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Joan Osborne|How Sweet It Is

How Sweet It Is

Joan Osborne

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While 1995's Relish proved Joan Osborne was a smart and idiosyncratic lyricist with a big, strong and soulful voice, the unexpected success of the album (and the single "One Of Us") proved to be as much of a burden as a blessing. Touring kept Osborne out on the road for the next few years, and troubles with her record company prevented her follow-up, Righteous Love, from arriving in stores until 2000, after which it died quickly on the vine (though the album deserved a better fate). As Osborne was blocking out plans for her next album in the fall of 2001, the terrorist attacks of September 11 upended her musical priorities, and for How Sweet It Is, Osborne has indulged herself in the musical equivalent of comfort food by cutting covers of a dozen classic soul and R&B tunes from the 1960s and '70s, with the exception of three reworked rock numbers (Dave Mason's "Only You Know and I Know," the Band's "The Weight," and Jimi Hendrix's "Axis: Bold As Love"). While Osborne devotes herself to vintage material here, for the most part she avoids a retro vibe and, thankfully, avoids the contemporary failing of proving one's soulfulness by bending vocal lines into uncontrollable spasms of melisma. Here, Osborne merges passion with simplicity, while most of the tunes are recast in clean, spare arrangements which capture the classic lines of their melodies without sounding like retreads. And in a season of loss, fear, and mistrust, "Smiling Faces Sometime," "Why Can't We Live Together," and "Love's in Need of Love Today" sound potent and almost painfully relevant in this context, while the bluesy pleasures of "These Arms of Mine" and "I'll Be Around" feel as comforting as a hug and a cup of cocoa. How Sweet It Is is a rare example of an album of covers that doesn't sound like a holding action, and makes clear Joan Osborne is still an artist well worth watching.
© Mark Deming /TiVo

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How Sweet It Is

Joan Osborne

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1
I'll Be Around
00:04:32

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

2
Think
00:03:38

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

3
How Sweet It Is
00:04:22

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

4
Smiling Faces Sometimes
00:04:45

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

5
Love's In Need Of Love Today
00:04:12

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

6
These Arms Of Mine
00:04:39

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

7
Only You Know And I Know
00:03:45

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

8
War
00:05:50

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

9
Why Can't We Live Together
00:04:59

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

10
Bold As Love
00:04:05

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

11
The Weight
00:05:13

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

12
Everybody Is A Star
00:03:14

Joan Osborne, MainArtist

2002 Intersound 2002 Intersound

Album review

While 1995's Relish proved Joan Osborne was a smart and idiosyncratic lyricist with a big, strong and soulful voice, the unexpected success of the album (and the single "One Of Us") proved to be as much of a burden as a blessing. Touring kept Osborne out on the road for the next few years, and troubles with her record company prevented her follow-up, Righteous Love, from arriving in stores until 2000, after which it died quickly on the vine (though the album deserved a better fate). As Osborne was blocking out plans for her next album in the fall of 2001, the terrorist attacks of September 11 upended her musical priorities, and for How Sweet It Is, Osborne has indulged herself in the musical equivalent of comfort food by cutting covers of a dozen classic soul and R&B tunes from the 1960s and '70s, with the exception of three reworked rock numbers (Dave Mason's "Only You Know and I Know," the Band's "The Weight," and Jimi Hendrix's "Axis: Bold As Love"). While Osborne devotes herself to vintage material here, for the most part she avoids a retro vibe and, thankfully, avoids the contemporary failing of proving one's soulfulness by bending vocal lines into uncontrollable spasms of melisma. Here, Osborne merges passion with simplicity, while most of the tunes are recast in clean, spare arrangements which capture the classic lines of their melodies without sounding like retreads. And in a season of loss, fear, and mistrust, "Smiling Faces Sometime," "Why Can't We Live Together," and "Love's in Need of Love Today" sound potent and almost painfully relevant in this context, while the bluesy pleasures of "These Arms of Mine" and "I'll Be Around" feel as comforting as a hug and a cup of cocoa. How Sweet It Is is a rare example of an album of covers that doesn't sound like a holding action, and makes clear Joan Osborne is still an artist well worth watching.
© Mark Deming /TiVo

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