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49 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Another class act from Joni Mitchell, June 11, 2000
It should come as no surprise to anyone that Joni Mitchell decided to finally record an album of jazz standards. Aside from the jazzy experiments in her own music that started in the mid-70's, Joni recently lended a vocal to jazz bassist Kyle Eastwood's debut CD, and then took part in Don Henley's benefit concert for the Walden Woods Project, where all guest stars performed a standard (Joni sang "Stormy Weather," and recorded another version here). So in theory this album makes perfect sense, and in practice it skirts greatness.Joni has an obvious affection for the material at hand...you can hear it in the thoughtful readings she gives. And Joni's voice, which has a smoky maturity from countless cigarettes in fifty-plus years, is perfectly suited to bluesy material like "You're My Thrill," "You've Changed," and "Stormy Weather," managing to both maintain her own identity and at times resemble the great Billie Holiday. Other tracks concentrate more symphony's strings than jazz licks, so songs like "Answer Me My Love" and "Don't Go to Strangers" sound lovely but are dangerously close to the realm of Easy Listening. The results are better when the music genuinely swings, as on "Sometimes I'm Happy," helped along by a flawless Herbie Hancock piano solo, or the especially striking "Comes Love." Two Mitchell originals are given the symphonic treatment here; one works, one doesn't. "Both Sides Now" is transformed from an elegant guitar ballad to a gorgeous piece of mature wisdom perfectly executed. "A Case of You," however, doesn't blend with this sort of arrangement. Big band music pretty much needs lyrics to fit the measures more evenly, and it sometimes seems as if Joni won't fit all of her words in. (A better second choice might have been "Blue Motel Room" from "Hejira," which already sounds like a jazz standard). It also would have been interesting to hear her strip down a standard and flat-out mess with it, a la Cassandra Wilson or Holly Cole. Even a Bossa Nova arrangement would have broken up the pace, which gets a little monotonous towards the end. But for a mature, jazzy vocal set to lush arrangements, "Both Sides Now" is a class act all the way: one of our most important artists paying homage to some of our most important songs.
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