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32 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A 'return' to center for Joni,
By rdale@erisco.imshealth.com (New York City) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Historically, "Night Ride Home" has been called Joni Mitchell's return to form. It was her first album in the 90's and the aural atmosphere surrounding the songs seemed like a welcome relief from her turgid 80's material. I have been and remain an avid fan; even so, "Dog Eat Dog" and "Chalk Mark in a Rainstorm" are not particularly favorite's of mine. So when "Night Ride Home" appeared it seemed as if Joni (and Larry, of course) had begun to feel that an uncluttered approach to her music was best. And they were right! "Night Ride Home" is just another example of Mitchell's stunning range as songwriter, guitar player and singer. The title track is a lovely ballad, all the more enjoyable since it reflects on a small cherished moment between Joni and Larry. Her reworking of Yeates' "Slouching Toward Bethlehem" is terrific: her plaintive guitar work is surrounded by thunderous percussion and siren wails. It's sense of the coming 'revelation' is ominous. And who -- but Joni Mitchell -- would have the nerve (and good sense) to change Yeates' original text? "Come In From the Cold" offers Joni's slightly middle-aged perspective on romance & relationships. Gone is the doomed folkie from "Blue" which kind of cast her as the "Sarah Bernhardt" of the '70s; now she assumes a more mature and realistic (while not overtly cheery) stance on matters of the heart. Two songs regarding Joni's childhood also appear: "Cherokee Louise" recounts the story of a sexually abused girlfriend while "Ray's Dad's Cadillac" concerns itself with slightly less weighty matters (a la "In France They Kiss On Main Street"). Ironically, despite "Cherokee Louise"'s repugnant theme, Mitchell's guitar work and percussion make the song a toe-tapper. "Night Ride Home" laid the groundwork for Mitchell's next masterpiece, "Turbulent Indigo". It is a fine collection of songs from a true master: strong, vibrant and immensely enjoyable.
23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vivid musical genius.,
By Matt Marx (Mount Kisco, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Upon hearing the name "Joni Mitchell", the everyday joe thinks back to the early and mid-1970's, when breakthrough albums like Blue and Court And Spark nearly made her a household name in the music industry. What the everyday joe doesn't know, however, is that one of her most flavorful and deep albums to date was recorded far after her heyday. When the 1990's were drawing their infant breaths, under the grunge and teen-pop, Night Ride Home was released.Joni's voice had gotten deeper along with her music. The now sharp and enigmatic singing blended with the haunting and mysterious guitar work, a far cry from the blissful and soaring songs she had written over 15 years earlier. The opening track, "Night Ride Home", is a swayable sensation written about a colorful 4th of July twilight (elaborated by crickets chirping in the background). The title track is followed by the sophisticated "Passion Play", and the spine-chilling story of "Cherokee Louise". "The Windfall" and "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" are powerful, edgily-spoken songs that dive as dark as folk music can go. "Come In From The Cold" is one of the album's most defining moments. The 7-minute opus is full to the brim of full-bodied acoustic guitar, soft percussion, and Joni's voice as powerful and radiant as ever. The song serves a story, with spellbinding lyrics ("We had hope, the world had promise for a slave to liberty. Freely, I slaved away for something better, and I was bought and sold. And all I ever wanted was to come in from the cold.") The album concludes with four more tracks of the album's signature huskiness. Fans of Nick Drake, Jeff Buckley, and even softer Neil Young will be put in a trance by the subtle mystery this album has to offer. This album is extremely dark, but by no means dismal. With complex acoustic guitarwork and a sheer, emotional palate of lyrics and vocals to sing them, Night Ride home is essential for any Joni Mitchell fan, and those who enjoy the darker , huskier side of folk (a la Neil Young's 1992 Harvest Moon album). Hear the work of a true legend.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Fabulous Return To Form By Miss Joni!,
By Barron Laycock "Labradorman" (Temple, New Hampshire United States) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
No one made more impact on the sixties and early seventies folk-rock scene with her deeply personal songs than Joni Mitchell. So, when she returned to the same style and presentation after a long absence in the early nineties with this album, it certainly galvanized our collective consciousness by provocatively presenting a number of songs that are both representative of and yet quite superior to a lot of what she had done before. Here Joni presents a song writing that is both mature and serious, and yet showing her mischievous side with a few songs like "Come In From The Cold", which is probably the most accomplished and popular of the tunes collected here. Yet we linger over other songs as well, such as the title cut of "Night Ride Home", which is a memorable glimpse into her private and personal world with her husband in some moments alone out on the road. A lot of similar cues to her aversion to being a public personality are here; the hope for quiet, the reference of "no phones till Friday", etc. So, while this is no outrageously autobiographical tour of the state of her psyche as some previous albums had been, it does represent a return to her habit of speaking loudly and clearly about a number of personal and social issues she has in mind. Another memorable effort is "Passion Play", with its provocative verses and interesting arrangement, and one must mention a quite lovely "Nothing Can be Done". All of the songs make for a worthwhile listening experience. Of course, no one as observant and perceptive as Mitchell can help but make shrewd side remarks at the inanity of social circumstance or political happenstance along the way, and we laugh along while accompanying her on this soulful journey through the risky, crater-filled landscape of life in the nineties. This album marks a return to her classic form, and is an outstanding effort by one of the most captivating, surprising, and articulate talents in modern music. From the numbers mentioned above to her treatment of everything from original songs to a stunning interpretation of William Butler Yeats famous poem "The Second Coming", this is filled with numbers you will be humming and singing along with. You will find yourself listening to it and shaking your head knowingly as you recognize her wisdom as she sings her way into the millennium. Enjoy.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful and totally underrated,
By A Customer
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Like most avid Joni fans I first came across her work through Blue and Court and Spark - only later starting to collect her later albums too. Having now bought all her albums apart from Dog Eat Dog I can honestly say that this is one of her very best, and I totally agree with the other reviewer who said this is an underrated record. With the possible exception of Ray's Dad's Cadillac, every song is a gleaming gem, the wonderful vocals, powerful lyrics and simple acoustic guitar arrangements sounding so much better than the over-produced stuff Joni produced in the 80s. The title track alone is worth the price of the CD and the haunting Come In From The Cold has to be one of Joni's most beautiful songs ever. I would (of course!) give Blue and The Hissing Of Summer Lawns 5 stars and although I totally love this album and think it is one of Joni's best 3 or 4 albums, it isn't quite as revolutionary as the Hissing.
21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A CLASSIC FROM THE EARLY 90's....,
By
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Its great to see several cuts from NIGHT RIDE HOME featured on Joni'snew look back, "THE BEGINNING OF SURVIVAL", (being released July 27th) . Although "Turbulent Indigo" received the Grammy and basically took its blue print from "NIGHT RIDE HOME", I really felt the warmth and devotion return with NRH, something I had missed from Joni's works over the years after Mingus. Although I really enjoyed Turbulent Indigo, Night Ride Home is special, moody, sad at times but it shows the real Joni Mitchell that overproduction sometimes hit with its colder touches(during the 80's). I still listened to everything Joni put out but this underappreciated collection of songs hit me just at a time in my life where I was reflecting about life and this music from Joni really touched me. She's deeply spiritual, always seeking answers yet always asking questions in her songs. I have listened to this over and over since its 1991 release and it still one of many Joni Mitchell classic favorites.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Night Ride Home ~ Joni Mitchell,
By Thijs (Groesbeek, Gelderland Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Night Ride Home was really a return for Joni Mitchell. She dropped almost all of the instruments that made her records released in the 80's sound so overproduced. There are more acoustic tracks who focus on Joni and her guitar. The lyrics are again from a very high level, like her albums from the 70's. Joni's voice has matured incredible and now you can hear that because of the sparse instrumentation. But that's not a complaint, because her voice sounds very cool and experienced by now. Absolute highlight of this album is Come In From The Cold, a song were Joni is looking back from the first time that she falls in love, to all the romance and relationships that have happened in her life. This is a great work from Joni Mitchell and if you love her more famous albums, you're gonna love this one also.
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Middle Aged Love Songs!",
By hermit the frog (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Scared people started leaving Joni in droves after Dog Eat Dog in '85. (These were probably the same people who didn't buy Mingus or Hejira, but that's another essay). So some people missed out on the very good Chalk Mark in a Rain Storm in '88, and seemingly more missed out on this classic piece of pop music, Night Ride Home.Someone asked Joni in an interview what this album was about, and she shot back, "middle-aged love songs!" As if she had to defend making such an album. But these songs are about so much more than that. Slouching Toward Bethlehem is musically inviting, but chilling in its lyrics. Windfall is anything but a love song - "Because Elvis gave them cars/you think I'm cheap," she says (amazingly) to someone who may have been spending too much time on her couch. The title track, however, fits perfectly into her broad description - it might even take place on a hayride. There is a (I hate to use the word) coziness to some of the proceedings. Wayne Shorter is used (as usual) as her melodic alter-ego, but here it seems to work more effectively than on any other album -- mostly because the arrangements are lush without being busy or over-orchestrated. He blends in more with his surroundings, which serves to accentuate Joni's vocals. Blah, blah, blah...buy it for the title track, for Slouching Toward Bethlehem, and for Two Grey Rooms. But upon repeated listening, you'll find that you'll prefer to listen to the whole glorious thing, start-to-finish. Again and again.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The most stunning Joni album I've heard,
By
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
There's not much that can be said for such a moving album. From the first time I listened to this album earlier this year, I was hooked. The writing is passionate and intense and the music is the same. Written more than 20 years after her first album, this proved that there was no slowing down in the creative process. I stil haven't heard all of Joni's albums, but from the 6 or so I have heard, this takes the cake. You can't beat "Come in from the Cold". Court and Spark has 2nd place right now for me.
There are only 2 or 3 "misses" on this album, but the thing is that the rest of the album is so incredible that those 2 or 3 songs don't even make a dent--hence the 5 star rating I gave it. On my list of the greatest albums of the 20th century, this album without a doubt makes it onto the list. Joni's not limited by decades or radio. She may put out some less than satisfactory music now and then, but over the course of her career has deserved that right I guess. This album ranks among the reasons why she is indispensible to musical history, and present day discussions.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Welcome Home, Joni,
By
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Standing alone, removed from the context of the entire body of her work, Joni Mitchell's "Night Ride Home" deserves to be regarded for what it is - a stunning array of ten beautiful melodies, embellished by lavish harmonies and counterpoints, all delivered through the medium of her intoxicating, confident and finely honed voice. The vocals are set in a spare but artfully arranged instrumental background of acoustic guitar, bass and percussion, with just a dash of keyboards and winds where appropriate. The lyrics cover a mixed bag of topics, with social commentaries (incest, greed, economic exploitation and an adaptation of a Yeats poem about the apocaplyptic consequences of the loss of moral centers) alternating with recurring "Fountain of Youth" reminiscences of magical romantic moments past. Whether Mitchell is a worthy poet or painter may be debated by poets and painters - but there can be little doubt about her status as the outstanding lyricist in the world of popular music. This album is all Joni - the melody writer, the singer, the musician, the lyricist and the person. But "Night Ride Home" is perhaps even more interesting within the context of her journey as a musical artist. In her early albums, the young Mitchell developed the basic skills - "words and music" writing, intrumental and confessional - that would culminate in her first masterpiece. "Blue" was puctuated by exquisite melody writing, on top of her own musical accompaniment. There was little vocal harmony, and only a smattering of instumental help (except for a little James Taylor and Stephen Stills). The question was, where could she go from there? "For the Roses" was a fine album, featuring a bit more accompaniment and even two successful injections of traditional orchestration, but it could not exceed Blue, and therefor could not equal it (since it came on its heels). Gradually, Joni made the committment to expand her musical horizons, mixing Tom Scott's 'semi-jazz' into her equation in the commercially successful "Court and Spark" and even more intensely into her experimental "Hissing of Summer Lawns". The latter album was less popular, and no doubt confused many of her fans (including this one) and most music critics, unable to keep up with the pace of her musical advancement. "Hissing" had some misses, but it would be received far better by fans and critics as time passed, and proved to be the transition to her second masterpiece, "Hejira". Hejira, released only five years after Blue, represented almost a complete transformation in musical style from Blue. The soaring, expansive melodies of Blue had yielded to more tightly knit, almost narrative melody and lyrical lines in Hejira, and the musical accompaniment - a sort of fusion jazz punctuated by Mitchell's unique stylistic variations on the guitar - took center stage. The confessional lyrics were largely gone - while still personal, their emphasis reflected more the emptiness of one in search rather than joy of new love or the anguish of heartbroken separation. With this transformation, Mitchell lost some old followers (in my case, it was twenty years later that I woke up to the album, finally able to absorb the beauty of the instrumentation) but gained some new ones who were more jazz-oriented. Yet Mitchell was not yet finished with her move in the direction of jazz-oriented exploration. With "Don Juan's Reckless Daughter" and "Mingus", she lost most of her original following altogether, even though some of us trusted that she was exploring areas she needed to in order to complete her development as an artist, and realized that it was we who could not yet keep up. The 1980's brought the Larry Klein era, and a move to consolidate the many skills acquired into a new style with a new direction, but still rather heavily jazz-oriented. I have not yet warmed up to the three albums from that decade - perhaps one day I will - but one cannot help but respect Klein's work and its positive influence over time on Mitchell's music. With "Night Ride Home", however, there is a return to the emphasis on traditional, fluid melody last seen in "Blue", but this time with much more sophisticated harmonies and counterpoints, and more polished guitar arrangements. And with "Night Ride Home", Joni has for a second time answered the post-Blue question "where do I go from here?". She could not hope for a second masterpiece in the style of Blue, but she has found a way to improve upon Blue significantly in some respects, and that is really something. "Turbulent Indigo" won the Grammies, but I suspect they were in part a belated recognition of the overlooked "Night Ride Home", which had enabled even Joni's earliest fans to welcome back into their lives the greatest artist of the late 20th century in the English-speaking world.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Neglected Classic,
By
This review is from: Night Ride Home (Audio CD)
Some people think that great, artistic pop essentially died with disco. This album negates such thought as an absolute assertion; it deserves to be regarded in history as one of the very best non-classical albums of the last quarter of the 20th century. The lyrics to songs such as "Come in from the Cold" and "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" are tremendously arresting and thought-provoking, simply as poetry; and the gorgeous harmonies and Wayne Shorter sax will make you forget that "Cherokee Louise" is about the terrible subject of child sex abuse, and "The Windfall" about a civil litigation system out of control (really, a great theme song for insurance companies who want legislatures to restrict the ability of victims of medical malpractice to recover. The point being: as politics, this is garbage; but as art, which is what we're reviewing here, it's interesting. Actually, it enhances the overall mood of the album, which is like a walk in a gloomy, humid rain forest, with foreboding lurking around the corner.). Joni Mitchell has always been regarded as a great lyricist above all, and a pioneer for such artists as Tori Amos, Ani DeFranco and Alanis Morrissette. Here, she is the master of that universe.
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Night Ride Home by Joni Mitchell (Audio CD - 1991)
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