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Lucinda Williams - World Without Tears (CD)

Album Details: World Without Tears

Release Date:04/08/2003
Label:Lost Highway
UPC:008817035529

Other Available Formats: World Without Tears

User Reviews: World Without Tears

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    Back To The Bluesy With Lucinda Williams

    By Cherryll  May 3, 2003 | 2 out of 2 found this World Without Tears review helpful

    This album is classic Lucinda Williams, as completely different and yet wholly hers as anything she has ever put out. Car Wheels felt like a journey across the South; and Essence was a journey to the center of the soul. This is the story of a woman s...talled out , and seeking the answers which exist where she is. Williams sets the tone in the opening, Fruits of My Labor, a tune with the same electric country feel as Reason To Cry, when she reminds us all Baby, sweet baby, if its all the same/take the glory over the fame. She plays with both the language and rythms of rap on Righteously, which finds its center in the driving electric guitar licks and ballances the why you wanna dis me/after the way you been kissin me with the by hammering home the line Just play me John Coltrane. Ventura is a pretty, road styled tune about traveling the California Coast in search of release. Next comes an track about what country music, and all music, could use more of right now--Real Live Bleeding Fingers and Broken Guitar Strings. It is a song Williams fans could sing to her I climbed all the way inside/Your tragedy/I got behind/the majesty. Overtime is a haunting, syncopated song about the advice well meaning friends give someone getting over loss. Those Three Days is an open, bluesy rant about the after effects of a three night stand. Atonement is a starteling, driving blues blast about wrenching forgiveness. Sweet Side offers a tender follow up to He Never Got Enough Love, with a rap based melody that still sounds surprisingly country. Minneapolis offers goergous instrumentals accompanied by Williams hauting vocals. She goes into a classic blues swing for People Talking, a lyrical gripe about gossip and waggin tongues. Next she offers a stark picture of the American Dream with Vietnam Vets hooked on heroine and working class heros out of a job and out of luck when, Everything is wrong. This she follows up with the almost hymn like World Without Tears where she askes If we lived in a world without tears...how would broken find the bones. She closed with the equally stately Words Fell a perfect closing note for such a gifted song writer. Lucinda Williams is known for being a perfectionist in the studio, and this album reveals her work ethic. The songs are poetic and meaningful, the instrumentals are haunting and complex and the vocals are emotional, pitch perfect and distinctive. PS: For perfect listening accompaniment try Mary Gauthiers Filth and Fire and Maria McKees self titled Read more Less

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    sex

    By ßéßµ...!!╠╣╦  Mar 6, 2009

    Pros: sex

    Cons: sex

    sex

Pro Reviews: World Without Tears

  • All Music Guide

    While many considered Car Wheels on a Gravel Road and Essence as definitive statements of arrival for Lucinda Williams as a pop star, she "arrived" creatively with her self-titled album in 1984 and opened up a further world of possibilities with Sweet Old World. The latter two records merely cemented a reputation that was well-deserved from the outset, though they admittedly confused some of her earliest fans. World Without Tears is the most immediate, unpolished album she's done since Sweet Old World. In addition, it is simply the bravest, most emotionally wrenching record she's ever issued. It offers unflinching honesty regarding the paradoxes inherent in love as both a necessary force for fulfillment and a destructive one when embraced unconsciously. Fans of her more polished, emotionally yearning material may have a hard time here because there isn't one track -- of 13 -- that isn't right from the gut, ripped open, bleeding, and stripped of metaphors and literary allusions; they're... all cut with the fineness of a stiletto slicing through white bone into the heart's blood. World Without Tears is, among other things, predominantly about co-dependent, screwed-up love. It's about relationships that begin seemingly innocently and well-intentioned and become overwhelmingly powerful emotionally and transcendent sexually, until the moment where a fissure happens, baggage gets dumped in the space between lovers, and they turn in on themselves, becoming twisted and destructive -- where souls get scorched and bodies feel the addictive, obsessive need to be touched by a now absent other. The whole experience burns to ashes; it becomes a series of tattoos disguised as scars. The experience is lived through with shattering pain and bewilderment until wrinkled wisdom emerges on the other side. Most of Williams' albums have one song that deals with this theme, but with the exception of a couple of songs, here they all do.Musically, this is the hardest-rocking record she's ever released, though almost half the songs are ballads. Her road band -- on record with her for the first time -- cut this one live from the studio floor adding keyboards and assorted sonic textures later. The energy here just crackles. Sure, there's gorgeous country and folk music here. "Ventura," with its lilting verse and lap steel whining in the background, is a paean to be swallowed up in the ocean of love's embrace. In fact, it's downright prosaic until she gets to the last verse: "Stand in the shower to clean this dirty mess/Give me back my power and drown this unholiness/Lean over the toilet bowl and throw up my confession/Cleanse my soul of this hidden obsession." The melodic frame is still moving, but the tune reverses itself: It's no longer a broken-hearted ballad, but a statement of purpose and survival. "Fruits of My Labor" is a straight-ahead country song. Williams shimmers with her lyric, her want pouring from her mouth like raw dripping honey. Her words are a poetry of want: "I traced your scent through the gloom/Till I found these purple flowers/I was spent, I was soon smelling you for hours...I've been trying to enjoy all the fruits of my labor/I've been cryin' for you boy, but truth is my savior." One can hear the grain of Loretta Lynn's voice, with an intent so pure and unadorned. But the muck and mire of "Righteously," with its open six-string squall, is pure rock. It's an exhortation to a lover that he need not prove his manhood by being aloof, but to "be the man you ought to tenderly/Stand up for me." Doug Pettibone's overdriven, crunching guitar solo quotes both Duane Allman and Jimi Hendrix near the end of the tune. "Real Live Bleeding Fingers and Broken Guitar Strings" is a Rolling Stones-style country-rocker with a lyric so poignant it need not be quoted here. "Over Time," a tome about getting through the heartbreak of a ruined relationship, could have been produced by Daniel Lanois with its warm guitar tremolo and sweet, pure, haunting vocal in front of the mix. "Those Three Days" may be the most devastating song on the record, with its whimpering lap steel and Williams' half-spoken vocal that questions whether a torrid three-day affair was a lie, a symbolic sacrifice, or the real thing. The protagonist's vulnerability is radical; she feels used, abused -- "Did you only want me for those three days/Did you only need me for those three days/Did you love me forever just for those three days." Yet she holds out hope that there is some other explanation as the questions begin to ask themselves from the depth of a scorched heart and a body touched by something so powerful it feels as if it no longer owns itself. Pettibone's solo screams and rings in the bridge to underline every syllable and emotion. "Atonement" is something else altogether; it's a punkish kind of blues. If the White Stripes jammed with 20 Miles in a big studio it might sound like this, with Williams singing from the depths of a tunnel for a supreme megaphone effect. She growls and shouts and spits her lyrics from the center of the mix. And Taras Prodaniuk's fuzzed-out basement-level gutter bass is the dirtiest, raunchiest thing on record since early Black Sabbath. "Sweet Side" is almost a poem in song, attempts to inspire someone who's been broken by life to accept his goodness. It is not a rap song despite what's been written about it so far. It's more in the tradition of Bob Dylan's early talking blues, but with a modern organic rhythm played by Jim Christie instead of drum loops. In addition, there is the gorgeously tough "People Talking," the most straight-ahead country song Williams has written since "Still I Long for Your Kiss" (from the Horse Whisperer soundtrack, not the version that appears on Car Wheels, which is dull and lifeless by comparison). Here again, Pettibone's guitar and the slippery, skittering shuffle of Christie's drumming carry Williams' voice to a place where she can sing her protagonist's personal, soul-searing truth without restraint.World Without Tears is a work of art in the Henry James sense; it is "that which can never be repeated." It is as fine an album as she could make at this point in her life -- which is saying plenty. While she has never strayed from her own vision and has made few compromises, this album risks everything she's built up to now. The audience she's won over time -- especially with her last two records -- may find it over the top, which would be too damn bad; it'd be their loss. Hopefully, history will prove that World Without Tears sets a new watermark for Williams, and is an album so thoroughly ahead of its time in the way it embraces, and even flaunts, love's contradictions and paradoxes -- the same way the human heart does. It is this writer's hope that people will be listening to and learning from it for years to come. - Thom Jurek, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Lucinda Williams

The object of cultish adoration for years, singer/songwriter Lucinda Williams was universally hailed as a major talent by both critics and fellow musicians, but it took quite some time for her to parlay that respect into a measure of attention from the general public. Part of the reason was her legendary perfectionism: Williams released records only infrequently, often ... Read more