Lucinda Williams talks about writing and performing rock 'n' roll after her stroke

LOS ANGELES (AP) ā€” A little too country for rock ā€˜nā€™ roll, and a little too rock ā€˜nā€™ roll for country, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams has always played by her own rules.

That's never changed ā€” even after November 2020, when she suffered a stroke. Williams underwent grueling rehabilitation, eventually leading to her memoir, ā€œDonā€™t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You,ā€ and her album, ā€œStories from a Rock N Roll Heart." The latter, released earlier this summer, features contributions from Bruce Springsteen, his wife Patti Scialfa, Jesse Malin, Angel Olsen, Margo Price, Jeremy Ivey, Buddy Miller, and more.

ā€œThe recovery part is really hard because you get impatient,ā€ Williams told the Associated Press. ā€œYou want it to happen all at once.ā€

On Saturday, Williams reaches another recovery milestone: Her 2023 tour kicked off at the famed Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.

In a phone interview earlier this year, Williams spoke to the AP about her recovery, collaborating in new ways, and whatā€™s in store for the future.

This conversation has been edited for brevity and clarity.

AP: Youā€™re hitting the road for ā€œStories from a Rock N Roll Heart,ā€ your first album since your stroke. Did the process of writing and recording change?

WILLIAMS: I wasnā€™t able to write how I usually write, which is with my guitar, because I havenā€™t been able to play. But I was able to make enough of a chord to make a note, and Iā€™d figure out something in my head. And, you know, my friends jumped in and helped by playing the chords. It turned into a collaboration, a collaborative effort. So, in a way, it was a mixed blessing. We ended up with songs we might not have otherwise.

It ended up being kind of liberating to work with other people because I hadnā€™t really done it before, to that extent.

AP: And, I imagine, the chemistry had to be right ā€” like getting to work with some really impressive collaborators in Angel Olsen and Margo Price.

WILLIAMS: Margo, weā€™ve started to (become) really good friends. Sheā€™s in the same neighborhood weā€™re in Nashville. We were in the studio and I think (my husband) Tom (Overby) suggested seeing if she wanted to come in and sing some background stuff and she was excited about it. Sheā€™s just so fun to work with because sheā€™s real enthusiastic, and, you know, sheā€™s fun to be with. And then, Angel Olsen was in town already. She didnā€™t live here. Sheā€™s living in Asheville. But she was in Nashville when we were recording, so she came in and an added amazingly beautiful, really small little part vocal to ā€œJukebox,ā€ which I think just makes the whole song.

AP: It seems like you were never going to throw in the towel and stop writing and performing.

WILLIAMS: People are just amazed. They canā€™t believe Iā€™ve been going out and playing shows and Iā€™m in the studio. I mean, Iā€™m still doing the same stuff. I can manage things well enough. Iā€™ve got a lot of great help. Iā€™ve got a great band, two fantastic guitar players ā€¦ they play, and I sing.

AP: Are you hoping to one day play guitar again?

WILLIAMS: Yeah. The physical therapist gave me hand exercises that I do. I kind of stretch my fingers out. I do about 50 of those a day with my left hand. And I do some with my right hand, too, just in case. Itā€™s mainly the left side of my body that was affected. But, you know, I just try to think positive. I keep thinking, ā€˜Well, I didnā€™t know if I was going to be able to walk across the room without falling down at one point.ā€™ But I was able to, you know, I overcame that.

AP: At this stage in your career, I have to ask: Do you still feel too country for rock ā€˜nā€™ roll, and too rock ā€˜nā€™ roll for country?

WILLIAMS: I think the worldā€™s caught up, with Americana, you know, that's exactly what that is. I wish they would bring back ā€œfolk rock.ā€

AP: Whatā€™s next for you?

WILLIAMS: Another album. Weā€™re already talking about that.