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"A Painter Passing Through" is the title of the last and most recently recorded track on this retrospective of Gordon Lightfoot's career. And this lavish four-disc set makes the point again and again over 66 tracks: His is the work of a musician with a painter's eye for both detail and scope. The roughly chronological collection opens with two early '60s cuts on which Lightfoot sounds like a cross between Jim Reeves and Marty Robbins. He joined the folk revival soon after (under the influence of Ian & Sylvia and Bob Dylan), and hits including "Early Morning Rain," "Steel Rail Blues," and "For Lovin' Me" are here, blending history and human emotion, especially on the epic "Canadian Railroad Trilogy." Disc two examines Lightfoot's main themes: love gone wrong in "If You Could Read My Mind," observations of a traveler in "Ten Degrees and Getting Colder," the working life in "Cotton Jenny," the natural world in "Ode to Big Blue," and his native Canada's landscape in "Alberta Bound." At the height of his popular success, Lightfoot achieved a sinuous blend of the personal with folkier themes in songs like 1974's masterful description of sexual tension and infidelity, "Sundown"; "Carefree Highway," a song which combines the traveling life and unrequited love; and the evocative vignette of love and landscape "Seven Island Suite." His later work couldn't match their popularity, but his happier perspectives on love ("I'll Prove My Love," "Romance") and changes in life ("East of Midnight," "Morning Glory"), and that wonderful painter's view, show that Lightfoot's indispensable catalogue is still growing. Kerry Dexter, Barnes & Noble