The Beauty of the Rain [DualDisc] Dar Williams

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DualDisc - CD/DVD

  • Release Date: 11/23/2004
  • Original Release: 2003
  • Label: SILVERLINE
  • UPC: 676628413326
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CD$13.99
DVD Audio$19.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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The Beauty of the Rain [DualDisc]

Disc 1
1LISTENMercy of the Fallen 4:11
2LISTENFarewell to the Old Me 2:45
3LISTENI Saw a Bird Fly Away 2:51
4LISTENThe Beauty of the Rain 3:00
5LISTENThe World's Not Falling Apart 4:24
6LISTENThe One Who Knows 3:47
7LISTENCloser to Me 3:42
8LISTENFishing in the Morning 2:38
9LISTENWhispering Pines 4:00
10LISTENYour Fire Your Soul 3:04
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Disc 2
1Mercy of the Fallen DVD
2Farewell to the Old Me DVD
3I Saw a Bird Fly Away DVD
4The Beauty of the Rain DVD
5The World's Not Falling Apart DVD
6The One Who Knows DVD
7Closer to Me DVD
8Fishing in the Morning DVD
9Whispering Pines DVD
10Your Fire Your Soul DVD
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Where Mortal City was a consciously reformatted Honesty Room, End of the Summer was an over-the-top break away from Mortal City, and Green World was an admission that End of the Summer was a forced endeavor, The Beauty of the Rain is Dar Williams' first recording that truly expands upon the sound of the album before it. For the first time in her career, Williams no longer pushed too hard to re-adjust her sound, but instead embraced and built upon it. The result is her most comfortable and confident recording to date, and the first time Williams did not appear to be ashamed of her previous work. Complete with a heavy roster including John Medeski, Alison Krauss, Béla Fleck, and John Popper, The Beauty of the Rain is a polished and spacious-sounding recording where virtually every track is an easy parade through flourishing arrangements and accessibility. The only song to stand out as a bit off the mark is the initially stunning "Whispering Pines," which shifts from a lovely, lush backing vocal and keyboard opening to a new age-tinted piano ballad, but when the third verse sets in, guest Cliff Eberhardt's soulless and strained singing turns it into a poor Disney-style "end-of-picture" duet and the whole song crashes down in a train wreck of poor judgment. Album-opener and extraordinary single "Mercy of the Fallen," the staccato intricacies of "Closer to Me," and the understated title track more than make up for this blunder and will certainly please passionate fans as well as increase Dar Williams' fan base considerably. [Silverline's 2004 edition featured bonus DVD content.] Gregory McIntosh, All Music Guide

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