Patty Griffin - Children Running Through

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Added on February 7, 2007 by in Music
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Patty Griffin - Children Running Through (Size: 86.41 MB)
 01 You'll Remember.mp33.89 MB
 02 Stay On The Ride.mp39.68 MB
 03 Trapeze.mp38.04 MB
 04 Getting Ready.mp35.97 MB
 05 Burgundy Shoes.mp36.29 MB
 06 Heavenly Day.mp36.87 MB
 07 No Bad News.mp37.41 MB
 08 Railroad Wings.mp37.3 MB
 09 Up To The Mountain (MLK Song).mp37.59 MB
 10 I Don't Ever Give Up.mp37.34 MB
 11 Someone Else's Tomorrow.mp37.53 MB
 12 Crying Over.mp38.46 MB
 AlbumArt_{477D4BAF-B354-4237-ABD6-6C70323BF581}_Large.jpg8.85 KB
 AlbumArt_{477D4BAF-B354-4237-ABD6-6C70323BF581}_Small.jpg2.24 KB
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Description

MORE GREAT MUSIC REVIEWS & TORRENTS AT www.btbeat.com


Patty Griffin\'s raucous second album Flaming Red was a shocking departure from the critically noticed Living with Ghosts. It placed solid, searing rock & roll and big bad drumbeat up against the still developing authority of her voice. On Impossible Dream she married country and her own brand of gospel in an intimate and musically seductive mix. The reason for stating the obvious is that the Mike McCarthy produced Children Running Through is the moment Griffin has been striving for her entire career thus far, that place where she "arrived" in her own aesthetic and professional view, the album that cements the emotional and musical adventure of the former album and the clarity of vision, the seamlessness of the execution and the precision of the latter. In the process of recording, one wonders if it ever occurred to Griffin that this was such a magical moment, an album that both she had been waiting to make, and the one her fans, no matter how devoted, had been waiting for.

The smoky jazz tinged with Glenn Worf\'s double bass strolling through the first verse of "You\'ll Remember" that gets kissed by Michael Longoria\'s brushed drums is her evocative song of hoped for memory and resilience, and is breathtaking in its poetic sparseness. This is underscored and shifted by the tough, acoustic guitar and horn laced acoustic R&B in "Stay on the Road." The prominence of her voice in the mix is startling. She stands right out in front of her band and lets the raw soul just pour out of her mouth. She changes up again on the gorgeous country of the tragically haunting "Trapeze" with backing vocals by Emmylou Harris. Griffin\'s song is lyrically her own, but there is a trace of Bruce Springsteen\'s country-ish phrasing in her delivery. As Harris\' duet vocal joins on the second verse, the tale strips itself of time and place and becomes a folk song, a tale told too often but never in this way as the refrain lays out a proverb for the ages: "Some people don\'t care if they live or they die/Some people want to know what it feels like to fly/They gather their courage and they give it a try/And fall under the wheels of time going by." The song builds to a stirring climax and the final word, "Hallelujah," resonates long after the track concludes. Griffin hardly lets these three songs, filled with their wisdom and loss, dominate her recording. "Getting Ready" is a burning, snaky rockabilly tune for the 21st century. In it, one can hear the energy of Johnny Burnette and the punk rock determinism of the early Pretenders. This is a song of self-determination and the acknowledgement of emotional and sexual power.

There\'s yet another twist in the utterly gorgeous "Burgundy Shoes," a ballad that swirls into a celebration of a mother, or grandmother, that rings to the skies with gratitude and remembrance. Once more, as she does for the rest of the set, Griffin shifts gears toward her own brand of secular gospel in "Heavenly Day" with a stirring string section that underscores the soaring conviction and joy in her vocal, and Ian McLagan\'s piano is straight from the gut, caressing her voice until it\'s time to push it into the stratosphere, which he does. (You all guessed right: this is the same song she loaned to Solomon Burke for his Nashville album.) "Up to the Mountain (The MLK Song)" is another gospel number based on the "I Have a Dream" speech delivered on the day before Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated. Griffin\'s reverence here is so profound it feels like she deliberately gives up some of the authority she expresses on the rest of the album out of respect. And that\'s fine. She lets the low strings and McLagan\'s grand piano guide her to the peak of the mountain she sings about. She never goes over it but points to the dignity of the man, the integrity of his spirituality, and the depth of his courage, and carries his inspiration in the grain of her voice. This is followed by her own testament in "I Don\'t Ever Give Up," a song — ushered in quietly by percussion and an acoustic guitar — about determination in the face of discouragement, error and downright oppression. As the swelling strings buoy her voice she looks outside the song and then back in for what she needs to carry it through and reveal her truth.

There\'s more here, much more. All of Griffin\'s previous albums have merit, all of them are fine works in and of themselves, but Children Running Through is the kind of summation of an arrival. Griffin is the mature, fully in control artist here; she knows what she wants and she knows how to get there. Her songwriting is leaner yet more evocative, her singing stronger and more confident, and her manner of illustration is spot-on; the song is true simply because she delivers it that way. Finally, this recording, like Van Morrison\'s Moondance, Emmylou Harris\' Luxury Liner, and Bonnie Raitt\'s Give It Up and Aretha Franklin\'s I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You, signals not the arrival of a great artist — there are so few these days — but the fully formed artist at the height of her creative and demonstrative power. Children Running Through is Patty Griffin\'s masterpiece thus far.

- 5 Stars & All Music Album PIck

On "I Don\'t Ever Give Up," 10 songs into Patty Griffin\'s remarkable new album, Children Running Through, this gifted, insightful writer wails a defiant theme: "I\'m no fighter / But I\'m fighting / This ol\' world seems uninviting / But I don\'t give up / No, I don\'t ever give up / Fall down sometimes / Sometimes I come back flying / Love isn\'t here / Love isn\'t here / But it\'s somewhere." The fight, the folly, the fury, and the frailty of love are meticulously delineated in 14 fully realized songs. For starters, this is the most complex vocalizing Griffin has yet delivered on record; she\'s as woozy as Rickie Lee Jones, as spiteful as Dylan, as vulnerable as, well, Patty Griffin. The arrangements, too, are uniformly arresting: piano-bar jazz in "You\'ll Remember"; rustic, spare country summoned by lightly strummed acoustic guitar, minimalist pedal steel winks, and thumping acoustic bass at the outset of the winsome "Trapeze," in which Griffin\'s whispery voice finds soaring harmony with that of Emmylou Harris; a driving, full-on rock \'n\' roll attack on the Dylan-ish howl "Getting Ready"; and a blistering, Irish-tinged burner, "No Bad News," punctuated by majestic mariachi horns(!). Of course, Griffin being Griffin, the lyrical flights are by turns poignant and pungent. This Barnes & Noble exclusive edition features two songs unavailable elsewhere: "Free," a brusque, acoustic guitar-and-brush drums-driven musing that celebrates wanderlust even as it expresses a longing for a place of one\'s own, and the atmospheric meditation "Up or Down," a moving reflection on life\'s journey -- here, Griffin takes the measure of her time in a voice by turns assertive and weary, with a close-miked piano and a distant, muted trumpet evocatively shadowing her roller-coaster emotions. Children Running Through might be called a career album, but the apt superlative here is "great." With all her gifts in full flower, Patty Griffin has created something timeless.

- David McGee, Barnes & Noble


Artist: Patty Griffin
Album: Children Running Through
Date Of Release: February 6, 2007
Genre: Country, Singer Songwriter, Adult Alternative
Bitrate: CBR 256 kbps

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Patty Griffin - Children Running Through