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In the mid-1980s Emmylou Harris -- first on the strength of her work a decade earlier with Gram Parsons and then on her ensuing solo albums -- was the godmother of the New Traditionalist movement. Now, as the millennium nears, she's become the queen mother of alternative country-No Depression-Americana-whatever-it's-called-today, yet another return to the traditional roots of country music. Wrecking Ball is a sharp left turn, though, featuring challenging song selection and a broad sonic palette courtesy of producer Daniel Lanois (Bob Dylan). Broad washes of ambient sounds and reverb-laden guitars mix with New Orleans-style rhythms and Harris's own aching soprano voice (here sounding rough and urgent) to take songs such as Dylan's "Every Grain of Sand," Lucinda Williams's "Sweet Old World," Neil Young's title track, and even a Jimi Hendrix tune, "May This Be Love," into bold, new territory. After more than 20 years of making music, Harris's impulses are still outside the mainstream but nonetheless compelling. Daniel Durchholz, Barnes & Noble