Back Home Again Rhonda Vincent

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/11/2000
  • Sales Rank: 54,036
  • Label: ROUNDER / UMGD
  • UPC: 011661046023

Listener Rating: (1 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Soloing" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Back Home Again

1LISTENLonesome Wind Blues 3:03
2LISTENPretending I Don't Care 3:41
3LISTENWhen I Close My Eyes 3:27
4LISTENYou're in My Heart 2:25
5LISTENLittle Angels 3:24
6LISTENPassing of the Train 2:43
7LISTENOut of Hand 3:04
8LISTENJolene 3:16
9LISTENYou Don't Know How Lucky You Are 3:14
10LISTENKeep Your Feet on the Ground 2:24
11LISTENYou're Running Wild 2:21
12LISTENWhere No Cabins Fall 2:48

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Rhonda Vincent, who's played and sung traditional bluegrass since she was a child, spent several years recording in mainstream country music and contributed harmony vocals to Dolly Parton's top-selling, return-to-the-roots album, THE GRASS IS BLUE. Weaving these musical threads together in a heartfelt tapestry of great singing and great songs, from the driving beat (and Vincent's own rhythmic mandolin chops) of "Passing of the Train" to the country-blues-tinged "Pretending I Don't Care," Vincent proves that these folk and country roots truly are her heritage. With spare instrumentation (including Jerry Douglas's Dobro), Vincent and her brother Darrin offer the high lonesome sound on "You Don't Know How Lucky You Are," and Vincent gives the nod to her friend from Locust Ridge, Tennessee, with a stellar version of Dolly Parton's love triangle tale, "Jolene." Fans of Dolly and bluegrass chart-toppers Alison Krauss and Claire Lynch, take note. Kerry Dexter, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Classical Bluegrassby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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June 05, 2009: This woman is one of the greatest performers in Bluegrass today. I don't know why PBS hasn't done an "American Experience" episode about her or why she isn't playing and lecturing on Ivy League campuses with courses in American Culture."Back Home Again" is a ten year old recording that shows the continuing promise of an artist whose vocal instrument only gets better and more powerful with each passing year. She will throw in a little folk and country on her later records. What you get here is a pure Appalachian soprano with an infallible ear for the sweet spot of Bluegrass harmonies. She's faithful to the conventions of the genre: lost loves, train songs, earthly angels, and it all sounds new: "Lonesome Wind Blues", "Passing of the Train", and a version of "You're in My Heart" where the pure elegance of her singing is underlined by the elegant fiddle playing of Ron Stewart. It will stay and play in your heart. There is a song about child molestation, "Little Angels", that I found jarring and out of genre and rightly so. So was Billie Holliday's "Strange Fruit". As good as Rhonda Vincent is here...and that means very good...it's interesting to play this recording and compare it with the work she's doing now. To paraphrase Carl Sandberg's comment about The Weavers, when I hear Rhonda Vincent I hear America singing.