Emmylou Harris - Anthology: The Warner/Reprise Years (2001)
Artist: Emmylou Harris
Title: Anthology: The Warner/Reprise Years (2001)
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: Rhino
Genre: Country, Folk, Country Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 02:28:47
Total Size: 969 Mb / 388 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Anthology: The Warner/Reprise Years (2001)
Year Of Release: 2001
Label: Rhino
Genre: Country, Folk, Country Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 02:28:47
Total Size: 969 Mb / 388 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1
01. Too Far Gone
02. If I Could Only Win Your Love
03. Boulder to Birmingham
04. Together Again
05. Here, There and Everywhere
06. One of These Days
07. Sweet Dreams (Live)
08. (You Never Can Tell) C'est La Vie
09. Making Believe
10. Easy from Now On
11. To Daddy
12. Two More Bottles of Wine
13. Save the Last Dance for Me
14. Beneath Still Waters
15. Blue Kentucky Girl
16. Wayfaring Stranger
17. That Lovin' You Feelin' Again (with Roy Orbison)
18. The Boxer
19. Precious Love
20. Fools Thin Air
21. Mister Sandman
22. Colors of Your Heart
CD 2
01. If I Needed You (with Don Williams)
02. Tennessee Rose
03. Born to Run
04. Another Pot o' Tea
05. I'm Movin' On (Live)
06. (Lost His Love) On Our Last Date (Live)
07. So Sad (to Watch Good Love Go Bad) (Live)
08. Maybe Tonight
09. Drivin' Wheel
10. In My Dreams
11. Pledging My Love
12. Someone Like You
13. White Line
14. Rhythm Guitar
15. Timberline
16. I Had My Heart Set on You
17. Today I Started Loving You Again
18. To Know Him is to Love Him (with Dolly Parton & Linda Ronstadt)
19. Heartbreak Hill
20. Heaven Only Knows
21. I Still Miss Someone
22. Wheels of Love
23. Wheels of Love
Rhino's double-disc Anthology concentrates on Emmylou Harris' Reprise recordings, which is a blessing. Once she left Reprise, she started to delve into "experimental," "atmospheric" recordings a bit too heavily, certainly more than her prior recordings would justify, and it almost obscured her purest talents -- that of a singer that carried on the tradition of, say, Patsy Cline, becoming the greatest country singer of her generation. Since her generation was the rock generation, her path crossed multiple times with singers that weren't strictly country, most notably at the beginning of her career, when she sung backing and harmony vocals for the incomparable Gram Parsons. This gave her exposure, and she capitalized upon it by turning in recordings that simultaneously appealed to rock and country artists, finding herself as a tremendous interpretive singer, somebody that perfectly balanced the divide between classic and contemporary. Rhino's double-disc Anthology perfectly captures that balance and if it has any faults, it's that it illustrates her career a little too well, finding that her classicist approach was as modern as it was reverent. So, there are moments here that seem a little too studied to be true, but that's an accurate representation of her career, illustrating how she walked the tightrope between genuine country and a scholarly interpretation of it. This will appeal to both factions, as it captures both sides of her personality equally well. That means it might not be the perfect choice to convert doubters, yet it still winds up representing Harris' career remarkably well, perhaps being the one disc for casual fans.