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Whole New You
Whole New You

Whole New You

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is an appropriate title for 's fourth studio album of new material, her first in four-and-a-half years. Much has happened in the interim. In career terms, had made several modestly selling albums before appeared in the fall of 1996. The album was another modest seller until hit the singles charts in the spring of 1997, going on to hit number one on the lists and the Top Ten on the charts. Then it won the Song of the Year and Record of the Year Grammys, while spent a year in the charts and sold close to a million copies. That means that can no longer be considered a niche artist, but must compete in the mainstream, even though she is actually a one-hit wonder up to this point. She reacted as you might suspect an artist would after a breakthrough release; she maintained her exposure by doing a Christmas album and some soundtrack work while taking her time on a follow-up. Personally, her life has been at least as tumultuous. was her divorce album, but during the lengthy run-up to she remarried and had a child, which clearly has given her a different perspective (and another reason for that title). Within all this change, however, there are certain constants. She continues to collaborate with writer, producer, and multi-instrumentalist , who continues to come up with imaginative musical tracks clearly informed by mid-'60s sensibilities. The title track (and first single), for example, is distinctly -esque, with twangy guitar and -style spare string arrangement, while employs what by now should be called the Memorial Horn Trick, a sole flugelhorn playing a countermelody at the end of the tune. The arrangements are full of such echoes, but they remain echoes; weaves instruments and effects together evocatively, but not overtly. Something similar can be said about 's lyrics, which she sings in her characteristically becalmed voice, with its timbre that suggests (the "boop-boop-de-doop" girl) without the humor and her phrasing that gulps syllables for emotional resonance. Though she is given to making simple statements, they are imbedded in impressionistic reflections on life. Over and over, she sings of being committed, whether she wants to be or not: "I can't find my way to stay and I can't find my way to go and I can't give up without a fight" ( ); "Anywhere you go I will go there" ( ); "I'm bound to you and there's no in-between" ( ). In a sense, the album's 11 tracks make up one elliptical song in which the narrator thinks about the choices she has made recently with a sense that those choices are irrevocable. For the most part, she doesn't mind that, it seems, but she's certainly aware of it. Amid the various references to steadfastness and the allusions to childhood, there is little passion, but plenty of clear-headed acceptance. This is an album about marriage and family, not love, at least not the kind of romantic love that most songs are concerned with; in fact, the word "love" is never mentioned. For that reason, the most interesting song is the most complex one, a seemingly random assemblage of news reports and nightmares that, in its way, feeds into the album's main theme. After all, to have a sense that you have finally found a home that depends on your relationship to other people is to fear that some accident will take it away from you. may not contain a song that will spark sales and awards the way did ( would make a great single, though), but anyone who, like the artist herself, has come to the safe harbor of family life (even with its many challenges) after a long, uncertain voyage through personal relationships and life experiences will appreciate 's ruminations on the subject. ~ William Ruhlmann
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