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Shawn Colvin's songs are careful and precise: She crystallizes complexities in a few phrases, and her sweetly fragile voice conveys depths of emotions. She's not a prolific writer -- since 1989, she's released only four albums of new material -- but her songs (often written with John Leventhal) are remarkably consistent, as amply demonstrated on Polaroids: A Greatest Hits Collection. Arranged chronologically, the set begins with three tracks from the moody and artful Steady On, highlighted by the gentle pulse of the devastating "Shotgun Down the Avalanche." Fat City, from 1992, included two of her best songs: the lilting, wistful "Polaroids" and the plaintive, heartbreaking "I Don't Know Why." Colvin displayed her skills as an interpreter on 1994's Cover Girl, and she finds new subtleties in the Police's "Every Little Thing (He) Does Is Magic" and the Talking Heads' "This Must Be the Place (Naïve Melody)." She scored a hit and a pair of Grammys with "Sunny Came Home" from 1996's A Few Small Repairs, and songs like "You and the Mona Lisa" and "Get Out of This House" find her channeling bitter feelings into surprisingly bright pop productions. Whole New You from 2001 continued to favor polished arrangements for songs like the lovely "A Matter of Minutes," although the bonus cover of Lennon & McCartney's "I'll Be Back" hints at her folk-leaning early work. Like its namesake, Shawn Colvin's Polaroids emerge from darkness into glossy Technicolor, and the snapshots of her career are captivating at every stage of development. Steve Klinge, Barnes & Noble