L.A. Times Review – 4 Stars – Highly Recommended

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  • #30553
    West Words
    Participant

    Wish he hadn’t put so much negative into a glowing review… 😕

    http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2011/02/album-review-lucinda-williams-blessed.html

    Album review: Lucinda Williams’ ‘Blessed’
    )March 1, 2011 | 6:45 am

    It’s been rough being a Lucinda Williams fan for the past decade; we’ve listened as the singer, one of the great songwriters of the 1990s, floundered with albums that failed to measure up to the stuff of her legend. The classic 1988-98 triumvirate of “Lucinda Williams,” “Sweet Old World” and “Car Wheels on a Gravel Road” presented an artist whose best songs rivaled the great American songwriters who have drawn from the wellspring of blues, country, folk and rock to create perfection: Bob Dylan, Townes Van Zandt, Gram Parsons and Bonnie Raitt. Certainly some of Williams’ ‘00s output contained good songs, but after such strong work early in her career, a combination of lazy songwriting and lethargic energy suggested something was amiss. Whether it was bad relationships, bad liquor or just overall bad vibes, it seemed that her muse had somehow become debilitated.

    So “Blessed,” one of the best albums she’s ever released, comes as a relief. Produced by Don Was (who produced Raitt’s “Nick of Time”), the dozen songs on the album tackle complicated emotions with a deft touch to create profoundly moving moments. Whether it’s the sense of loss in “Copenhagen,’ about the instance in which she learns about the death of a friend, or “To Be Loved,” a tender ballad that every mother should sing to her children before bedtime (“You weren’t born to be mistreated/You weren’t born to be misguided/You were born to be loved”), Williams’ writing on “Blessed” is seamless. As on her classic albums, the songwriter mixes it up with electric guitar songs (“Buttercup,” “Seeing Black”), personalized protest songs (“Soldier’s Song”), and touching, gorgeous ballads (“Don’t Know How You’re Living,” “Sweet Love”). Combined, the result is a dynamic, human album, one that’s easy to fall in love with. Highly recommended.

    –Randall Roberts

    Lucinda Williams
    “Blessed”
    (Lost Highway)
    Four stars

    #46023
    tonyg
    Keymaster

    Holy shit. A rave review, after slamming an entire decade worth of albums. With friends like him….
    🙄

    #46024
    parkerca
    Participant

    Glad “Blessed” received 4 stars, but he makes it sound like everything she has released in the last 10 years as insignificant. I’m a little biased because i’m a fan, but what she has put out in the last 10 years could rival her past records.

    #46025
    punchdrunklove
    Participant

    It’s been rough being a Lucinda Williams fan for the past decade

    condescending tone alert. i’m sure the “bad vibes” reference was for WEST. this superb album is condemned to be tagged as such forever.

    but:

    “To Be Loved,” a tender ballad that every mother should sing to her children before bedtime (“You weren’t born to be mistreated/You weren’t born to be misguided/You were born to be loved”)

    i like this image he proposed, never thought of that (the “bluesy” tone definitely doesn’t invite a mother and her kids to my mind). didn’t i read somewhere that this was LW’s love letter to the world? certainly feels like one indeed, but the funny thing is that the most moving letter on blessed for me, as a causal listener (not really), is “sweet love”, which is focused on a single person and not on the world.

    #46026
    Lafayette
    Participant

    @punchdrunklove wrote:

    …but the funny thing is that the most moving letter on blessed for me, as a causal listener (not really), is “sweet love”, which is focused on a single person and not on the world.

    Here you go, mr. casual listener (not really). As performed at Stuart’s Opera House:

    “Sweet Love”

    #46027
    tntracy
    Participant

    @punchdrunklove wrote:

    “To Be Loved,” a tender ballad that every mother should sing to her children before bedtime (“You weren’t born to be mistreated/You weren’t born to be misguided/You were born to be loved”)

    i like this image he proposed, never thought of that (the “bluesy” tone definitely doesn’t invite a mother and her kids to my mind). didn’t i read somewhere that this was LW’s love letter to the world? certainly feels like one indeed

    You are correct; Lucinda introduced it as such in both Bloomington & Nelsonville…

    Tom

    #46028
    Los Doyers
    Participant

    Hey, critic, ÂĄQue te den por el culo!

    #46029
    tntracy
    Participant

    @Los Doyers wrote:

    Hey, critic, ÂĄQue te den por el culo!

    I’m not sure if, as moderator, I am obliged to censor profanity in another language. Especially when I agree with the sentiment… 😉

    Tom

    #46030
    punchdrunklove
    Participant

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2cT73At0kc

    thanks for posting!

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