Van Lear Rose Loretta Lynn

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/27/2004
  • Sales Rank: 6,613
  • Label: INTERSCOPE RECORDS
  • UPC: 602498189559
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Van Lear Rose

1LISTENVan Lear Rose 3:50
2LISTENPortland Oregon / Jack White 3:49
3LISTENTrouble on the Line 2:21
4LISTENFamily Tree 3:03
5LISTENHave Mercy 2:35
6LISTENHigh on a Mountain Top 2:44
7LISTENLittle Red Shoes 3:34
8LISTENGod Makes No Mistakes 1:45
9LISTENWomen's Prison 4:16
10LISTENThis Old House 1:56
11LISTENMrs. Leroy Brown 3:38
12LISTENMiss Being Mrs. 2:50
13LISTENStory of My Life 2:40

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Loretta Lynn's teaming with producer Jack White -- of garage-rock chart-toppers the White Stripes -- has resulted in one of the finest albums of her exceptional career. For the most part, White casts Lynn's vocals in atmospheric, woozy settings, with trebly, serpentine guitar lines wafting around. No matter the soundscape, though: Lynn, now 70 years young, is singing with authority, commanding the spotlight. The grungy "Portland, Oregon," a duet with White, is suffused with her urgent blues twang lamenting the deleterious effects of too many sloe gin fizzes. "Women's Prison," a turgid tale of love, murder, and execution, is driven by screaming guitars, pounding drums, and a steadily vamping gospel organ as Lynn, cool and collected, lays out in chilling detail her sensible reasons for gunning down an unfaithful lover. She's at her best when White lays back -- on the wrenching breakup ballad "Miss Being Mrs.," Lynn is backed solely by White's acoustic guitar, and the power of her muted delivery is profound. A malfunctioning telephone line serves as metaphor for a relationship's breakdown in a beautifully rendered honky-tonk-tinged weeper, "Trouble on the Line," with moaning pedal steel lines rising eerily behind Lynn's tear-stained reading. Whether it's a machine gun–like rock 'n' roll attack ("Have Mercy") or a jubilant, fiddle-fired country two-step ("High on a Mountain"), Lynn is having the time of her life, digging into the serious themes with gusto and luxuriating in the simple pleasures of back-to-basics music making. Any way you cut it, Van Lear Rose is the sound of a great artist fully revitalized. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Van Lear Roseby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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May 03, 2005: This is one of the best selections of music, I've ever come across. The blend of hard driving rock guitar with Loretta's poignant truthful songs makes me turn up the volume everytime.

Van Lear Roseby Anonymous

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September 04, 2004: From the In Your Face "Family Tree" to the heartbreaking "Womens Prison", Loretta and Jack White combine for great music. Buy it, you'll like it.


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