Pretty Little Stranger - Joan Osborne, Osborne, Joan
Holy Waters - Joan Osborne, Griffin, Patty
Brokedown Palace - Joan Osborne,
What You Are - Joan Osborne, Osborne, Joan
Shake That Devil - Joan Osborne, Osborne, Joan
Time Won't Tell - Joan Osborne, Osborne, Joan
Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends - Joan Osborne, Kristofferson, Kris
Who Divided - Joan Osborne, Garcia, Jerry
Till I Get It Right - Joan Osborne,
Dead Roses - Joan Osborne, Henley, Larry
After Jane - Joan Osborne, Osborne, Joan
When the Blue Hour Comes - Joan Osborne, Crowell, Rodney
Though Joan Osborne has referred to this as "my version of a country record," the music is likely to find more favor in coffee shops and on NPR than with honky-tonks and the Grand Ole Opry. It conjures comparisons with Ros... more »anne Cash's artistry after her country hitmaking days, as if Osborne came to Nashville to make the sort of music that Cash left Nashville to make. While it may not achieve the commercial success that Osborne enjoyed with her popular breakthrough, "One of Us," it's the most consistently compelling album of her career. Produced by Steve Buckingham (Dolly Parton), with harmony support from Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, and Rodney Crowell, Osborne mixes six strong originals with six choice covers, rarely overpowering the material through displays of vocal technique, as she occasionally has in the past. Much of the material deals with the aftermath of relationships (including one with a woman on "After Jane"), with results ranging from a mixture of resilience and vulnerability on the title track through the insistent groove of "Who Divided" and the eternal optimism of "Till I Get It Right." There's also a folkish rendition of the Grateful Dead's "Brokedown Palace" that Osborne makes her own, and some live-wire slide guitar from Sonny Landreth on "Dead Roses." The closest she comes to classic country is a bittersweet reading of Kris Kristofferson's "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends," while the closing balladry of "When the Blue Hour Comes" (with co-writer Rodney Crowell on harmonies) is pure heartbreak. --Don McLeese« less
Though Joan Osborne has referred to this as "my version of a country record," the music is likely to find more favor in coffee shops and on NPR than with honky-tonks and the Grand Ole Opry. It conjures comparisons with Rosanne Cash's artistry after her country hitmaking days, as if Osborne came to Nashville to make the sort of music that Cash left Nashville to make. While it may not achieve the commercial success that Osborne enjoyed with her popular breakthrough, "One of Us," it's the most consistently compelling album of her career. Produced by Steve Buckingham (Dolly Parton), with harmony support from Alison Krauss, Vince Gill, and Rodney Crowell, Osborne mixes six strong originals with six choice covers, rarely overpowering the material through displays of vocal technique, as she occasionally has in the past. Much of the material deals with the aftermath of relationships (including one with a woman on "After Jane"), with results ranging from a mixture of resilience and vulnerability on the title track through the insistent groove of "Who Divided" and the eternal optimism of "Till I Get It Right." There's also a folkish rendition of the Grateful Dead's "Brokedown Palace" that Osborne makes her own, and some live-wire slide guitar from Sonny Landreth on "Dead Roses." The closest she comes to classic country is a bittersweet reading of Kris Kristofferson's "Please Don't Tell Me How the Story Ends," while the closing balladry of "When the Blue Hour Comes" (with co-writer Rodney Crowell on harmonies) is pure heartbreak. --Don McLeese
Mike S. Smutny | Brooklyn Park, MN United States | 11/21/2006
(2 out of 5 stars)
"I hate to give this a negative review because by many standards this is a decent recording. The songs are adequate, the arrangements are solid if uninspired, the song choice is at least thoughtful, and Joan can sing out of the phone book and still sound good. But...this is so far below what she's capable of and what she excels at that it is a serious disapointment to fans of the swampy back woods blues of "Relish", still one of my favorite CD's. There's nothing here to rival "St. Teresa", "Ladder", "Spider Web", "Right Hand Man", or even "One of Us" which I never need to hear ever again."
Where'd Joan go?
MtnRider | 11/15/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)
"I really miss the intensity of Joan's voice on previous albums. This is more thoughtful, pensive. Less heartbroken or fired up. I always catch myself thinking about her earlier music, "how does so much soul & heart come out of such a tiny little woman?" The gritty voice, the emotion, the imperfections.
Well, not to knock this CD, it's good stuff, just not what I love about Joan's music."
Like A Tiger
Lee Armstrong | Winterville, NC United States | 11/24/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Joan Osborne's "Pretty Little Stranger" has some shining moments. The self-penned title tune has an excellent beat, a throbbing bass line, and Joan's powerful vocals connecting with the band, "There is a Spanish boy who also rides the A train. I want to tag him like a tiger so I can track him as he moves around the city so I can guard him like an angel." This is a stellar track, on a par with Joan's best work. The beautiful melody of Patty Griffin's "What You Are" is polished by Joan's lovely vocals, "Do you wish you were the silence of the moon? Nobody knows but maybe you will be soon." Joan's "After Jane" is a delight with the vocals passionate and the music cranked, "Will I rise up again? Will I ever know a friend like my Jane!" There are other beautiful moments like Beth Nielsen Chapman's gorgeous tune of "Time Won't Tell," given a country twang with pedal steel guitar and Vince Gill on harmony. Rodney Crowell's "When the Blue Hour Comes" is a lovely ballad. On a few tracks like "Brokedown Palace" & "Shake the Devil" the band seems sleepy, unable to keep up with Joan's vocal fireworks. Most of the CD is excellent and deserves to be embraced by Joan's fans, old & new. Enjoy!"
Heartfelt and expressive -- a triumph for Joan Osborne!
Invisiboy2001 | Chicago, IL United States | 11/20/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have to admit that I was apprehensive about buying this new Joan Osborne album, because I was disappointed with her "How Sweet It Is" from a few years ago (I am not really into soul music, per se). Fortunately, I was pleasantly surprised with this new CD. The music has a country-rock feel to it, and her voice is exquisitely expressive. The girl can SING.
This CD is similar to albums by Emmylou Harris and Rosanne Cash (the song "Who Divided" sounds like it could have been lifted from an early Rosanne Cash album, while Osborn's remake of Kris Kristofferson's "Please Don't Tell Me How The Story Ends" features delicious, tender, just-ahead-of-the-beat phrasing one would expect from Emmylou Harris).
A thrilling aspect of this album is that Osborne has returned to recording songs she has written! After her last two CDs of mostly covered material, I am excited to get some more nuggets from this talented songwriter (wait till you hear "Pretty Little Stranger" and "Who Divided" -- perfection!!).
Overall, this is a terrific albumn for fans of music by country-rock women like Lucinda Williams, Matraca Berg, Emmylou Harris, Juice Newton, Linda Ronstadt and Rosanne Cash. Highly recommended!"
The Minimal Funky Joan
heavymanners | Chicago | 12/06/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"There's a direct connect between what Joan did on the Funk Brothers' "Standing in the Shadow of Motown" film and this new album.
It's bare.
No frills.
Backbeats to die for, even on the so-called country tunes.
And thankfully, none of the over-production by engineers that compromised her several previous works. (Send the orchestra home, thanks.)
Actually, I wish Joan would just sing the phone book, or Dixie cotton field slave songs, or just scat any Robert Johnson guitar riff - "a capella."
That would be the ideal venue for this woman's roots soulful spirit.
Less is always more with Joan.
The music industry moguls have to be truly reviled for not promoting her when she had her moment....
But this new CD is testimony that Joan's still one of us....