Backwoods Barbie Dolly Parton

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/26/2008
  • Sales Rank: 36,449
  • Label: DOLLY RECORDS
  • UPC: 805859009323

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  • Overview
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Backwoods Barbie

1LISTENBetter Get to Livin' 3:35
2LISTENMade of Stone 4:12
3LISTENDrives Me Crazy 4:12
4LISTENBackwoods Barbie 3:19
5LISTENJesus & Gravity 4:40
6LISTENOnly Dreamin' 5:35
7LISTENThe Tracks of My Tears 3:33
8LISTENThe Lonesomes 3:17
9LISTENCologne 3:41
10LISTENShinola 4:11
11LISTENI Will Forever Hate Roses 3:26
12LISTENSomebody's Everything 4:16

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Following an incredibly fruitful three-album tenure with Sugar Hill, Dolly Parton makes a much-ballyhooed, and ultimately successful, return to the country mainstream with Backwoods Barbie. But make no mistake -- it's a return on her own terms, as she wrote and largely produced the album for her own newly formed label. Typical of her best work, Parton delivers meaningful songs with panache, conviction, and commanding style, in both songs and arrangements. A strong streak of vulnerability surfaces via lush production touches and Dolly's soaring, aching vocals -- landing a visceral punch with her accounts of a heart bruised, battered, betrayed, and broken. These range from the torch-style, bluesy wailing of "Made of Stone" to the woozy, late-night country blues of "The Lonesomes" to the bitter reflections articulated in the honky tonk-flavored, pedal steel-rich screed "I Will Forever Hate Roses." The Fine Young Cannibals' hit "Drive Me Crazy" is a techno-country fusion that's likely a showstopper in concert, but it's one of Dolly's lesser cover choices, lacking the lyrical and musical depth of her re-imagining of "Stairway to Heaven" on 2002's Halos & Horns or, going back to 1977, New Harvest...First Gathering's country-disco arrangement of Jackie Wilson's "Higher and Higher" (better than mere words can suggest). On the other hand, Dolly returns, gloriously, to the Smokey Robinson songbook (see the aforementioned 1977 release for her version of "My Girl") for a delicious southern country-soul treatment of "Tracks of My Tears," a beautifully realized production that blends the best elements of Smokey's and Johnny Rivers's hit versions with Dolly's impeccable sense of the lyrics' emotional shadings. The title track is a winning, stone-country, personal ballad in the "Coat of Many Colors" mold in which Dolly asserts, "I might look artificial but where it counts I'm real." Never doubted, not for a second. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

A reviewerby Anonymous

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July 07, 2008: Backwoods Barbie is truly one of Dolly's best albums ever! From the classic country of title track, remniscent of the Coat of Many Colors era, to the poppy remake of Drives Me Crazy, this album will appeal to any country music fan. Dolly wrote most of the songs herself, which makes it even better! It's a must have!

Her Roots Aren't Showingby Anonymous

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March 22, 2008: Dolly Parton is one of those artists that inspires a following that often comes across as completely uncritical -- as if the woman walks on water and can do absolutely no wrong. This is actually understandable to a certain extent because the woman exudes tons of charm. She's smart, gracious, has a big heart and a wonderful sense of humor that she often turns on herself with aplomb. But there is a downside to all of this in that she often seems to have this yearning to be all things to all people and this has shown over the very uneven course of her career over the past 30 years. Her move into the pop world certainly paid off with lots of commercial success, but it came at a cost to the artistic integrity that made her such a treasure in the first place. This was what made her return to her roots with a string of albums over the past 10 years or so, so remarkable. Dolly had returned to us from the pop world unscathed. Which is why this album is such a frustrating let down. We have a set of songs that are, in of of themselves, OK but presented in a slick presentation that would have been very radio friendly a quarter of a century ago. As a consequence everything just seems, well, disposable. This might be a solid album for somebody like Shania Twain, but Dolly should be held to a higher standard.


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