Kind Hearted Woman
Kind Hearted Woman is an album by the American musician Michelle Shocked, released in 1996.[1][2] It is a rerecording of her 1994 album, which was sold at her concerts.[3] The album was released by Private Music, after Mercury Records declined to release any further Shocked albums.[4][5] Shocked eventually disentangled herself from Mercury, and was able to take all of her masters with her.[6][7] Shocked supported the album by touring with her band, the Casualties of Wah.[8] ProductionThe album was produced by Bones Howe.[9] Members of Hothouse Flowers backed Shocked on the rerecording.[10] Kind Hearted Woman was inspired by the death of Shocked's grandmother, most specifically on "Fever Breaks".[11][12] Three of its songs were originally written for a dance performance.[13] Critical reception
Spin wrote that Shocked is "curious about all the musics of America, wants to feel each texture by hand, without sounding blithely postmodern."[18] The Los Angeles Times stated that "the songs range from angular acoustic rock to barroom swing to country pop, occasionally recalling alterna-divas Kristin Hersh and Johnette Napolitano."[17] The Sun-Sentinel concluded that "stripped-down arrangements and a clear haunting vocal style, ripe with folkish mannerisms and strange countrified rhythms, keep Shocked visions crystalline as icicles."[19] The Los Angeles Daily News noted that, "while her hauntingly beautiful delivery is sometimes reserved, it is mostly marked by the ebullience of a woman on the edge."[16] The Santa Fe New Mexican deemed the album "a darkly sensuous work of thrilling depth and compassion."[20] The St. Louis Post-Dispatch determined that "these thoroughly grim folk songs set in rural mid-America are remarkable for their clarity and intelligence."[21] AllMusic wrote that, "like Bruce Springsteen on his Nebraska album, Shocked was concerned with what sounded like Depression-era issues of poverty and hard times in the heartland."[14] Track listing
References
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