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Nanci Griffith
Nanci Griffith - Now: Definitive, Canonical, Digital Discography
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Nanci Griffith

Real Names of Famous Folk

Hearts in Mind

Hearts in Mind

Albums

78 Light Beyond
82 Poet
84 Blue Moon
86 Believers
87 Lone Star
88 Little Love
88 Summer Eve
89 Storms
91 Grand Hotel
93 Best (UK)
93 MCA Years
93 Other Voices
94 Flyer
97 Country Gold
97 Blue Roses
98 Other Voices2
99 Dust Bowl
99 Revisited
00 Wings To Fly
01 Clock
01 Millenium
02 Distance
02 Marquee
03 MCA Studio
05 Hearts
06 Ruby's Torch
10 The Loving Kind

Albums
Bootlegs

Promos

Singles

DVDs
    
1 Simple Life   
2 Angels    
3 Heart of Indochine   
4 Beautiful    
5 Back When Ted Loved Sylvia   
6 Mountain of Sorrow   
7 Old Hanoi   
8Before  
9 I Love This Town with Jimmy Buffett   
10 Rise To The Occasion with Mac MacAnnaly   
11 Love Conquers All   
12 Last Train Home   
13 Big Blue Ball of War    
14 Our Very Own with Keith Carradine    

Editorial Review from Amazon.com

On her first studio album since 2001's Clock Without Hands, Nanci Griffith hearkens back to her best early albums, particularly the Jim Rooney-produced work of the '80s. Whereas her '90s music veered off into arch or uncomfortable pairings with lofty-minded producers and members of U2 and R.E.M., here she takes stock and strives for, as the title of the leadoff track says, a "Simple Life."

Griffith was wise to assume the lead as her own producer (with Pat McInerney), scaling back to a more organic, folk-singer approach ("Last Train Home," a 2002 song which appears here, would have fit well on her first Philo albums) and reuniting with guest vocalists Mac McAnally ("Rise to the Occasion") and Jimmy Buffett ("I Love This Town").

While the material draws on a variety of influences, Hearts in Mind wraps its thoughts around two themes: Exploring the hopeful beauty of the romantic heart, and honoring soldiers and civilians lost in the wreckage of war ("Heart Of Indochine"; "Old Hanoi"; "Big Blue Ball of War"; and the exquisitely sad, Julie Gold-penned "Mountain of Sorrow," inspired by the events of 9/11).

Throughout, Griffith stretches herself as an artist: "Beautiful," a tribute to her stepfather, marks a lively, clarinet-accented departure from her usual repertoire, while only her delivery lifts "When Ted Loved Sylvia," Le Ann Etheridge's intriguing take on the relationship between Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath, above its lyrical shortcomings.

The singer makes fine use of her lower register at times, and continues to push for a fuller voice than the feathery vocals that marred her freshman efforts. The end result is her most accessible album in years, one that deeply satisfies on both a musical and an emotional level. ~ Alanna Nash


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Label: Universal
Catalogue #9864439

29 August 2010 | copyright matters  | | Privacy