Between Here and Gone Mary Chapin Carpenter

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CD

Average Customer Rating:

( 5 customer ratings )

  • Release Date: 04/28/2009
  • Original Release: 2004
  • Sales Rank: 4,267
  • Label: Sbme Special Mkts.
  • UPC: 886974855422

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Between Here and Gone

Track List
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Between Here and Gone

1LISTENWhat Would You Say to Me 3:43
2LISTENLuna's Gone 4:16
3LISTENMy Heaven 5:53
4LISTENGoodnight America 5:36
5LISTENBetween Here and Gone 5:08
6LISTENOne Small Heart 6:02
7LISTENBeautiful Racket 4:40
8LISTENGirls Like Me 4:27
9LISTENRiver 4:21
10LISTENGrand Central Station 4:25
11LISTENThe Shelter of Storms 5:18
12LISTENElysium 5:29

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Like her previous studio album, 2001's Time*Sex*Love, Between Here and Gone, arrives after a four-year silence marked by reflection, introspection, and, in the artist's words, "growing older and wiser." Despite its rousing moments -- the propulsive "Beautiful Racket" (possibly the first song to refer to a "lambent wind") boasts the relentless drive of classic Carpenter rockers such as "He Thinks He'll Keep Her" -- the new album revels in poetic ratiocination, its themes softly imparted in piercing observations about relationships, the passage of time, and the disposition of hopes and dreams. Rife with fiddles, acoustic guitars, mandolins, and steel guitars -- and advancing a more overt country and folk ambiance than her most recent albums -- this effort could well be a sequel to State of the Heart, Carpenter's stunning second album, notable for its unsentimental dissection of love and life as understood by a much younger, less experienced woman. Now we get "Elysium," a thoughtful meditation likening the flowering of a newfound but inevitable love to the beauty of nature she observes on a long, winding drive in the country, with a keening fiddle line ascending as Carpenter describes her surprise and exultation. We get the beauty of the hymn-like "Between Here and Gone," its deliberate pace a backdrop for Carpenter's ontological musings on her place in the whole scheme of things. Despite its hard, hammering rhythm, "Beautiful Racket" finds the songwriter now taking sustenance in what she once scorned -- the mundane details of life's daily chores. A 9/11 rescue worker, covered in "holy dust," ponders the tragic aftermath and his own purpose, in a moving folk ballad, "Grand Central Station," that feels like redemption. Exquisite and profound, Between Here and Gone is some kind of masterpiece. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



More Reviews and Recommendations

Customer Reviews

Pure And Tenderby Anonymous

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September 27, 2010: MCC's latest release is well worth the wait and money spent. The brilliant storyteller again captures imagination and offers hope and healing through her identifiable way with words. A nice mixture of mourning and life... Buy it then take a long drive through the country somewhere and remember the simple things that create memories. Her vocals won't let you down.

This review was written about the CD edition.

A Beautiful Racket Indeed!by Anonymous

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September 27, 2010: From first offering to last, MCC takes you cross country on the highway of emotions, reflection and the joy of living day to day. Rivers, bridges, city streets and two lane roads...and some of her best music ever.

This review was written about the CD edition.


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