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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Poet Laureat of the Cusp,
By
This review is from: Honesty Room (Audio CD)
The thing that makes Dar Williams unique is that we can all identify with what she's singing about. Growing up in the wake of the Baby Boomers, a little too old to really be GenX, her songs about a childhood with a hippy babysitter and cold war fears resonates with a lot of thirty-somethings out there, such as myself. But I'm fairly confident that this accoustical effort will appeal to those outside my demographic as well. And what you get with this album is a first-person confessional, not of pain and sin, but of life in America. If you're familiar with her later recordings, this album is a nice departure from the full-band folk-rock she's become equally adept at. Most of the music on this album is simple folk guitar and Dar's vocals. The lyrics are nothing short of brilliant; personal and intimate, without ever going over-the-top to hokey. Nearly every song on this album speaks from and to the heart. Dar has made many more albums since this one, and it's always interesting to see which new direction she's taking with each release. But even as her music gets more complex with the addition of a full band in later albums, she still maintains the pure songwriting gift that this album so spectacularly showcases.
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I was thinking about my sprained outlook on certain aspects of life...,
By Viviane (Brooklyn) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Honesty Room (Audio CD)
I got this album, it nudged some of the discs back into place. Dar's not a preacher, but "The Honesty Room" is naked, generous, unapologetic and energetic. In a culture where most music is blantantly geared toward mass-appeal consumerism, where the fact that performers can't sing is voiced-over and choreographed away, where "pop" equals "product placement," a singer/songwriter (or anyone else) who isn't afraid to show the world who she sees in the mirror is unbelievably refreshing. This is an aptly named, beautifully layered CD, with many styles for many moods. It makes me want to go hiking through the mountains of Montana.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Life passes very gracefully in The Honesty Room,
By dev1 (Baltimore) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Honesty Room (Audio CD)
When The Honesty Room was first released by the Burning Field label, it didn't sell. Then it was picked up by Waterbug Records, and it still didn't sell. Finally, after the album was released by Razor & Tie, it still didn't sell. Well, almost. Without air play, without a video, and without promotion from the CD label, The Honesty Room did pretty well for the unknown artist Dar Williams. The word that Dar was the latest and greatest in the folk world spread by way of this new fangled communication tool called the internet. Seriously, Dar Williams may very well be the first internet singer.As far as The Honesty Room is concerned, self-examination and self-reflection have been done before. In fact, overdone. But Dar is a gem: instead of performing for the members of an audience, instead of singing into a microphone connected to a tape recorder, Dar sings "to and for you" alone. Her ability to connect is what politicians call "charisma," while knowing music fans prefer to use the term "intimate." Each of her compositions is an engrossing tale, a story of normal everyday life told with poetic finesse. The CD opens with `When I Was A Boy' - a song that questions sexual stereotypes and concludes with a surprise ending. `The Babysitter's Here' paints a nostalgic and heartwarming image of hero worship. Dar's lyrics bring life to the characters, and the last verse is affectingly poignant. You'd be very fortunate if `This Is Not A House That Pain Built' is the house where you grew up. Life passes very gracefully in The Honesty Room. Several times I've questioned just how does Dar Williams sing these songs without sounding "corny." I suppose that each listener will have his own answer.
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