “Me and Bobby McGee,” a song inspired by publisher and Monument Records boss Fred Foster’s suggestion that a song should be written about Foster’s secretary, Bobby McKee. And Kristofferson’s “For the Good Times” was recorded by the great Ray Price and became a No. 1 country hit.

After arguing with Foster about his validity as a recording artist (Kristofferson said, “I sing like a fucking frog,” to which Foster replied, “Yes, but like a frog that can communicate.”), Kristofferson’s first solo album came out in April of 1970. It contained now-classics including “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’ Down,” “Me and Bobby McGee,” “To Beat the Devil,” “Help Me Make It Through the Night,” “Just the Other Side of Nowhere,” “Darby’s Castle,” and “Best of All Possible Worlds.” It began with “Blame It On the Stones,” a song that opened with the decidedly non-traditional line, “Mr. Marvin Middle Class is really in a stew/ Wonderin’ what the younger generation’s coming to.”

With that debut album, Kristofferson emerged as a luminous figure whose fame expanded far beyond country music. Janis Joplin recorded “Me and Bobby McGee,” which became her signature hit. And Kristofferson became a counter-culture darling, beloved by artists and listeners who had never before paid attention to country music.

“You can look at Nashville pre-Kris and post-Kris, because he changed everything,” said Bob Dylan.

Kristofferson’s second album, The Silver Tongued Devil and I, came out on Monument Records in 1971 and contained “The Pilgrim – Chapter 33,” a song he claimed to write about friends Cash, Chris Gantry, Funky Donnie Fritts, and others but later admitted was mostly about himself. “He’s a walkin’ contradiction, partly truth and partly fiction,” he sang. “Taking every wrong direction on his lonely way back home.”

All those wrong directions led to some spectacular locales. In 1971, Kristofferson began a side career as an actor. He would go on to win a Golden Globe award for his role in A Star Is Born, and to act in numerous films including Semi-Tough, Songwriter, Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, Lone Star, and Blade. He toured the world with his band and with Rita Coolidge, his wife from 1973 until 1980. He moved from Nashville to California. And he released seven solo albums between 1972 and 1979.

This flurry of activity and the accompanying celebrity did not ease Kristofferson’s mind, which was prone to depression, or his problematic drinking habit. The heady years of grand success proved to be some of the most difficult of his life.

“The darkness is driving me farther away from the shore/ Throw me a rhyme or a reason to try to go on,” he wrote and sang in “Shipwrecked in the 80s.” He found rhyme and reason in the graceful form of Lisa Meyers, who married Kristofferson in 1983 and helped him get his life under control. The couple would have five children together.

In 1985, Kristofferson joined Cash, Waylon Jennings, and Willie Nelson to form the supergroup now called The Highwaymen. The group returned Kristofferson’s voice to radio, provided a larger audience for him to relay his critical and sometimes controversial views on American foreign policy, and offered him great joy.

“Every time I look at a picture of Willie and me and John and Waylon, I find it amazing that they let the janitor in there,” he told journalist Mikal Gilmore.

After two roundly ignored solo albums for Mercury Records, Repossessed and Third World Warrior, Kristofferson began working with producer Don Was in 1995. Their creative partnership proved fruitful, with Was’ restrained production allowing the gristly character in Kristofferson’s voice to be heard to full effect, and with Kristofferson writing pensive, eloquent songs that rank with his finest works. “It’s about making sense of life at this end of the game,” Kristofferson said about his 2009 Closer to the Bone album, and that comment also applies to Was-produced works A Moment of Forever (2006), This Old Road (2009), and Feeling Mortal (2013). On his 80th birthday in 2016, Kris released The Cedar Creek Sessions, which was nominated for a Grammy for best Americana Album six months later.

Until the pandemic in 2020, Kristofferson toured incessantly in the 21st century, a quiet man in worn brown boots, commanding stages with only his guitar and harmonica for accompaniment. His Gibson acoustic might go out of tune . . . no matter. In his final years he performed with Merle Haggard‘s band, The Strangers.

In 2003, Kristofferson received the Free Speech Award from the Americana Music Association and in 2004 he became a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Since then, he received lifetime achievement honors from BMI, The Recording Academy, the Country Music Association and the Academy of Country Music, among many others.

“When I got started, I was one of the people hoping to bring respect to country music,” he said. “Some of the songs I had that got to be hits did that. I imagine that’s why somebody might vote me into a Hall of Fame. I know it’s not because of my golden throat.”

On the back cover of The Silver Tongued Devil and I, Kristofferson advised that his songs were “Echoes of the going ups and coming downs, walking pneumonia and run-of-the-mill madness, colored with guilt, pride, and a vague sense of despair.”

Sometimes divine communion, then, is holy hell. Kristofferson brought some of that hell on himself, and he lived through times when guilt and despair were anything but vague, and when pride was hard to conjure. Asked about regrets, he said, “Listen, I have those. But my life has turned out so well for me that I would be afraid to change anything.”

Kristofferson’s survived by his wife, Lisa; eight children, Tracy, Kris Jr., Casey, Jesse, Jody, John, Kelly, and Blake; and seven grandchildren, who offer the following consolatory statement:

“It is with a heavy heart that we share the news our husband/father/grandfather, Kris Kristofferson, passed away peacefully on Saturday, September 28 at home. We’re all so blessed for our time with him. Thank you for loving him all these many years, and when you see a rainbow, know he’s smiling down at us all.” – The Family of Kris Kristofferson

The family asks for privacy during this time.


Here is what his peers are saying about his passing (we’ll be updating this as we get more quotes to add):

  • Alan Jackson  – Thanks for all the inspiration. Rest in Peace Kris Kristofferson.
  • Anne MurrayGooodbye Kris. What an extraordinary songwriter and joy to work with you were!
  • Anthony SmithThe songwriter that influenced me, the most and the coolest guy I ever knew. The great Kris Kristofferson.
  • Ashley McBryde – Thank you for teaching us to write.  And for teaching me how to beat the devil.  Rest now Mr. Kristofferson.
  • Bellamy BrothersWe were asked to produce an album by a Record Label in Europe with lots of stars from Switzerland and American singers duetting together. All of the singers wanted to do ‘Bobby McGee’ but we hadn’t seen Kris for a while and didn’t have a contact for him. A friend of ours mentioned he knew how to reach him and so we asked him to explain the project and see if Kris would be part of it. He answered us almost immediately and said he would love to do it and to tell Howard and David just to send the tracks to his studio in Hawaii and he’d record the vocals. Of course all of the Swiss Artists were so excited they all wanted to sing with him, and so they did, from the Yodelers to the Rock Stars to the Folk Singers and everything in between because Kris’ music is Universal, everyone knows it and everyone loves to sing it & everyone will miss Kris Kristofferson so much but his Legacy will live on. We love you Kris. #whymelord
  • Big KennyRest in peace @kristofferson What an amazing poet, songwriter, actor and inspiration to so many in our time. Forever grateful for his spoken contribution to our song the 8th of November. Blessed we got to share some time and laughs. Such a great spirit. Sending condolences to his wife Lisa and family and all his fans.
  • Bill AndersonKris Kristofferson was the songwriter’s songwriter. We all looked up to him and wished we could have written with such “elegant simplicity.” His music will live forever, and I will forever treasure the times I got to spend with him. Rest in peace, my friend, knowing that you were the best.
  • Billy DeanKris Kristofferson taught us the difference between simplicity and trite, sexy and vulgar, broken and reborn.
  • Billy Ray Cyrus – The magnitude of Kris Kristofferson‘s greatness is beyond words. As a man, a musician, a songwriter, a singer, an actor, and a humanitarian… he set the bar for what it means to live fully and authentically. His legendary impact on music and humanity will resonate forever.
  • Blackberry SmokeRest in peace, brother Kris Kristofferson. We love ya
  • Carolyn Dawn JohnsonThis is truly sad….what a gentle spirit and brilliant poet…..I have been around him only once and he was so kind…….I hope I leave this kind of legacy
  • Cody JinksThis is a real picture of me and Ward looking in at the man himself, Ward and I had the honor of playing a show with him some years ago. There might as well have been a light radiating from that room as Ward and I waited. We pondered on what we would say when we got to say hi. To songwriters like us this man was larger than life, still is. The importance of his contributions to music will go on as he is arguably one of the greatest God has blessed us with. Let’s all sing Why Me Lord, today. Thank you Kris Kristofferson!
  • Collin Raye – I’m very saddened this week at the news that the great Kris Kristofferson has passed away. Even though Kris lived a long life, it’s still difficult to accept that he’s gone. Of all the amazing songwriters who influenced and inspired me, and there are many, no one else wrote more songs that touched me deeply than Kristofferson. A consummate lyricist who changed country music songwriting forever. His passing, coming only days after the death of my friend Hugh Prestwood, whom like Kris wrote so many lyrical and musical masterpieces, has made this week a devastating loss for our industry and music. Kris penned my favorite line of all time: ‘I’d trade all of my tomorrows, for one single yesterday.’ May you be at peace, Kris. I most assuredly will be paying tribute to Kris and to Hugh onstage for quite some time. May God bless and comfort these men. Two of His finest poets.
  • Cory Morrow – May The Lord receive your soul and may you rest in His peace and Love forever.  Like so many others, Kris Kristofferson has been a tremendous influence, not just in the music that we strive toward, but in the men we desire to be for those around us. I didn’t know him personally, but have met him on more than one occasion. Nothing but genuine kindness and grace did I see. I am going to be playing me some Kristofferson music today!! May God bless you all today. Stop and give thanks today for the blessings in your life.
  • Dallas Wayne – We lost a friend and hero yesterday for all of us who look upon country music songwriting as poetry. Kris Kristofferson was the gold standard in sharing emotions and stories in song. Condolences go out to his wife Lisa and their entire family. Thank you for showing us all how it’s done. Rest well.
  • Darius RuckerWe lost one of the kindest most beautiful souls that God gave us. I will miss u my friend. I love u Kriss. I just love u man!!
  • Daryl Worley – Meeting Kristofferson was one of the huge highlights of my life. He was so kind and an absolute perfect gentleman. He even knew one of my songs, ‘Second Wind,’ and of course that made my head swell. He was a brilliant man but I think his greatest offerings came in the songs. My goal in life was always to be the best songwriter I could be. Looking back over his work is probably the best example anyone could ever see. Thanks Kris. You served us all in many different ways and we are forever indebted. You will be missed.
  • David FrizzellI am always at a special event when I see Kris. The last two times were when him and my brother Lefty were getting inducted in to “The Texas Country Music Hall of Fame” and we both were gonna do a show for the event (he had heard I forgot my harmonica for the show and gave me one of his) and then a few years ago The NSAI had their 50th anniversary event and I was there with Shelly to do “You’re The Reason God Made Oklahoma” and got to visit with Kris before the show. What a great talent and we are gonna miss him!
  • Deana CarterSo sad to lose this special soul. 💔 Thank you for your love and brilliance @kristofferson. One of a kind. Sending all my love to Lisa & the whole family.
  • Deborah Allen – I am heartbroken to hear that Kris Kristofferson has pass away. He was such a beautiful human being, a prolific poet, a brilliant, legendary songwriter and an Icon in the world of music and film. I’m so grateful to God that I had the honor and privilege of calling him my friend. He was a gift to all of us and he will be Loved, Missed and Remembered… Forever. Rest in Heavenly Peace Kris… 🕊🌹🕊
    PS… I cant help but think about how perfectly God had it so poetically planned to bring Kris home on this “Sunday Morning Comin’ Down” …and how, Kris now knows all the answers to the questions he asked in his amazing song, “Why Me Lord.” ✝️  I love theses heartfelt words from his family in their statement this evening:  (Sunday, September 29) We’re all so blessed for our time with him. Thank you for loving him all these many years, and when you see a rainbow, know he’s smiling down at us.”
    Dennis Quaid – Our thoughts and prayers are for his family.  God’s love flowed out of Kris through his songs and his very being. God has a special place for him.  A life well-lived, a great soul now become a guiding star.
  • Dolly PartonKris Kristofferson. What a great loss.  What a great writer.  What a great actor.  What a great friend.  I will always love you, Dolly
  • Don McLean – Kris and I shared a magical weekend together. We both were introduced by legends at The Newport Folk Festival in 1969. Johnny Cash brought him and introduced him. Pete Seeger brought me and introduced me. If that were not enough, other artists made their debut as well such as James Taylor and Van Morrison. To top it off we landed a man on the moon that weekend and everybody was writing songs. Whenever I saw him we would always talk about it. Kris was a fine man
  • Duane Allen (Oak Ridge Boys) – When The Oak Ridge Boys were searching for a way to grow our career we listened to Kris Kristofferson‘s music. The stories in his songs were things we were experiencing. Then, he wrote, “Why Me Lord”. When we heard that song the message struck home. It assured us that we were on the right track. We love Kris and his beautiful family. Please remember them in your prayers.
  • Eric Church – Kris, The ultimate life well lived. Thank you for being a beacon of light in a darkening world. You were my hero and my role model. And even then, you managed to exceed my expectations when you became my friend.  So long Captain. Till we meet again.  PS I found this on my phone.
  • ExileWe had the pleasure of being around Kris Kristofferson several times… He was a true genius. He may be gone but his songs will live forever… Rest in Peace
  • Gary LeVoxU will be missed my friend! Ur legacy and that smile will live on forever! Rip
  • Gary MorrisA heartbreaking loss…. an American icon.
  • Gene WatsonRIP Kris Kristofferson. Prayers to your family.
  • George Strait – So sad to hear of the passing of Kris Kristofferson. Artists and songwriters of this caliber come along very rarely and he certainly made his mark on the world. My family, like most people, were huge fans and we will all miss him. I knew him on a professional level only but I always felt like it was more because of the kindness and respect he showed me on the times we met. I’ll treasure those times forever.  He lived one heck of a life and I’m hoping it has only just begun for him. God bless Kris and all of the Kristofferson family.
  • Georgette JonesA huge piece of Country Music history and a wonderful, kind and talented man has left us. My parents new him as a friend and genius. I never met him and it’s a regret I’ll always have. RIP Mr Kris Kristofferson. You are forever remembered.
  • Gord BamfordSad news, R.I.P. Kris Kristofferson. The world has lost a music legend.
  • Hailey Whitterswe lost a real one over the weekend @kkristofferson
  • Heath Wright (Ricochet) – I was saddened to find out a few minutes ago that one of America’s great poets is gone! Kris Kristofferson was a true Renaissance man, a Rhodes scholar, a soldier, a helicopter pilot, a songwriter/recording artist, an actor, an author, and more. But to me, he was the living legend that made me feel good about myself at an award show one night when he ran us down to tell us how much he enjoyed our performance! RIP Kris Kristofferson – “Please don’t tell me how the story ends
  • Jack IngramKris Kristofferson is brilliant. A unique, solitary soul who dedicated his entire life to mastering the gift he was given. A kind soul. A generous heart. His lucky boxers were black polka dot!!!
  • James OttoRIP to one of the greatest poets country music ever had. Kris Kristofferson lived to be 88. His life story is legend at this point.
  • Jamie Lin WilsonKris Kristofferson.  Once, I stood so close to him I could have touched him. Or at least said hi.  I studied his songs so much that I have them written down with notations. I stole his melodies, his phrasing. I’m sure he wouldn’t mind, in fact I think he’d have encouraged it. “let’s all get together and steal each other’s songs”, of course.  His swagger, his confidence, his intelligence, insight, humor, and sensitivity. What a legend.  That generation of songwriter – how they encouraged each other and sang each other’s songs – that’s what motivates me to make friends in music. We’re not competitors. It’s art. We’re builder-uppers.  Damn. What a loss, but what a life.  I heard that he heard my cover of “Just the Other Side of Nowhere” and he approved. ❤️ Can’t beat that feeling.
  • Janie FrickeI’ll always cherish the memory of singing harmonies on “Why Me Lord” with Kris and Willie on the country homecoming show – I recorded that song he wrote and sing it at every concert I do – thanks to my friend Kris.
  • Jay DeMarcusSaddened to hear about the loss of Kris Kristofferson… we keep losing all the good ones and Heaven is getting full. RIP Kris…
  • JD ShelburneRIP Kris Kristofferson
  • Jeannie Seely – As our music industry is ever-changing, this is one loss that will be felt from now on. We will never hear songs like his again. His legacy will be one of respect for the kind of man he was, as well as his music.
  • Jennifer NettlesWe are blessed to have had such a talent in our lifetime. Musician, songwriter, actor, he remains an inspiration. Rest in grace with music all around. 🕊️ 🎶 @kristofferson 🙏🏼🩷 Thank you for the gifts of your art.
  • Jimmy WayneI’ve shared the stage with many acts, artist and lots of legends. September 11, 2004 was a very special evening. #KrisKristofferson met me backstage at a venue and introduced himself. We talked for a few minutes and then he asked me if I would tune his guitar. I was so nervous. I took my time and made sure his guitar was perfectly in tune. Shortly before Kris went on stage I handed him his guitar. He walked out to the microphone and stood in front of thousands of people and performed his hits with the guitar I’d just tuned. I watched his show from the side of the stage and thought to myself, “ I just tuned Kris Kristofferson‘s guitar. I think I’m gonna be telling this story for the rest of my life.” That was one very cool and unforgettable experience.  RIP, Mr. Kristofferson.
  • John Ford Coley – This is another one that just really hurts. We are losing the cream of the crop. I so admired Kris Kristofferson. I remember the first time that I heard “Me and Bobby McGee” and I thought who in the world wrote this one. I learned that thing backwards and forwards. Just the one line of “pulled my harpoon out of my dirty red bandanna” to this day still has to be one of the best visuals lyrics I’ve ever heard. I was in love with his music ever since. What a remarkable writer.
  • John McEuenKris Kristofferson made great music for us that was brought to life by Elvis, Cash, Joplin, and Kris himself (and many others). What a sad day to lose him. I recorded with him at John Carter Cash’s cabin studio on a Carter Family song (Gold Watch and Chain), and met up with him several times over the years before and after that. While watching his solo show in St. Petersburg, Florida I was amazed at the calm control and love he got from his audience.
  • John RichSo sad to hear Kris Kristofferson has passed. He and I became friends over the years, and it was a distinct honor every time I got to work or hang out with him. He was one of the greatest lyricists to ever live, and a true class act. He set the bar so very high. Miss ya brother
  • Johnny Lee – I have known Kris my entire career. He was truly one of a kind! My prayers for his family.
  • Josh Grider – I have seen the morning burning golden on a mountain in the sky.  Aching with the freedom of the feeling of an eagle when she flies.  I’ve heard people play the “best opening lines of a song” game. They don’t get much better than those right there for me.  Rest in peace, Mr Kristofferson. Thank you for the songs.
  • Kyle Young (Country Music Hall of Fame CEO)Kris Kristofferson believed creativity is God-given, and those who ignore such a gift are doomed to unhappiness. He preached that a life of the mind gives voice to the soul, and his work gave voice not only to his soul but to ours. He leaves a resounding legacy.
  • Lacy J. Dalton – In my opinion, Kris was one of the greatest songwriters ever – an incredible role model for me with my own writing – a hero, and a great, great man.  I will miss him terribly.
  • Larry Gatlin – It would take a wordsmith as good as Kris Kristofferson himself to express the feelings going through me right now, but since Kris is not here I’ll just say, I’m sad that he’s not still here with us on earth, but I’m happy he’s in Heaven with Johnny and Waylon and Roger. Almost forgot JESUS. As in ‘Lord Help Me Jesus.’ And they are having one Heaven of a time.
  • LeAnn Rimesan epic human with the biggest heart  you will be so, so missed. rest easy, my friend.
  • Lee GreenwoodHard to believe my friend Kris Kristofferson has left us. He was successful in all areas of his life. A champion boxer, a world-class actor, a spectacular songwriter and singer, and a hero to everyone fortunate enough to know him. I will never forget his support for me when I received my first CMA Country Music Association Male Vocalist of the Year Award – his friendship and encouragement helped validate my career in country music and my place in Nashville. My family and I send our deepest sympathy to Kris’ family. We lost a giant in our industry today!
  • Lee Roy Parnell – My heart is heavy today since getting the news of my friend, Kris Kristofferson’s passing.  No words could possibly express all the gratitude I feel for this fine man, both personally and professionally. He was truly one of a kind and his life… was a life well lived. I will miss him.  My thoughts and prayers are with the Kristofferson family.
  • Levi RiggsRest in peace, Kris Kristofferson. Boxer, Songwriter, Highwayman, and Inspiration. ❤️
  • Lulu Roman – Kris was always so sweet to me. They would throw us in the cornfield together on Hee Haw; those are some of my fondest memories. My prayers for his family
  • Margo PriceI’m lighting a candle for Kris Kristofferson and thinking about of how lucky I was to come into his orbit even if it was just for a short time, because he was one of the best songwriters to ever live. My heart goes out to Lisa, his family and friends who loved and knew him well.
  • Mark PowellThis is a sad day. @kristofferson was one of the greatest people and influences I have known. Deepest condolences to Lisa and family. RIP #kriskristofferson #genuine #legend
  • Mark WillsSaddened to learn of the passing of the legend, @kristofferson . Rest in peace, Sir.
  • Marty Raybon – Kris was one of country music’s greatest voices.  May the light and incredible gifts he shared with the world live on for countless years to come. Let’s keep his family in our hearts and prayers.
  • Matt Kennon – The world has lost another legend!  I’ll never forget how cool and kind he was the day I met him and we flew to LA on the same flight!  He was such a tremendous talent and one of the very best to ever do it!  I’ll never forget when I told him that his “Closer To The Bone” and My self titled Debut both were being released the same day on May 10, 2010, he said  “I’ll be looking for you buddy”. I sent him a shot of Jack and He said Thanks but I’m Drinking Scotch”  I’ll never forget that memory!  Well done Sir!  RIP Kris Kristifferson
  • Michelle WrightKris Kristofferson has passed. I’ve lost track of how many times I sang Bobby McGee or Help Me Make It Through The Night playing clubs 6 nights a week dreaming of my own music career. Thank you for all the music and memories that I carry with me performing your songs. RIP
  • Miranda Lambert.@kkristofferson thank you for everything. Forever a hero. Your songs will live forever. So thankful I got to share the stage with you.  Rest easy.
  • Moe Bandy – Kris had one of the greatest songwriting minds ever. What a gift that he shared with all of us. He was a very talented man. May he rest in peace.
  • Oak Ridge BoysWe are deeply saddened to hear of the passing of the great Kris Kristofferson. Here is a video of us singing his classic, “Why Me,” 40 years ago.
  • Old Crow Medicine Show10-4 good buddy. We love you forever and we will miss you always.
  • Phil VassarKris Kristofferson was one of my favorites. A true legend! He was such a renaissance man! One on one, he was so unassuming and humble. He was a great athlete, an amazing actor and artist. So smart and so incisive. What a storyteller.
  • Ray ScottJust… Damn. RIP. LEGEND..
  • Ray Stevens – What a loss. When he first came to town, Bob Beckham called me and offered me any of his first songs to record. I chose ‘Sunday Morning Coming Down.’ It wasn’t a hit for me but it was for Cash. Kris had a way with words like no one else. Rest in Peace, Kris.
  • Reba McEntireWhat a gentleman, kind soul, and a lover of words. I am so glad I got to meet him and be around him. One of my favorite people. Rest in peace, Kris.
  • Rhonda Vincent – I had the honor of playing a few festivals with Kris. I admired his work and know the music community feels a deep loss at his passing.
  • Rich O’TooleDamn. RIP Kris Kristofferson.
  • Sheryl CrowIt is hard to imagine a world without Kris Kristofferson in it. Knowing and singing with him has been one of the greatest blessings of my life. I feel certain he will be holding court in heaven. Rip Kris. You will be missed
  • Steve AzarFew wrote them better
  • than Kris Kristofferson! His words & melody were an amazing gift to us all! RIP🙌
  • Sunny Sweeney💔RIP. Damn.
  • T. Graham Brown – Kris was one of the greatest all-around talents in history. I’ve sung his songs my entire career. He was an American original and will be greatly missed.
  • Terri ClarkWhile most kids are read bedtime stories by Dr Seuss and AA Milne, I fell asleep to my mother playing guitar and singing the stories of Kris Kristofferson. Thank you for sharing your talent with all of us. Sending love and prayers to his family and friends.
  • Terry McBrideThere’s not a singer, songwriter or musician of my generation that wasn’t influenced, inspired, or in awe of Kris Kristofferson. RIP.
  • TG SheppardAnother one of our great musical treasures Kris Kristofferson has left for home. He will go down as one of the most prolific writers in music history. To us he will go down as one of the nicest most down to earth talents that our business has ever known. I was honored to have the pleasure of working with him and any time Kelly Lang or I was in his presence it was a wonderful memory. R.I.P. Kris.
  • Tim McGrawAnother legend lost…. Honored to have witnessed the great Kris Kristofferson
  • Tim MontanaOne of the BEST!
  • Travis TrittSad to hear of @Kris Kristofferson‘s passing. He was an inspiration to me and I was fortunate to get to know him on the set of “Outlaw Justice” that we filmed in Spain in 1998. My heartfelt condolences go out to Kris’s wife, Lisa and all of his family, friends and fans.
  • Trent TomlinsonThis was truly one of the greatest nights of my life. I got to hang out on the bus with Kris and he even asked me to play him a song and as reluctant as I was, I knew it was an opportunity of a lifetime. He listened to every word I had to say, and then said , “Son that’s pretty damn good” that was all I needed to hear to let me know that I made the right decision to move to Nashville to pursue my dream. If it wasn’t for this night, I’m not sure I’d still be here doing what I’m doing. Rest in Peace my friend!
  • Trisha YearwoodThis one hurts. The word legend gets tossed around a lot but with Kristofferson the shoe fits. These are shoes that won’t be filled. Rest easy.
  • Ward Davis – It’s weird to think that one of the coolest things I ever got to do was change a guitar string with my buddy for the frustrated old man standing in that doorway right there. But it was Kris’ string, and we had no business anywhere near it. Yet, there we were. He was as we all are. A human being. Kris Kristofferson was an exceptional example.  I met a man once, in Marble, Colorado who had gone to college with Kris at Oxford. He told me “Kris…..turned his back on academia.” My response was, “Well, Thank God!” And I meant it. And God blessed us, yall. Giving us that man and his beautiful art. And God bless him for sharing it with us.