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Emmylou Harris

Emmylou Harris Album: “Light of the Stable [Bonus Tracks]”

Emmylou Harris Album: “Light of the Stable [Bonus Tracks]”
Album Information :
Title: Light of the Stable [Bonus Tracks]
Release Date:2004-11-09
Type:Unknown
Genre:Country, Folk, Americana
Label:Warner Bros.
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:081227611064
Track Listing :
1 Christmas Time's A-Coming
2 O Little Town Of Bethlehem Video
3 Away In A Manger Video
4 Angel Eyes Emmylou Harris and Willie Nelson Video
5 The First Noel (Remastered Album Version)
6 Beautiful Star of Bethlehem
7 Little Drummer Boy Video
8 There's A Light
9 Cherry Tree Carol
10 Golden Cradle Video
11 Silent Night Video
12 Man Is an Island
13 Light of the Stable Video
Review - :
{$Emmylou Harris} is an artist with the rare sort of voice that communicates an honest and firmly grounded humanity while possessing a crystalline purity that verges on the angelic. In short, she was a singer born to make a great {\Christmas} album, and in 1979 she did just that with {^Light of the Stable}, in which she fused the high-lonesome traditional sound she'd been exploring on {^Roses in the Snow} and {^Blue Kentucky Girl} with songs that honored the spiritual and emotional roots of the holiday season. The album's gestation began with a 1975 single of {&"Light of the Stable,"} with most of the material recorded years later, but {$Harris} and producer {$Brian Ahern} gave the project an admirably unified sound, which speaks of Christmas with a quiet dignity that's celebratory but reverent -- this is one of the few {\Christmas} albums from a secular artist that scarcely mentions {%Santa Claus} while focusing clearly on the birth of Christ. {$Harris} and {$Ahern} assembled a stellar cast for these sessions -- the pickers include {$Ricky Skaggs}, {$James Burton}, and {$Rodney Crowell}, while {$Willie Nelson}, {$Linda Ronstadt}, {$Dolly Parton}, and {$Neil Young} pitch in backing vocals -- but the results are a marvel of restraint, with precious little showboating and a handful of performances that rank with the performers' best work. If you're looking for a disc that will kick up your Christmas party a few notches, {^Light of the Stable} isn't it, but if you want to hear music of quiet but compelling beauty which warmly resonates with the true meaning of the holidays, then you'll find this album is an experience to treasure. [In the liner notes to {@Rhino}'s 2004 reissue of {^Light of the Stable}, {$Harris} jokes that "We used to affectionately call the album the best-kept secret in the music business...that is why we could put it out with a different cover every year." While she exaggerates a bit, the 2004 edition of the disc did indeed feature its third set of cover artwork, as well as three new songs recorded especially for this edition. While the new songs display traces of the more adventurous approach {$Harris} embraced on {^Wrecking Ball} and {^Red Dirt Girl}, they still fit comfortably with the album's original ten tracks, especially the lovely {&"There's a Light"} and {&"Man Is an Island,"} while the new mastering makes the most of the album's crisp, warm sound -- if {$Harris} didn't exactly improve a masterpiece, she certainly gave it a new finish that reinforces the qualities that make it so memorable in the first place.] ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
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