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Poet in My Window

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Download links and information about Poet in My Window by Nanci Griffith. This album was released in 1982 and it belongs to Country, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 36:50 minutes.

Artist: Nanci Griffith
Release date: 1982
Genre: Country, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 12
Duration: 36:50
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Can't Love Wrong 2:55
2. Marilyn Monroe / Neon and Waltzes 2:43
3. Heart of a Miner 3:37
4. Julie Anne 3:09
5. You Can't Go Home Again 3:57
6. October Reasons 3:19
7. Wheels 2:46
8. Workin' In Corners 4:01
9. Waltzing With the Angels 3:05
10. Trouble With Roses 2:27
11. Tonight I Think I'm Gonna Go Downtown 2:31
12. Poet In My Window 2:20

Details

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While Poet in My Window is only a small step up from Nanci Griffith's debut, the album finds her inching toward the mature art of Once in a Very Blue Moon. While guitars and an occasional mandolin embellished There's a Light Beyond These Woods, a fuller country sound graces its follow-up. Pedal steel and multiple acoustic guitars fill out "Can't Love Wrong" and "Heart of a Miner," giving them lots of body. While Griffith's vocals sometimes bordered on timid on her first album, the bigger country-folk sound inspires a more vigorous approach here. Indeed, on "Wheels" and "October Reasons," she shows herself capable of belting out a phrase or two without losing the vulnerable underside of the song. Evelyn Taylor offers a bit of harmony here and there, adding to the "bigger" sound of the album and pleasantly complementing Griffith's voice. Lyrically, A Poet in My Window offers sharp observations and memorable lines on pieces like "Workin' These Corners." When Griffith sings "She's just a hill country girl home from the city/Her pockets full of plenty of those neon lights" on "Waltzing With the Angels," she manages to be both clever and insightful. While all of these elements work together to create a strong impression on Poet in My Window, the songs lack the standout quality that would mark a half a dozen cuts on Once in a Very Blue Moon. The earlier album is nonetheless easy on the ears, and fans unfamiliar with it will appreciate watching a young poet find her bearings. [The 2002 release by Rounder includes a previously unreleased song, "Can't Love Wrong," not included on the original.] ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., Rovi